Drifting is natural, it happens sometimes without giving it much thought. Add to that our human propensity to get bored with the familiar rather quickly. Once the romance wanes in our relationships, we can be tempted to drift. We attempt to convince ourselves and our life mates that we’re not drifting, but we both know we are.
My daughter and I were out in a bay once when our boat lost its anchor. She went swimming after it. We barely noticed how far and how quickly that boat drifted away from us with the outgoing tide. It was just right there beside us a few minutes earlier.
What are the ingredients to a marriage that drifts? All too often we experience unmet expectations. Our disagreements become more intense and we seem to have conflict more often. Perhaps even old, destructive life patterns reemerge. Or, maybe we get behind financially and can’t seem to catch up. We’re working more hours, away from home more hours and unhappy for more hours. Now we’re feeling unfulfilled and it is so easy for marriage boredom to increase.
We didn’t mean for it to happen but life is full with our schedules, our children, yes, even our ministry. We’re missing one another, we’re not communicating as we should and we left certain disciplines that help to maintain a healthy marriage. Now we’re both feeling the sting of unmet needs and mumbling under our breath the negative things that bug us about our partner.
It can change; there is hope. We can reverse the effects of drifting. Here are seven steps we can take.
- Confess it to God and one other. Confession brings it into the light. It puts the subject on the table so to speak.
- Get back to dedicated times of communication about the personal and the nonpersonal. Get back to sharing everything in conversation with feelings and real-life intimacy.
- Pray while you communicate. Speak to God about your drifting from each other. Share your heart with your heavenly Father and ask Him for solutions to the drifting issue. Expect to hear those answers and then implement them.
- Get back to spending quality time together. There is no compromise; we need time together to relate, to have fun and to be friends again.
- Stop waiting on feelings. If you wait on feelings to return, you’ll never act. Act first because right actions bring about right feelings.

- Write out your mission statement. If you have one, find it and read over it once again. If you do not have a couple mission statement then you are missing out on writing down your reasons for marriage, your why. Get busy and put into writing your marriage mission statement.
- Dream again about where you desire your marriage to go and to grow. Vision is a focus for the future for the two of you. That focus runs adrift when we lose sight of us.
Rest assured, drifting can occur with each of us. But it is not our game plan to stay there. We must take steps to counteract the drifting that has taken place.
It’s time to reclaim dinner around our tables. This practice is becoming lost in the midst of family busyness, jobs, school schedules, friends and activates. We desperately need to recover this tradition within our families and here’s why.
I recently needed to make a ministry/training trip to southern Virginia. It was a lovely drive; one in which I have made many, many times before. You see, our marriage began in that area 44 years previously. That now seems like a long time ago.

September 11th, 2001, a day we will all remember here in America and around the world. I was sitting on a plane at the Baltimore/Washington airport waiting to fly to New England through New York air space when we were all asked to disembark the plane and to go home. That day, 2,996 people would lose their lives.

As a kid I lived in insecurity. I was insecure in school, in relationships, in trying new things and in my family relationships. Insecurity is defined as instability, self-doubt and a lack of self-confidence. That was me. There were plenty of reasons for my insecurity, but at the time it was just life and trying to grow up.
Jesus once approached a woman at a well that was not married, but He told her she had had five husbands in the past. Jesus identified the longing in her heart to be whole and He let her know that another husband would not do that for her. His answer: to draw living water from Him – a spring of eternal life. His answer to this woman’s insecurities, her longing to find relational fulfillment in men and her insatiable desire for wholeness was met in one encounter with the Messiah.
Journalist and author Mignon McLaughlin once said, “A successful marriage requires falling in love many times, always with the same person.”

So often marriage is like a mirror and we get to see our real self through the reflections of our life mate. After all, who knows you better than your spouse? Who better to reflect back to you the image you are projecting?


When the city fathers of New York thought about the future growth of their city, they laid out the streets and numbered them from the center outward. In the beginning there were only six streets in their planning maps, so they decided to go crazy and project growth.
How about you; do you sell your vision short? How far can you see? How far do you desire to see and project? God has vision for you and through you. Dream with Him!
I recently read a Reader’s Digest article called, The Nature Cure and was totally intrigued. I will share some of the information from that article below. It seemed to verify what I have believed and incorporated into my life, certainly appreciating that this periodical would help to validate this belief.
Did you know pediatricians are now telling parents with young families to regularly visit parks so the whole family can de-stress and play? When is the last time you went camping, hiking in the mountains, visited gardens, introduced your child to the wonders of a stick, sat around a campfire, watched a sunset, played in a creek, observed butterflies or sat by a lake?
Someone once shared with me these words, “I’ll respect him when he starts respecting me.” Still another said, “When she starts acting respectable, I’ll show her respect.” Really? Since when is respect conditional upon another respecting you?
I love how author Gary Thomas weighs in on this very subject, “As our partners and their weaknesses become more familiar to us, respect often becomes harder to give. But this failure to show respect is more a sign of spiritual immaturity than it is an inevitable pathway of marriage.” He also notes, “When there is mutual respect in marriage, selflessness becomes contagious…. If you want to obsess about them [weaknesses], they’ll grow, but you won’t!”