FOTF-Logo-Stretch-Color.png
Search

Focus on the Family Broadcast

How to Deal With a Controlling Spouse

How to Deal With a Controlling Spouse

In this broadcast, Psychologist Dr. Ron Welch and his wife, Jan, describe how too much control can damage a marriage and family. Their message illustrates how placing your partner's feelings before your own can help you avoid tremendous heartache in your relationship.
Original Air Date: April 1, 2022

Woman #1: He’s stifling me. I…I can’t live this way anymore.

Man #1: No matter what I do, it’s never good enough for her.

Woman #2: He’s a loving husband and a good dad … well as long as we do everything his way.

John Fuller: Hmm, those comments reflect a really significant problem in marriages today. Uh, when a husband or a wife is controlling their spouse in unhealthy ways. Today on Focus on the Family, with Jim Daly, we’re gonna be examining the problems of too much control in marriage and how couples can find better, more godly ways to support each other and interact with each other. Thanks for joining us today, I’m John Fuller.

Jim Daly: Uh, John, I’m sure, uh, people hear about this topic, and they immediately think of that stereotype. You know, the loud, abusive husband, who’s a steam roller in his marriage, uh, maybe always angry, always barking orders, certainly thinking the world revolves around him.

John: Mm.

Jim: And if you’re saying, wow, that’s cutting pretty close to home. I think today’s program will be for you. And to be honest, uh, there’s some truth to that. Um, some men will intimidate their wives through anger, abuse, uh, both verbally and physically. And if that’s your spouse, I wanna urge you to get to a safe place.

John: Mm-hmm.

Jim: We’re talking about nonviolent control today, not where there’s abuse in the relationship in- in a physical form. And we’ve got to make sure that you hear me clearly that, uh, if you’re in that situation, get help, call Focus.

John: Mm-hmm.

Jim: Uh, we’ll get you pointed in a direction you can go. Uh, but today it’ll be the hope of your marriage in the future being better than it is today when your husband is controlling, angry, manipulative.

John: Yeah, and sometimes it’s kind of subtle in the way it plays out. Uh, but it’s felt, and the spouse feels frustrated and powerless and kind of alone in the marriage. So as you clarified Jim, this is not abuse in the traditional sense. It might be, you’re married to a perfectionist who has to have things a certain way. And, uh, there’s a lot of anxiety in that kind of a home. And that’s what we’ll be addressing today.

Jim: That’s exactly right. And we have two great folks joining us, uh, who’ve been here before Dr. Ron Welch and his wife, Jan. Ron is a clinical psychologist who also serves as a professor at Denver Seminary. And Jan is a special needs teacher and tutor. Ron and Jan, let me say welcome back to Focus on the Family.

Jan Welch: Thank you. It’s great to be here.

Jim: You’ve uh, written this great book, The Controlling Husband. Uh, it’s a hard subject though. Um, I know we’re gonna get into your background and I appreciate the vulnerability in which you approach this subject, ’cause it’s to help people. Let me ask you, uh, for the men listening or the wives who are married to men like you were and, uh, that controlling narcissistic temperament, what was going on in your head? I mean, was this a place that you felt through control? you could, uh, feel better about yourself. I mean, I- I’m not even sure how to ask that question. What were, are you feeling? Being controlling?

Dr. Ron Welch: Trying my best to not be out of control, if that makes sense.

Jim: Because you feared it or what?

Dr. Welch: Because I- I grew up in a family where, I mean, my mom, God bless her, she was a wonderful woman, but the glass wasn’t just half full, it was draining rapidly and you could see the bad things coming around the corner, and she taught me to prepare for those. So I became very anxious, very nervous and the control allowed me to try to prevent bad things from happening. Now you gotta understand at this point I wasn’t trusting other people. I didn’t trust God. I needed to make sure things were okay. And so in marriage, in my relationships, in my work, um, early in my life, I was working in the federal prison system. So I was aware of what dominant males look like. And I wasn’t that guy. I wasn’t the guy who enjoyed hurting women. I never have been. And I’ve never hurt Jan physically in any way. But man, I wanted to have things go the way I wanted them to go ’cause I was scared to death of what would happen if I didn’t have control.

