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©iStockphoto.com/LivingImages
Through our many years of marriage,
we have discovered an important truth: we can’t survive
without our daily hugs. After a hard day of work, there is simply
nothing that replaces a good long tender hug.
Something almost magical happens
when couples hug each other. It’s as though an electrical
charge passes from one to the other, giving a new feeling of strength
and ability to face the tasks ahead. It’s the ultimate supercharge.
And it doesn’t cost a penny. It doesn’t even take
much time, but the benefits are enormous.
Hugs have a way of reconnecting our
worlds. After a day of each having been involved in our own outside
world, hugs bring us back into our family world together, united
in our home. It helps melt away worries and stress and puts us
in a safe and loving place.
So what kind of hug are we talking about here? To be perfectly
clear, we’re talking about a put your arms around me
all the way and hold me close kind of hug. Not a side by
side hug. No, we’re talking full body hugs. The kind where
your hearts almost touch, maybe even beat in sync for those few
vital moments.
Hugs the Kids Can See
And where should these hugs take
place? Anywhere, but mostly at home in plain sight. Let your children
see you hugging and kissing each other. Bill Keane, Family
Circus cartoonist, illustrated it best when he showed the
parents embracing and kissing each other as their little children
looked on with delight. One of the children said to the others,
“I feel all warm and happy inside when I see Mommy and Daddy
kissing.”
Do it in front of the teenagers,
too. They may groan and act embarrassed or disgusted, but we can
guarantee that inside their heads and hearts they are receiving
a powerful message. It’s a huge pronouncement that marriage
is fun and happy, and that Mom and Dad really do love each other.
Teach them that husbands and wives
hug and kiss. Children of all ages are desperate for that message.
That goes for what they see their grandparents doing, too. They
need to see you enjoying hugs from each other. It says that marriage
is fun and loving at every stage of life. That it lasts. And that’s
another message they’re yearning to see.
Hugs in Private
Private hugs are important, wherever you are. Sometimes when we’ve
had an especially stressful assignment in our Church Service mission
work, we’ve slipped quietly into a private hallway or empty
room and just given each other a nourishing hug. Then we go quickly
back to work with a little more energy than before. It’s
quite amazing what that will do.
Of course, abundant hugs in the privacy
of your bedroom are vital, too. We learned long ago that when
we kneel by our bedside each night, take each other by the hand
and say our prayer, then end that sacred time with a hug and kiss,
something sweet happens. It’s like an exclamation point
to the prayer. And it’s a witness to Heavenly Father that
we are united and determined to keep our marriage strong and loving.
Knowing how important marriage is to Him — that has to put
a smile on His face.
Intimate hugging has an important
place, too. In fact, it’s vital to the well being of a happy
marriage relationship. President Spencer W. Kimball said, “Just
as married partners are not for others they are for each other.”
(Miracle of Forgiveness, p. 73) We need each other and
the warmth of being together physically.
Hugs and Disagreements
If you’ve had a “spirited
discussion” and an “I’m sorry” is in order,
be sure to accompany the apology with a hug. If you don’t
feel like hugging, that’s probably when you, or your mate,
need it most. It can dispel hard feelings and bring back a spirit
of love.
Don’t turn away a hug. That’s
like saying to the sun, “Don’t shine on me. I prefer
a dark cloud over my head.” Accept hugs from your mate,
and give them back freely. It has been said that the nicest thing
about a hug is that you usually can't give one without getting
one. So respond. Don’t just stand there like a stiff pole.
Hug back! When a hug is offered, it’s a gift of love. Don’t
turn it away. That can be devastating to your mate and very unhealthy
for your marriage.
Hugs Help Heal
Hugs have medicinal benefits —
they contribute to healing. We need the strength received from
one body to another. So don’t stop hugging just because
one of you is ill, even seriously ill. If the one who is ill can’t
handle a full body hug, then do it by touching, caressing, or
massaging. The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center reported
the following:
Doctors are realizing
that the simple act of touching can have a powerful effect on
cancer patients — and may be a crucial part of the healing
process.
