Let's take a look at your salvation plan (how you feel like a worthwhile person).
I behave well - my wife gives me validation for my progress and effort - I am worthwhile.
Whoa! No wonder you are defensive. When you make an effort to be a better person, and your wife doesn't see and validate your effort, you are worthless (and maybe kind of angry and resentful that she isn't playing her role in your plan very well). That plan doesn't even look good on paper. And you've had many (13?) years of it not working very well in practice.
You are not alone in having an ineffective salvation plan. We humans are salvation-plan-manufacturing machines and unfortunately we are really bad at it. We think if we do great at our jobs we are worthwhile. If we do well at the gym. If we are especially good pet owners. If that one person loves us. If we are good girls who don't make anyone angry. If we follow all the rules of a certain religion or practice. In the end, these all come to rubbish and we feel worthless (and hopeless). It's very good to be aware of your own salvation plan and be intentional about having a sturdy one. Your current plan is not sturdy and also not good for your wife or your marriage, though no doubt you often behave better than you used to. But under stress, when it really matters that you set aside your dependence on her good opinion to feel worthwhile and are available to listen to her, it doesn't work. As you know.
One tricky problem with these salvation plans that we cook up for ourselves is that the SEEM to work. We seek our worth in our work - we get a promotion - we feel awesome! We find worth in the gym - we are able to do more or lift more than before - amazing! We feel on top of the world. What happens when we are not doing well at work? Do we feel dejected? Or do we start cutting corners to make it seem like we are doing well? What happens when we get injured and can't keep posting better and better numbers at the gym? It would be so much easier if these plans never worked. We would drop them quickly. But this intermittent cycle of it works - I feel great - it doesn't work - I am angry or defensive or depressed - that's tough.
Oh boy do I have good news for you!
First, before we get to the good news, let's look at another common salvation plan that doesn't work.
I believe in (insert deity of choice) – therefore I obey – therefore I am saved.
(Saved meaning that you understand that deity delights in you, treasures you, created you with care and attention, loves you so much he would do anything to have you and keep you.)
Why doesn't this work? We don't obey very well. We might obey sometimes, most of the time, in some settings, many settings, but basically at some point we will come to a time and place where we don't obey. We get defensive. I didn't really disobey. There are understandable reasons I disobeyed. I mostly obey so this disobedience doesn't count. It's your fault I disobeyed. Etc. Or we feel like garbage, and give up, stop trying, hopeless.
Let's look at a sturdy salvation plan.
Gospel is: I believe in Jesus – therefore I am saved – therefore I obey.
Do you see the difference? Under the first (religious approach), when you don’t obey, you are toast. Your sense of worth is crushed. With gospel, when you disobey, your salvation (sense of worth) is not in question. You are STILL precious, a treasure, the delight of God's eye, despite your disobedience. You don't have to be defensive about anything because you have nothing to defend - you didn't lose your worth. Sometimes you lose your sense of worth in the moment, you might be ashamed in front of other people, you might be disoriented that you're not doing as well as you thought, but your wise mind can remind yourself that you did not lose your worth in God's eyes, and re-orient yourself with the idea of yeah! God is revealing in me a way I can get to know him better, and Jesus has trod this path through death to life so I can face this problem I have with confidence there is life on the other side of it. The disobedience becomes a clue that there is a place in your life where you don’t fully understand, where you might need healing or strengthening, and it gives you the opportunity to meditate, pray, face the problem and face your shame with a benevolent/loving witness and guide (Holy Spirit), and obey more fully from the joy in your heart, from having his instructions written on your heart. Maybe it doesn’t always look so different on the outside. It's different.
*****
Wantstorepair, am I correct in remembering that you were in active combat and suffered multiple concussions to the point of blacking out? If that was you, I assume that you know about CTE? Please give yourself enormous grace. Having a mis-firing, injured brain is not an excuse for disobedience. Nothing is an excuse for disobedience. But you have a headwind that many people do not experience. Giving yourself grace looks like this: when you are feeling rage, or victimization, or helplessness, try to hear a benevolent voice saying kindly to you: Wantstorepair, your brain is misfiring right now. You need to soothe it and help it to calm down before you can do anything for another person. And when you are in calmer times, try to practice things that you can draw on in a crisis - meditation, prayer, memorize poetry, remember the good things God has done in your life or moments you have experienced love.
[This message edited by Pippin at 2:33 PM, Thursday, September 5th]