Jim: Ron, that’s really fascinating. ‘Cause when you look at the culture today and if what I’m hearing you say is fear of having things in order the way you wanted them, drove you to that kind of compulsive behavior, controlling behavior.

Dr. Welch: Mm-hmm.

Jim: When you look at the amount of fear in the culture today, wow, how many people are moving in that direction, out of a protection modality to want to, or need to control their environment? Do you have [inaudible]?

Dr. Welch: How many areas, how many areas of your life can you not control? Your boss is gonna tell you what to do. The government or the laws and the restrictions in certain areas will tell you what to do.

Jim: Oh, the pandemic.

Dr. Welch: COVID is like, go here, wear a mask here, do that, and then suddenly you’re in this relationship where it’s like, oh she’s scared of me, and she’ll do what I say and then it’s easier. And then suddenly that selfish, internal pride kicks in and maybe some people listening don’t quite understand that or that doesn’t feel like who they are, but there’s a lot of ways people control. Mine was manipulation and intimidation.

Jim: What did that look like? Just so we can get a picture of it.

Dr. Welch: So here’s the kinda situation, when I would ask her what she wanted for dinner, I wasn’t really asking her what she wanted for dinner. I wanted to start a conversation about barbecue so that I could help her understand why barbecue is the right thing to have for dinner.

John: Mm.

Dr. Welch: That sounds pretty manipulative, right? Because-

Jim: It sounds exhausting.

Dr. Welch: It is. And I’m sure it was just terribly frustrating knowing ’cause she knew what I was doing but her story is that she was okay with that and went along with.

Jim: That sounds pretty simplistic though.

Jan: Can I interject in that though?

Jim: Yeah.

Jan: If I chose what I wanted, it would be miserable because you would go there and your partner would be like, ah, this service is horrible, but this food is just… so you start learning if I have a choice, I don’t really have a choice.

Jim: So it disappoints him.

Jan: Because it’s gonna make it. Well, it makes it awful for you because you chose this place and they’re complaining the whole time.

Jim: So-

Jan: Why would you put yourself through that again?

Jim: So that’s guilt.

Jan: Yeah.

Jim: I mean they start loading the guilt. Why did you pick this place? This-

Jan: Exactly.

Jim: … service is terrible.

Jan: So you-

Jim: The food is terrible.

Jan: … you learn after the first time, I’m not gonna choose because if I choose wrong, then I’m gonna,

Jim: Yeah, Jan, I do wanna come back to your, uh, romance, your meeting, Ron. And it was a- a whirlwind experience.

Jan: Exactly.

Jim: I mean, in some ways, were there red flags or did you just blow by them? Describe your courtship and how long it lasted?

Jan: Both. Well, within the first four days we were looking at wedding rings, so on I think the fifth day our engagement ring-

Jim: That’s pretty fast.

Jan: That’s pretty fast, um-

Jim: Did anybody in your sphere say, “Jan, uh, you may wanna slow this down a little bit.”

Jan: Not really because my family was in Texas and we didn’t have cell phones and those kind of communicative things, but we were in a class at DU and, um, we did a project together. Next thing I know we, we’re going out and by the time we came back to that once-a-week class, we were engaged.

John: Huh.

Jim: Yeah. So that was fast.

Jan: That was very fast.

Dr. Welch: To- to be fair, this is an example of one of those warning signs. She had been flirting me, with me during the class. So I said, well, I- I need to get those points back. I was taking down points while she was flirting. And I said, you know, if we go out, that’ll, I’ll get the points back. But I went out to the hallway and asked her for a quarter and she’s like, “Why do you need a quarter?” We stilled quarters in phones back then. And I said, “I gotta call somebody.” If I was gonna go out with her on Thursday, I had to move the girl that I already had to another day. So I was trying to call that girl to move that-

Jim: With her quarter.