"Studies have shown that light,
gentle massage can help reduce nausea, pain, diarrhea and other
side effects of cancer treatments," says Cynthia Raman,
a Houston massage therapist. "We also know that it stimulates
the immune system, the gastrointestinal tract and improves circulation."
Raman … says most of us don't
get nearly enough touching. "We as Americans are touch-deprived,
and it takes some practice to incorporate it into our lives,"
she says. "For cancer patients undergoing exhausting treatments,
the natural reaction is to withdraw into themselves and reject
touch, but that's when they need it most." (http://www.cancerwise.org/)
A dear friend who
recently suffered a stroke said that hugs from her husband, several
a day, have been vital to her recovery. It’s comforting and
stress-relieving. And he is equally rewarded in the process.
“Everybody needs a hug. It
changes your metabolism,” said Leo Buscaglia, Ph.D., who
was affectionately called the Love Doctor. He continually taught
about the power of a hug.
He told the story about a little
four-year-old child who understood what love and physical touching
can do. The child’s next door neighbor was an elderly gentleman
who had recently lost his wife. Upon seeing the man cry, the little
boy went into the old gentleman’s yard, climbed onto his
lap, and just sat there. When his mother asked what he had said
to the neighbor, the little boy said, “Nothing. I just helped
him cry.”
Sometimes a crying mate is much the
same. She or he (and yes, men have their moments, too) just needs
to be hugged and helped to cry. The whole process is very healing.
Hugs Guard Us
Take away our hugs and we’re left defenseless in a world
that is set on destroying marriages. It reminds us of our son
who was serving in Iraq. He had to wear a bulletproof vest at
all times. On one occasion he was struck by a bullet that knocked
him down but didn’t penetrate the vest. It saved his life.
Hugging is a little like bulletproofing
your marriage. When you keep your relationship strong and hold
on to each other, nothing can kill your marriage. You may get
knocked down from time to time by the storms of life, but you’ll
be able to get back up and continue on because you have a strong
marriage relationship, one nurtured by daily hugs.
It seems a fitting
close to quote a verse from Dean Walley’s poem Hugging.
He hit the mark when he wrote:
The hug, there's just no doubt
about it —
We scarcely could survive without it!
A hug delights and warms and charms;
It must be why God gave us arms.
Begin today by giving
each other hugs every day. Start in the morning before you go your
separate ways, then greet each other with a warm and loving hug
first thing when you get back together. After that, hug whenever
you need it, and especially just before you go to sleep at night.
In between all those marital hugs, give plenty to your kids. They’ll
love it, too.
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| About
the Authors: |
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Gary and Joy Lundberg live in Provo,
Utah. They are parents of five children and have fourteen grandchildren.
Gary is a licensed marriage and family therapist and a member
of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy.
Born and reared in Washington, D.C., he served seven years as
a fighter pilot in the U.S. Air Force.
Joy is a writer and lyricist and has written nearly 200 songs
with composer Janice Kapp Perry. She served as script
writer for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir broadcast Music and
the Spoken Word for six years, has authored numerous articles
in the Ensign, New Era and Friend magazines.
She was born in Ogden, Utah, reared in Vale, Oregon.
Gary and Joy are the authors of the nationally published books
on relationships I Don’t Have to Make Everything All Better
and Married for Better, Not Worse. They also authored
the pocket-size book for LDS youth and young adults titled On
Guard: Seven Safeguards to Protect Your Sexual Purity.
They present marriage retreats, firesides and seminars throughout
the country and enjoy teaching at BYU Campus Education Week.
Currently they’re serving a part-time Church Service Mission
at the BYU World Family Policy Center helping to protect marriage
and the family worldwide.
For more articles, family recipes and information, visit their
Web site at http://www.lundbergcompany.com
Click
for an Audio Interview of the Lundbergs
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