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Divorce Journal – Starting Our New Chapter
When you choose to serve others, especially under the titled ‘Coached 2 Love,’ then transparency is a must. Love has multiple faces. Likewise, the relationships that are inspired by the pursuit of love has many outcomes. One of the most dreadful is divorce.
No one gets married with divorce in mind as the desired outcome. At least none who take the vows of marriage sacred. The parties invested in the success of the marriage extend beyond the persons taking the vows or the attendants that stand with them. Usually there is a community of supporters, including family, friends, fraternity and sorority siblings, classmates, neighbors, and co-workers. The outcome of the marriage has an impact on all of those who poured in their feelings, time, and prayers. So, when a marriage ends it has an impact on the entire community.
If a marriage brings a community together to celebrate, then it stands to reason that a divorce should also bring one together to mourn. Unfortunately, the painful process of separation and divorce drives the partners into seclusion or excessive behaviors that make them hard to approach. And no one has the right to judge how someone processes the sting of divorce. And, no one has the right to deny the congregation of believers their opportunities to heal too.
I recorded a number of videos, journal entries, in an effort to both process the decision to divorce my spouse and begin the long journey towards healing. The idea was not my own, but that of a relationship consultant that happened to sit next to me at a networking function. Coincidence or not, she challenged me to combine the goal of leading others in conversation about love while sharing my own challenges to obtain the heart’s desire.
And I was immediately afraid. I was afraid of hurting the woman that I had spent seven years with. I was afraid of hurting her daughters who I call my own, or my sons, which had already seen their father loose at love. Our families, friends, fraternal and sorority siblings, and so many others were of concern. Yet, fear has never had the final say over my actions and this challenge would not be any different.
Recording the journal entries were at times cathartic. It is my hope that in sharing these journal entries others will find meaning or understanding for their own relationships. It is too late for there to be a different outcome in my marriage. Perhaps, someone will find the strength they need to fight for their marriage, so that it will not end in divorce. It may simply provide clarity for the community that stood with us through our courting period and on our wedding day. I trust that in sharing these videos others will benefit through the outpouring of my emotions.
I decided to start with one of the final videos that was recorded. This entry was completed shortly after a judge granted the petition for divorce. The range of emotions that I was experiencing should be evident as I struggled with finding words to describe the experience and what I hoped to come next. Clarity was not the goal, it was only authenticity. Truth is that divorce has never been that clear to me and there is great ambiguity with starting a new chapter.Divorce Journal – Starting Our New Chapter
25 Critical Relationship Questions
We started Coached 2 Love with the goal of building stronger families. We have identified a simple remedy for most of our global issues, which is the inappropriate definition or application of love, starting with self. Therefore, we believe that as we help others identify what love looks like, then help those persons convert the definition into practical steps, we will begin to see positive changes.
Our second focus involves helping people make better choices regarding the person they will date to marry. Notice the focal point of the latter goal: marriages. Unfortunately, we have encountered too many couples that shared a wedding goal, but had no idea of what to look forward to after their special day. The consequence of the narrow vision is a unmentionable epidemic of broken families.
One of our practical steps in helping others look through the wedding event into marriage is providing a list of thought provoking questions. Below we have provided a sample from our self directed questionnaire, which we believe individuals and couples should engage, before they even ask or answer (B.Y.E.A.) the wedding proposal. We do not consider our questionnaire to be an exhaustive list. However, we hope our complete list will motivate couples to go off the track and ask even more involved questions, of themselves and the parties involved in the relationship that would have otherwise been overlooked.
Let’s begin the journey.
1. What are your views of God?
2. What is the meaning of a wedding vow?
3. What are your views on sex, in particular, the various forms of sexual contact?
4. What has been your greatest accomplishment to date?
5. What are your views on children, baring, having and rearing?
6. What is your relationship with your parents?
7. What is the role of a husband?
8. What is the role of a wife?
9. Share details of your family’s history, lineage, or genealogy.
10. What are your greatest fears?
11. Provide an example of when you were knocked down in life and how you got back on your feet.
12. How do you define intimacy?
13. When was your last physical exam, and what were the results?
14. What parts of your life have you held in reserve for your spouse?
15. Share your views on drinking alcohol, smoking (cigarettes or cigars), and drug use.
16. How would you approach your spouse if they were failing your expectations?
17. How do you best communicate (verbally, writing, dropping hints, physical expression, etc.)?
18. What are your views on homosexuality?
19. How do you handle frustration?
20. Whose counsel do you most value?
21. How important is personal space or time alone or time away from your spouse?
22. How do you define cheating?
23. What are the boundaries for your parents’ involvement in your relationship?
24. What allowances are you willing to give to your spouse to express a different religious belief or practice?
25. How do you define success?

Love Nudge: The Valley
In the midst of our lows the primary temptation is to dwell on how far the fall. We ignore the coolness and stillness of the space. This environment is perfect for meditating on what God has in store for the future, and this seems to escape the depressed mind. It is difficult to find any redeeming quality associated with the lowly position.
The opportunity that we forsake as we invest in the negative is greatness in the making. Instead of abandoning hope grab hold of whatever faith can be muster. Know that if you are in this place, then God’s plan for you is still active.
Love Nudge: Live Your Creed
Our lives and the way we love should speak more profoundly than our mere beautiful words.
Sermons We See
by Edgar Albert Guest
I’d rather see a sermon than hear one any day;
I’d rather one should walk with me than merely tell the way.
The eye’s a better pupil and more willing than the ear,
Fine counsel is confusing, but example’s always clear;
And the best of all the preachers are the men who live their creeds,
For to see good put in action is what everybody needs.
I soon can learn to do it if you’ll let me see it done;
I can watch your hands in action, but your tongue too fast may run.
And the lecture you deliver may be very wise and true,
But I’d rather get my lessons by observing what you do;
For I might misunderstand you and the high advise you give,
But there’s no misunderstanding how you act and how you live.
When I see a deed of kindness, I am eager to be kind.
When a weaker brother stumbles and a strong man stays behind
Just to see if he can help him, then the wish grows strong in me
To become as big and thoughtful as I know that friend to be.
And all travelers can witness that the best of guides today
Is not the one who tells them, but the one who shows the way.
One good man teaches many, men believe what they behold;
One deed of kindness noticed is worth forty that are told.
Who stands with men of honor learns to hold his honor dear,
For right living speaks a language which to every one is clear.
Though an able speaker charms me with his eloquence, I say,
I’d rather see a sermon than to hear one, any day.