Dr. Welch: … with her there, with here quarter.

Jan: With my quarter.

Dr. Welch: So I don’t look real good in that kinda story, but that would be a red flag to say, wait a second, you know, and she looked up at me ’cause I was gonna go to a movie with the other girl and it felt well-

Jan: The line was busy.

Dr. Welch: I never reached her, I never reached her.

Jan: And so we sat down, and I was asking, “Who are you calling?” And it was Tuesday, so we had dollar night back then.

Jim: (laughs).

Jan: And- and he told me and I- I was like, I thought he was a nice guy. And then I look up and I go, “I like movies.” And we’ve never been apart.

Jim: Oh my goodness. I mean, yeah, but you stepped into there you go the-

Jan: Young Sherlock Holmes, thank you very much

Jim: … the fast lane in that relationship.

Dr. Welch: Now the- the flip side to that, that isn’t the good part is that I was so anxious to get married because I knew if she got to know me, there was no chance of her marrying me.

John: Mm.

Jan: And that’s kinda true.

Dr. Welch: And- and I say that with all honesty, I just, I knew as lo- the longer it took, she was gonna see how poor a husband choice I was, and she wouldn’t want me. Um, and so I- I wish there was a different story to that, but I was just so insecure.

Jim: Wow. A- and we’re gonna continue your story obviously. I do wanna get to some of the concepts in the book.

Dr. Welch: Sure.

Jim: Uh, um, we’ll pick up, you know, kind of where you went as a couple. But you, Ron, describe in your book, uh, The Controlling Husband, how men tend to be like wolves.

Jan: (laughs).

Dr. Welch: Mm-hmm.

Jim: Uh, speak to that. I mean, obviously there’s things in nature we can identify with, but what were you getting at?

Dr. Welch: Well, we’re alphas, right? It’s there’s from the day one it’s in tee ball we have competitive teams and people are being like drafted at age 10 in baseball teams, you know? And- and you have violent, strong, aggressive, physical behavior leads you to be the best player in the team or whatever. Uh, in work environments, it’s the person who takes the initiative and does well that gets rewarded with the promotions. In church organizations, if you’re active and you’re out there and you’re getting things done, then you’re seen as a, as a godly man, who’s moving things forward. But that’s the exact opposite of the kind of selfless other focused man, God calls us to be. And so the Wolf is the idea that you’re gonna try to be in charge and in control ’cause that’s what society teaches you, you need to be. Unfortunately, I don’t think our societal structures are bringing men up very well. And honestly, I’m not sure in many ways that the church is not participating in some of those structures.

Jim: Yeah, we wanna explore those things. But um, also you do talk about this idea that some women can also dominate and control and I wanna make sure that people hear that we’re not man bashing. Uh, the point is, here’s the point, there’s no bashing of anything. It’s just the idea of what is crippling you in your marriage. That’s the concept here.

John: Mm-hmm.

Jim: How can you do better? If you claim Christ as your savior-

Dr. Welch: Yeah.

Jim: … we’re, we must do better and we’ve gotta grow every day. And that’s one area reading your book, I’m so proud of the two of you, you didn’t give up on your marriage. You kept fighting, even though it took years. I just think, speak to the idea that some women too can be those manipulators, those controllers. It’s not a- a one gender only area.

Dr. Welch: Sure. It’s personality style, right? I mean it, all of us have different ways that we gain control. Some people do it passively. Some people do it very in the front door, kind of knock down the front door, but there’s a- a number of ways people can control. And in some cases, uh, in my practice over the years, I’ve seen every imaginable type of control from people, withholding sexual interactions, to people um, refusing to talk, giving the silent treatment. There’s lots of ways that you can be the dominant partner, regardless of what gender you are.

Jim: Let me ask this though as a clarifying point. Are there some things that you should control for good reasons and Godly reasons? I mean, I would think that you just, can be a mat that people walk on?

