Dear Cordbuff,
I just spent the last several minutes reading this entire thread so I fully understood all the posts at the end and what has transpired since your original post on Sunday, November 28, 2010. There were several things that came to mind and seem to be real concerns throughout these last few years.
One thing I noticed was what you said on your Monday, August 26, 2013 post, and I quote,
“I did not want to come back to this thread but after two years the new wife over the last few months has become a different person and is leaving me. She was everything that I hoped she would be, a good homemaker and a helpmate at my business. I had some health issues earlier this year that will make it difficult if not impossible for my business to survive without her. My only hope now is to continue on and hope that god will send me another wife to help. Anyone that is single and would like to talk I would love to talk to. If you are wondering I had a stroke related to stress and trying to handle the customers at work may trigger another one. Since she was my wife she was paid less since it included part of the house. We can’t afford a fully paid employee.”
1. First question that came to my mind was your point that over the last few months she had become a different person. What did she say the reasons were that she had changed and was leaving?
2. You said she was everything that you had hoped she would be; namely, a good homemaker and a helpmate at your business. Was that really what your hopes were for your relationship? That she would be a good homemaker and helpmate at your business? What about her loving you and your family? What about your loving her? What about an intimate bonding love between you and her sisterwife and the kids? Did those things matter to you or was her performance to accommodate your “needs” the foremost value expressed to her by you? That would be very disheartening to any woman…that she was a good asset and commodity to suit your needs.
3. You also said that you had health issues and that it would make it difficult, if not impossible for your business to survive without her. You say that you had a stroke related to the stress and that you trying to handle the customer load without her could possibly trigger another one. This comment is like a giant red flag. Laying that kind of pressure on a woman…to hold up your end of the business due to illness and that her leaving could cause you another stroke is pure and simple manipulation on your part, in my opinion. Causing her to carry that type of burden; namely, the financial responsibility and the condition of your health is way, way too much pressure to put on anyone, especially a relatively newly married second wife. She would feel damned if she did and damned if she didn’t. Damned if she continued to live under the stressful demands and obligations you were posing on her and damned if she didn’t and chose to leave for her own health and well being but having to live with the knowledge that doing so could kill you. I am sure it looked to her like there was no light at the end of the tunnel and she would have to carry her end as well as major parts of yours to survive without catastrophe. And you wonder why she “changed” the last four months and left? I don’t.
4. In the midst of all that, you then come to the conclusion your only hope is “to continue on and hope that god will send me another wife to help,” followed by an advertisement for a replacement wife by stating, “Anyone that is single and would like to talk I would love to talk to.” That just seriously took me back in shock. I was thinking, “Oh boy, where do I sign up? Da!…Not a chance in hell.” I’m thinking the woman was smart to have bailed as soon as she did before she had a nervous breakdown or stroke from the stress herself!
5. The last comment you made that she was paid less because she was your wife “since that included part of the house” was a “he’s got to be kidding, right?” So here you have this new wife with children carrying the burden of your business pressures and your health pressures and the household pressures AND you consider her low wages justifiable because you’re their housing is considered part wages? What the heck? Who is the actual provider here? Who was taking care of whom? What security did you freely give her? Housing obviously had strings attached and so did her financial security. Did she ever feel loved and taken care of by you just because you loved her? Or truth be told, did you even love her or did you just need her skills and what she could offer you. I really feel sorry for this woman and her daughter. It appears to me that you mainly used her to fulfill what you wanted and needed and was a pretty selfish relationship. From what you have said, I do not necessarily believe that God arranged this marriage, because I do not believe the Lord’s heart was for her to be treated the way she was by you. That, of course, is my personal opinion based on what you wrote. Maybe there is more to the story, but you failed to indicate a redeeming quality that I can see so far.
Dear Brother Cordbuff, please understand that I understand your plight in needing to take care of your family’s needs financially…but at what cost? In my opinion, if you do love this woman and want her back into your family, I would start by a serious self-examination of what you consider your “love” for her to actually be. It appears to be all about what you need, what you want, and how to feed your existing family and succeed in what appears to be a downward spiraling business. Have you even taken the time to understand the position you put this woman in by placing such heavy responsibilities upon her…taking your God-ordained responsibilities to provide for your first family AND her and her daughter and placing the results of failure ultimately on her shoulders? What kind of love is that? Do you believe that is the heart and love of her Heavenly Father for her to carry what should be your first and foremost responsibility? I think that stress and fear has blinded you to the realities of the situation. Have you considered that maybe the Lord wants to remove that business from you and your family so you are not all living under that extreme pressure all the time? God is well able, like Samuel and others said, to open new doors and provide new avenues of income that do not constantly suck the life out of you and your family. I’m sure you have invested a lot into salvaging your business, but it does not appear to have changed a whole lot. The only upswing you saw was because your new wife put her skill and time into it and lessened the burden on you. But even then, you still had a stroke, so seriously, where does that leave you?
I would strongly suggest you get before the Lord and repent for your choosing to control the situation the way you have and lay it all at His feet. I would give it all to Him and tell Him you want only HIS will in your life, love, and business and not that your will be done…only His…and then be willing to follow through with what He does with it all. I realize you must think that everything you have done was out of sacrifice for your family’s needs, but the fruit is just not there from what I can see. Maybe you will lose the business and the house, but know that if that is the will of the Lord, He will make a way for you to provide for and house your family if you continue to seek His will and your relationship with Him is first and foremost. His love and direction for our lives does not always look anything remotely resembling what we thought it should look like, but God’s divine plans rarely do. I pray that you can find a peace in walking a new walk of blind faith in Him and Him alone. “Lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him and he will make your paths straight.” Give Him the chance to restore all that the canker worm has obviously worked overtime in destroying in your life and relationships. I pray that your new wife returns to your family; that is, of course, if it was His will for her to be there in the first place. Laying her and your step daughter down at His feet is the most precious symbol of love you can do for them, because He will never leave or forsake them. If the Lord so chooses to reconcile her back to you, please love her selflessly without her performance and carrying your burdens being an agenda. Please love her for who she is not what she can do for you. You may find that the results of that one thing could be one of the biggest and most precious experiences of your life. A woman who knows she is loved unconditionally loves back in measures that are hard to even put in words. I would love for you, her, and the whole family to experience a bond between you all that is unbreakable and divinely inspirited.
In Christ’s love,
Deborah