** 2 Day BUSINESS OF MARRIAGE WORKSHOP EVENT ** APRIL 16 & 17, 2010

Monday, November 2, 2009

What is your emotional currency?


In business currency is used to measure it's success. In the US we use the dollar, Japan the Yen, Europe the Euro and so forth. Every business, even non-profit's, need money to operate successfully. When companies decide to do business with each other internationally, it is vital they know the exchange rate for their primary currency as well as the rate of the currency they will be doing business with. Lately the dollar's value has been dropping internationally so it typically takes a lot more of them to buy something over seas than it did before. That is not to say there is no value in it from other countries, it just might not be the currency other business consider the most valuable to them.

In your marriage, your spouse and you both have one currency you value above another. That currency is how we express or show love to one another. This currency is how you communicate your love to them and they to you. The challenge arises in many marriages when either one THINKS or ASSUMES they know the others currency without actually taking the time to find out, or better yet ask, what their spouses real currency is. Some highly value physical touch over material gifts while others place the most value on together time.
The confusion comes in the fact that all currency has some value to it, however not all currency has the most value according to each person. Service projects are probably always appreciated by her but if her most valued currency is encouragement or praise you will never get the response you want, and she will never feel you are as loving as you could be in her mind.
This comes in to evidence when you hear someone say things like, "I do everything on he list of honey-do's! I take out the trash, she never has to clean the car or mow the lawn, and yet it is still never enough!" However, even though those things are nice, if all she really wants is for you to tell her how beautiful she is, how proud you are of her and how amazing a mother she is, you will be coming up short in her emotional currency "bank". It's as if you are giving her $1000 US and her currency is YEN. She appreciates the money and knows it has value, it just isn't the currency she would prefer to do business in.
All of us have a currency that we value over all others. Most of the time ours is not the same as our spouses. Our "exchange rates" are not equal.
The good news is there are only currencies you have to learn. As soon as you know what your spouses is, you can focus on giving that to them and you will see a major difference in how they accept your tokens of affection.
Here they are:
Acts of kindness (charity or service): Doing something for them, even when you don't want to. This is my wife's. She feels the most love when I hang a picture, clean out a closet, paint a room, run errands or just about anything on my eternal "honey-do" list.
Physical touch: Holding hands, a hug, sitting next to each other, a back rub, a tap on the bum, sexual foreplay and sexual intercourse.
Affirming words (encouragement, praise): Telling them how wonderful they are, celebrating a "win" at work, encouraging them to peruse a hobbies or education, telling them how proud you are of them, telling them how good they look and make you feel, tell her what a great mother/wife she is, tell him how much you appreciate his hard work.
Material gifts: Cards, flowers, presents, love letters, making dinner for him/her, gifts both handmade and store bought.
Time: Talking with each other (Television off, or at least on pause), running errends together, going on dates, going for walks together, vacations, playing games with the kids.

As you can see all of these currencies have a value to them. However, we all hold one value over the other. If you figure out what your spouses' is and focus on giving them their currency you will never feel short changed!