Dr. Welch: You know, there’s that whole learned helplessness concept Jan and I talk about this a lot where I’ve tried rocking the boat and it’s not working.

John: Hmm.

Dr. Welch: So in the areas where you feel, it’s part of the principle and character of who you are, those areas you should control. If you want to be a provider in the household as a man, then you should work your tail off at work and provide and do a really good job as- as God expects you to do. But if that’s gonna mean you’re working 80 hours and you’re not home for your family and you’re never around. And when you are your attitude and your- your countenance is mean and frustrated and tired, then man, you gotta look yourself in the mirror and say, is this job worth it the-

Jim: Yeah.

Dr. Welch: … way I am, that’s not okay.

Jan: When you’re in a controlling relationship, it starts off very slowly, as it moves on, you’re kind of used to it and then you get smaller and smaller and it’s just, oh, okay, this is the way my life is gonna go. It’s not, you know, banging you on the head the, and then taking control, like a cave man. In our relationship, it was gradually.

Jim: Mm-hmm.

Jan: Like, um, giving up friends-

Jim: Mm-hmm.

Jan: … isolation. Those are some of the earlier signs I think-

Jim: Yeah.

Jan: … to be aware of.

John: So did you become that doormat that Jim was talking about?

Jan: Pretty much. Yeah. I mean, it was more fear as well, because if I didn’t do something the right way, you know, he’d get upset and I didn’t want him to get upset. So you try and do everything you can, so he doesn’t get upset.

Jim: Jan, how- how long was that struggle though? How many years did you live-?

Jan: We disagree. Mine is longer than his, (laughs).

Jim: Well, what would, you know, we’re gonna give you the benefit of the doubt. What’s your recollection?

Jan: I would say 16.

Jim: 16 years.

Jan: Or if not a few years more, but-

Jim: All right. So I need to ask that question to some women who might be living with that kinda husband-

John: Yeah.

Jim: … is saying right now they’re maybe even contemplating divorcing. And they’re saying to you, “I can’t believe it. Jan, why would you do that for 16 years?”

Jan: Because they’re not always that way. There’s so many wonderful, great qualities.

Jim: So glimpses of hope.

Jan: Yes, that was my kind of motto. If you had to say anything, hope- hope and faith were my motto. I really believe God put us in this relationship for a reason. And maybe it wasn’t perfect now, but my kids were happy. I’m from a divorced family, that was not an option. And I would’ve sta- I mean, I wasn’t happy for a literally long time, but as long as these people around me were happy, I was willing to, I don’t wanna say sacrifice, but I was okay with that.

Jim: Is there something there Ron, uh, and I, what I mean is clinically when you have a woman who’s willing to absorb a lot. I mean, spiritually, it’s angelic. I mean, you’re taking all of this, but is there a line where a person needs to advocate for themselves and- and not just roll over hoping that you might send a morsel her way?

Dr. Welch: You know, this is, it’s hard to hear her talk because when I think about the number of years that I put her through that it’s my largest regret of anything in my life. But the reality is that she was used to that from some pretty controlling, strong father figure images and interactions. And from my perspective, as a therapist, I look at that and I say, there is going to be a point where you may be the last person to see it because it feels so familiar and even if it’s not healthy-

Jim: Right.

Dr. Welch: … it feels kinda like what you know.

Jim: That’s to your conditioning point a moment ago.

Dr. Welch: It is. And so I think that’s where if I had been living my life, the way God called me to be, I would be that partner that’s trying to help bring her closer to God and build her up. And I would’ve been saying, oh, this is not okay. Look at how she’s feeling. Look how miserable she is. I wasn’t mature enough. And I was still, um, very, very unable to deal with my own needs let alone take care of her.

John: Hmm. Well, if we’re talking about something that’s cutting close to home, then please know that, uh, Focus on the Family is here to help. We have caring Christian counselors. Uh, we’d be very happy to set up a time for you to have a consultation with them. Uh, our number is 800-A-FAMILY or stop by focusonthefamily.com/broadcast.

