FOTF-Logo-Stretch-Color.png
Search

11 Characteristics of Married Roommates

Share:
Bored Couple in Bed

Catch all the foxes, those little foxes, before they ruin the vineyard of love, for the grapevines are blossoming! (Song of Solomon 2:15, NLT).

What are married roommates? The phrase “married roommates” can look very different depending on the couple. Extensive research was done to understand the subtle differences to help couples pinpoint what is really going on in their relationship and to identify roommate-like behaviors—the little foxes—that have found their way (or could find their way) into their vineyard of love.

  1. Exhausted: You’re too tired, sleep-deprived or burned-out—you have nothing to give or energy to connect.
  • Busy: Hectic schedules and demanding responsibilities leave little time for each other.
  • Business-Like Relationship: Most of your communication is around “administrating” your marriage—talking about to-do lists, schedules, kids, finances, etc.
  • Gentle Neglect: You or your marriage is constantly taking a back seat to the cell phone, social media, jobs, kids, friends, housework, hobbies, etc.
  • Disengaged (separate lives): Your marriage feels like two individuals going in separate directions.
  • Complacency: The romantic spark has faded, and the marriage feels predictable—boring even.
  • Spiritually Disconnected: You don’t connect together at a deep spiritual level.
  • Conflict Avoidance: You or your spouse avoid difficult conversations or sweep negative issues under the rug.
  • Sexlessness: 15 to 20 percent of married couples report that sex is routine, dutiful, infrequent or non-existent.
  • Feeling Unsafe: Your marriage is not a safe haven where you feel unconditionally accepted and loved.
  • Visionless: You don’t have a vision of how you will use your “oneness” to serve God and bless others.

Roommate marriages are lonely. Loneliness is in stark contrast to God’s design for marriage. God created us as relational beings. We long for connection and intimacy—to know and be known by another at the deepest level. It goes against our heart’s desire to feel alone or isolated. As loneliness spreads, divorce enters the picture. Reconnect with your spouse and journey from married roommates to soulmates.

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

Take the Focus Marriage AssessmentDiscover your strengths

Reconnected: The Digital ExperienceA 7-week study for church groups and couples

Learn how to enjoy shared activitiesThree ways

Dynamic CTA Template Below

Share:

About the Author

Read More About:

You May Also Like

A church group of four couples and a leader sit on a couch in discussion. A thriving marriage ministry is the key to healthy churches and healthy marriages.
Biblical Marriage

5 Ways Marriage Ministry Builds Healthy Churches and Marriages

By prioritizing marriage ministry, churches can build resilient and vibrant congregations that reflect the transformative power of faith, commitment, and community. As we invest in the well-being of marriages, we nurture families and cultivate a flourishing church community as a beacon of hope and love.

Child holding bowl repaired by kintsugi
Encourage Children

Beauty in the Brokenness: How God Restores Our Hearts

Kintsugi is the art of repairing something that has been broken with gold, with the understanding that the object is more beautiful because it has been broken. Like the art of kintsugi, God repairs the brokenness in our lives and makes us more beautiful through the process.

A man comforts his sad wife. Remember, you don't need to deal with depression on your own.
Depression

Dealing With Depression

Don’t get tangled up in the notion that depression is a sin. Remember, you don’t need to deal with depression on your own.