“What does a woman want?” Sigmund Freud famously asked.
In many ways, it’s a knuckleheaded question. With almost 4 billion females on the planet, we can assume that women want any number of things. Surely most of them desire what the great bulk of humanity wants: respect, love, joy, liberty, and so on. Those universal hopes aside, we might surmise that Freud’s question would elicit 4 billion answers.
So let’s narrow down the question. Let’s ask instead: “What do wives want from their husbands?”
Nope—that’s still too broad. With nearly 70 million married women in the United States alone, we can imagine that wives might want everything ranging from a husband who brings home a higher paycheck to a guy who doesn’t leave his clothing strewn all over the floor.
Let’s try a more specific approach. Let’s take a different angle and ask: What might men do to please their wives and so improve their marriages? How can they better love and care for their spouse?
Listening
A chief complaint from some women is, “He doesn’t hear a thing I say,” and she may well be right. “Familiarity breeds contempt” is an old saying with which I’ve never agreed, but certainly familiarity can breed indifference.Listening is a major component of any conversation, and even casual conversation is an important part of marriage. If your wife is telling you about the horrendous day she had at work—the boss was sick, the phone never stopped ringing—listen and respond to her rather than nodding while wondering if the weather will allow you to play golf on Saturday.
Touch
Taking a walk? Hold her hand. Passing her in the kitchen? Pause and give her a hug. Watching a movie together on the sofa? Put your arm around her shoulder.Quoting anthropologist Helen Fisher, Friedman writes, “‘We’ve evolved all kinds of brain mechanisms to fall madly in love and stay in love,’ she says, and touch is high among them.”
Love Letters
Who doesn’t feel appreciated when receiving a gift, especially an unexpected one?Flowers, chocolate, and other treats are popular emblems of love given by men to women and are certainly worthy gifts, but an even better one can be a card or a handwritten note telling your spouse how much and why you love her. Skip the flowery language and put your feelings into your own words. Put the note in a conspicuous place or on the bedroom pillow when you leave the house.
Even better, you could dig out an envelope and a stamp and mail it to her. Few of us receive personal letters in the mailbox in this age of email. Post this out-of-season Valentine, and you’ll make her day.
Children
In the last month, two moms have independently praised their husbands for helping with the kids as soon as they enter the front door after work. To paraphrase one of them, her husband leaves the house as a contractor and comes home as a dad.Inclusion
Marriage can’t be a democracy, but it’s a partnership. Sometimes we men find ourselves on the opposite side of a fence—or even a chasm—from our wives. Our employer wants to give us a promotion and a raise, but accepting those honors involves moving to Dallas. Our wife is perfectly happy with her life in Savannah, her childhood home where she has a network of family and close friends.In this situation, real difficulties and resentments can arise. And here’s where we must listen carefully to her, taking a rational approach but also recognizing that human beings aren’t Mr. Spock from “Star Trek,” but creatures driven by emotions.