Jim: Ron, I’m sure some people are still struggling to stand, you know, what are the descriptors for me? ‘Cause you don’t know you’re doing it necessarily. You feel comfortable-

Dr. Welch: Mm-hmm.

Jim: … controlling because it’s reducing the fear level in you.

Dr. Welch: Mm-hmm.

Jim: Um, what were some of those indicators again, uh, that really began you- you began to notice what was true and what was false.

Dr. Welch: I think one of the best indicators is how are decisions made? When something comes up in a discussion, who wins? Is it a win, lose situation or do you really try to find door number three and come up with an awesome compromise? Or is it, yeah, I need to prove my point.

John: Hmm.

Dr. Welch: And anytime a guy or even a woman whoever’s controlling in the relationship feels like I’m trying to win the battle, boy, you gotta check yourself ’cause that’s a huge warning sign. Another is if the partner comes away from the conversation less than, or belittled or depressed or sad, you gotta look at yourself and say, okay, so the sum total of that conversation was my wife feels like I don’t love her. Well, that didn’t work.

Jim: It also, you know, some of these signals can come up in really different ways. There was a humorous story in your book where you talked about moving to Colorado. And I think your son who was really young at the time three or so-

Dr. Welch: Mm-hmm.

Jim: … you had, which I actually thought what a brilliant system, you had all your moving boxes and you put stick- colored stickers for each room, like kitchen, bedroom, living room-

Dr. Welch: Yeah.

Jim: … by the way, way to go. I think that’s great.

Dr. Welch: (laughs).

Jan: They were-

Jim: But your three-year-old son had a different plan for that, right?

Dr. Welch: Mm-hmm.

Jim: What happened to him?

Jan: Yes. It was hilarious. We, um, he actually had two system, so we had double codes.

Jim: Oh double system.

Dr. Welch: (laughs).

Jan: It was a double code. And so my three-year-old was following him and I was watching, and he was taking, he put ’em on, he’d take ’em off. He’d put ’em on himself, he’d put on another box. So,

Jim: And Ron didn’t know he was taking them off.

Dr. Welch: I had no idea.

Jan: No.

Jim: You were intense

Jan: I think the whole house and then he came back through, and he was like, “Why is this color? It’s the wrong color?” And Brevin comes around the corner, dot daddy, (laughs).

Dr. Welch: Would you like another dot.

Jim: Brevin, that’s a great name too by the way.

Jan: Thank you.

Dr. Welch: Brevin

Jan: Britton and Brevin.

Jim: But- but that is also a subtle way to see where you’re at and what’s happening in your life.

Dr. Welch: Think of the opportunity to be a joyful participant in this wonderful family experience.

Jim: How did you respond to him?

Dr. Welch: I was a jerk. I was angry and I was intense, and I was mad at Jan for laughing and why are you so-

Jan: It was hilarious?

Dr. Welch: And- and, of course at that point she was so far into hilarity, she couldn’t stop.

Jan: (laughs).

Dr. Welch: But I- I just, I look back on that I think, and this was not a single episode. This is the kind of way I reacted because it threatened my control. And that’s just sad in retrospect.

Jim: Well, yeah, but these are the signals that need to wake us up-

Dr. Welch: Yeah.

Jim: … to these triggers that are going on. Jan, when you we’re growing up, you had an experience, I think, uh, your parents gave you a doll-

Jan: Oh yes, my-

Jim: … to replace another doll.

Jan: Yes.

Jim: Uh, tell us about it.

Jan: I had, I had a Raggedy Andy, and it was a musical one where you can slide him on your feet and dance with him. Um, and so for my sixth or something birthday, um, I got a bigger Raggedy Andy, and unfortunately, they didn’t tell me they were taking the other one and giving it to a family, which is fine now but at that age you didn’t want that.

Jim: Well, in fact, you looked around to introduce the two of them, right?

Jan: Yes. And he was gone, and which is your best friend when I was a child. And eventually I did find it in my father’s closet and woke my mother up and she said, no, we’re giving them away. So she let me have one more last dance with him.

John: Mm.

Jan: I mean, as a five- to six-year-old, I still remember that.

Jim: Yeah.

Jan: And so I kinda learned really young that someti- things change and you don’t have control.

John: Mm.

Jim: Jan, let me dig in a bit on your side of the story. And I wanna hear the emotion of what you were going through, the rationalization. Help us better understand that ’cause I- I just wanna know your heart better that way, you have such tenderness.

Jan: Thank you.

Jim: And you’re, you know, you’re wanting, uh, and this is so true of women that I have found. Certainly my wife is this person. They’re so concerned about everybody around them.

Jan: Exactly.

Jim: That they’re willing to sacrifice themselves. They’re willing to sacrifice their joy, their happiness for others because they have this innate desire to do so. I think it’s, you know, that mothering instinct, right?

Jan: I totally agree.

Jim: I probably get crit on that but-

Jan: Yeah, probably but it, but-

Jim: Yeah.

Jan: Yeah.

Jim: So how were you managing all that emotion? Am I in a good place because I’m giving of myself, Lord, are you happy with me because I’m acting in a selfless way? There’s a lot of spiritual messiness in this.

Jan: I think so as well, I’ve had kind of a challenging relationship with God because I al- I didn’t feel worthy. And so why would God love me when I don’t feel like I’m lovable? And so I think part of that was by trying to give so much that maybe I would become something lovable and when you’re-

Jim: Wow.

Jan: … in a rela- yeah, it’s kinda like, oh, that doesn’t make sense.

Jim: No that’s that’s powerful, but I bet a lot of women are motivated in that way.

Jan: Yes. You want to help others. And I think that whether you’re a man or a woman, um, and I didn’t understand a lot behind his controlling, but I was so in love with him that if I could do things that would make his life better and therefore, I wouldn’t have to have the fear or the being, ’cause there’s always somebody in a relationship that brings up conflict. I am not that person.

John: Hmm.

Jim: Right.

Jan: I’m burying my head in the sand. I don’t wanna see it. I don’t wanna acknowledge it.

Jim: We can just get along.

Jan: Yeah, and he was more like, if something wasn’t working, he would had no problem bringing up things and I’m like, I don’t wanna deal with this. Um, so I think part of it was trying to avoid those times. If I could just get everything done right the first time. And when you have children, you want them to be happy. So it’s very easy to put your spouse and your children, your community, your church ahead of things. And I was okay with that.

Jim: Yeah, well-

Jan: But now I’m not.

Jim: Yeah, and in some ways-

Jan: So is that it’s not, it’s not a good thing.

Jim: It, it’s the source, it sounds like the source from which that comes from.

Jan: Exactly.

Jim: If it’s low self-esteem-

Jan: Yes.

Jim: … I can become more worthy because I can do these things, that’s unhealthy.

Jan: It’s very unhealthy.

Jim: And if you’re doing it in a healthy fashion, it’s because God calls me to do these things sacrificially.

Jan: Yes.

Jim: And you are then willing and giving out of that, I, that’s a healthier perspective. We are right near the end here and I do want to get into the healing perspective. I mean again, 16 years. O- okay Ron, how long did you think it took? (laughs).

Jan: He’s like four or five, (laughs).

Jim: Yeah, right.

Dr. Welch: No, she’s right. I mean, it took a long, long time because each time I started to think, I remember very clearly a- a point where I saw my son starting to talk to her the way I did and telling her, why weren’t you here at this time? And I gave him the dad talk about, you know, “Don’t talk to your mother that way.” And God just slapped me across the face and said, “Who do you think is teaching these principles to your sons?” And I thought about generational sin. And I thought about, you know, how many, how many further generations of our family are gonna treat women that way? And at that point I started realizing that I was so out of line with where God wanted me to be. But that wasn’t just about my relationship with Jan. It was my relationship with other people, with God. I just wanted so badly to be in the driver’s seat.

Jim: So how did that, you know, you look at that, some people, even in their salvation with Jesus, it’s a moment. They could point to it; they can tell you the time. And then with others, it’s almost like a rolling situation where it was drops of water over a long period of time that, then on one day, boom, uh, it made sense to me, and I gave my life to the Lord. I would think even in the cleansing of our bad habits, it’s very similar. Some people will have an epiphany. I’ve heard of people, alcoholic said just gave it up in one day it was done. And then others who it was, I might say like a rolling epiphany, it took time. And it sounds like that was true for you. And then how did you get up when you stumbled? When you were back into the control saying, “Lord, why am I doing that?” Ho- how do you manage that process to hopefully end up in a better place?

Dr. Welch: You know what’s great about God is He takes your attempts to try and become the man and he wants you to be, and he says, you’re giving it your best shot let me make it a l- easier the next time. Let me remind you how you felt the last time. I would see the look in her eyes that was different, and it wasn’t like she believed me after f- maybe three or four times. It was probably five or six years after those 16 years she talked about where I believe she started thinking I could actually change. That wasn’t very quick. It took a long time for her to believe that I was capable of change.

Jim: And Jan right here at the end, I wanna get that perspective from you. Uh, the skepticism, you may have had, the hope you had the back to skepticism, the hope, women are living in that right now with their husbands.

Jan: Exactly. And it’s now that we’re on the far side of it, you can look back and you can see those attempts, but when you’re still in it, it takes you back to all of the other times that you were in that situation. Um, I wish I could say that I was like, yay and I believe this. And um, now I do, because I s- I’ve seen that, but it’s really hard at the time, (laughs) to be like, oh, it’s gonna work.

Jim: Yeah, stay encouraged.

Jan: Mm-hmm.

Jim: But that was such beautiful thing, Ron, the way you said you could look into Jan’s eyes and her face and see as a barometer.

Dr. Welch: And you don’t forget, you don’t forget the way she used to look at me. And I don’t forget the fear and the sadness and how I reminded her of past experiences. So there’s something about being able to move toward the way God wants you to be that your soul just lifts and it’s like, “Oh, I- I could be that guy.” And then you start realizing it feels so much better to let God handle the control and the fear than trying to deal with it yourself.

Jim: Well, in the biblical mandates in marriage are pretty amazing. And I know that in this culture today, you know, they seem controversial, but actually they’re quite amazing and they work well when both people are functioning-

Dr. Welch: Yeah.

Jim: … in a healthy way. Husbands-

Dr. Welch: It’s the [inaudible] out there, isn’t it?

Jim: … husbands laying their lives down-

Dr. Welch: Yeah

Jim: … for their wives and wives respecting their husbands. I mean, it, it’s the right formula. It’s God’s DNA. It’s his plan in us spiritually. And when we apply it, it works well. And if you’re in that spot where you’re screaming at me right now-

Jan: Mm-hmm.

Jim: … even hearing that, you need to get a hold of us, let’s talk about it. Uh, talk to one of our caring Christian counselors. Um, get the book, uh, by Ron Welch, The Controlling Husband. That’s gonna give you many more or ideas on things you can do. And if you’re the controlling wife, I’m sure you haven’t written that book yet, Ron, but I’m sure those concepts will apply to you. And of course, if you can make a gift to Focus of any amount, we’ll send it as our way of saying thank you. If you can’t afford it, it’s not about that, it’s about asking you to join us in ministering to other people that need help. If you can’t do that right now, we get that and you need the book, let us know we’ll trust others, we’ll cover the cost of it. It’s not about the financial transactions. It’s about giving you help and hope.

John: Yeah, reach out to us today. Our number’s 800, the letter A, and the word FAMILY, 800-232-6459. And uh, we also have a lot of great, uh, details, additional resources and more, uh, about Ron’s book, The Controlling Husband, uh, it’s all at focusonthefamily.com/broadcast.

Jim: Uh, Ron and Jan, again, I wanna say thank you for all that you’ve done. And you know, just exposing this to people, (laughs), it’s- it’s very courageous to do that, to take your weakest elements of your relationship. Thank the Lord behind you, but to still lay those out there on a table for others to see says a lot about your heart, to wanna help others as a counselor, Ron and Jan, certainly as his spouse, (laughs).

Jan: Yes.

Jim: Um, y- you know-

Jan: We’ve walked the walk.

Jim: You walk it all the time and people are gonna talk to you about it, but thank you for that-

John: Mm-hmm.

Jim: … vulnerability. And thank you for putting in the, uh, time to write this great book, The Controlling Husband, which takes a lot of humility, Ron, to lay it out there. So thank you.

Dr. Welch: To be fair I tell my students at Denver Seminary, if I’m gonna ask them to be honest, I’ve gotta share my life and my journey. So hopefully sharing it with you all let’s people learn and grow in their relationship with the Lord.

Jim: Man, you’ve come a long way.

Jan: Yeah.

Dr. Welch: Still on a journey. I consider-

Jim: Well done.

Dr. Welch: … myself a recovering controlling husband.

Jan: (laughs).

Jim: Yeah. That’s fair enough. Great to have you.

Dr. Welch: Thank you so much.

Jan: Thank you guys so much.

John: And thank you for joining us as a listener today. We trust that you’ll have a great weekend ahead with your family and your church family as well. And on Monday, we’ll have some help for engaged couples to prepare for the good, the bad and the sometimes-ugly side of marriage.

Preview:

Lucille Williams: And I had our clothes and I remember looking at these vomited clothes.

Jim: Yeah.

Lucille: Clothes with, I was looking-

Jim: Yeah, you got it, (laughs).

Lucille: … at these clothes with vomit all over them. And at 19 I looked down and I thought, to myself, this is marriage.

End of Preview

Today's Guests

The Controlling Husband Book Cover

The Controlling Husband: What Every Woman Needs To Know

Receive the book The Controlling Husband for your donation of any amount!

Recent Episodes

Focus on the Family Broadcast logo

Helping Your Child Develop Resilience (Part 2 of 2)

Dr. Kathy Koch explores the importance of resilience in our lives and how we can nurture that trait in our children. As a parent, you are the key to your child’s resilience! Through intentional modeling, ongoing conversation and observation, and encouragement, you can help them learn to bounce back from struggles, get unstuck, and move forward with courage and confidence. (Part 2 of 2)

Focus on the Family Broadcast logo

Helping Your Child Develop Resilience (Part 1 of 2)

Dr. Kathy Koch explores the importance of resilience in our lives and how we can nurture that trait in our children. As a parent, you are the key to your child’s resilience! Through intentional modeling, ongoing conversation and observation, and encouragement, you can help them learn to bounce back from struggles, get unstuck, and move forward with courage and confidence. (Part 1 of 2)

Focus on the Family Broadcast logo

Trusting God As a Family Through Adversity

Rebecca St. James, and Joel and Luke Smallbone from the band, For King & Country, share how God provided for them in their time of need through family prayer and the support of other believers. It’s an inspiring story of faith, pointing to their new movie, Unsung Hero, releasing in theatres on April 26.

You May Also Like

Focus on the Family Broadcast logo

A Legacy of Music and Trusting the Lord

Larnelle Harris shares stories about how God redeemed the dysfunctional past of his parents, the many African-American teachers who sacrificed their time and energy to give young men like himself a better future, and how his faithfulness to godly principles gave him greater opportunities and career success than anything else.

Focus on the Family Broadcast logo

Accepting Your Imperfect Life

Amy Carroll shares how her perfectionism led to her being discontent in her marriage for over a decade, how she learned to find value in who Christ is, not in what she does, and practical ways everyone can accept the messiness of marriage and of life.