Chapter One
The Hidden Value
of a Man
* * *
For the last two decades, we've been sensing a
strange uneasiness among men everywhere. What we see
happening is much like what we witnessed in the early
1990s during Operations Desert Shield and Desert
Storm. When the buildup of troops began and then the
bullets started flying, our country saw an incredible happening
on the home front. It was as if pent-up patriotism
had been held in check so long that the conflict caused an
explosion of flags, bumper stickers, parades, and speeches,
all saying, "We're proud of our men and women overseas,
and we're proud to be Americans again."
It seemed as if the nation was waiting for something,
some time, when the wounds of the Vietnam War could
be healed and our country brought back together. And
that's just what happened. In hundreds of cities small
and large, parade routes were lined with cheering people
welcoming home the troops from Saudi Arabia. But the
Vietnam vets marching by got the loudest and the
longest (and much-deserved) rounds of applause.
In the same way, we've sensed a pent-up frustration
on the part of men that has also turned into an explosion.
We've worked with couples and families, men and
women, for more than a quarter of a century now. And
never have we seen such a nationwide, major explosion,
which we first noted in the 1990s and has reverberated
well into the 21st century. It's as if men are awakening
from their own personal Vietnam experience of having
been browbeaten and ridiculed by the media, and some
in the women's movement, for just being men. For more
than 50 years, men have been pictured by cartoon characters
and dinner speakers as dense, unromantic, uncommunicative,
uncaring, and on and on. But today, all
over the country, men are coming out of the woodwork
to stand up and challenge that image.
This other "Desert Storm" was largely ignored by
the press, but it has moved man-to-man across the country,
galvanizing men as we've never seen before.
A late-night call from a man in his fifties typifies
what we're hearing everywhere we travel. His story, while
admittedly picturing an extreme, captures the heart of
this book. And it reminds us that a greater day is coming
for the family.
We received the call when we were live on a
national, one-hour radio talk show. With only moments
left in the program, the announcer said, "Let's try to
squeeze in one more call."
The caller said, "Remember me, Gary? This is J.D."
J.D.? We were staring at each other with blank looks
on our faces, at a loss to remember who J.D. was.
Then he said, "Gary, I'm the guy from Waco you
talked to 13 years ago about his wife leaving him."
To be honest, the first thought that raced through
my (Gary's) mind was, Oh, no! We're going to finish this
program with this man saying, "All that advice you gave me
never worked!" But that's not what happened.
For a short time over the radio, and then in an
extended conversation off the air, we got to hear the
heartwarming story of a man who had incredible value
and power in his home-just like every husband and
father-yet never realized it until it was almost too late.
J.D.'s story was miraculous in another way as well.
Many years ago, I (Gary) began my first book by telling
his story without knowing how it would end. But what he
revealed that night on the phone was beyond what I'd
hoped for or even thought possible. As we listened in joy
and tears to "the rest of the story," we stared at each other
and thought, We're in the middle of writing this book,
spending long hours trying to capture in the right words the
most important principles we've ever shared with men. And
suddenly here's J.D.'s story, almost a complete overview of our
entire book!
The lifelong damage J.D. had been doing to his wife
and children had somehow escaped his attention. He
often felt unneeded by them. But most of all, he was
completely unaware that two tremendously powerful
sources of strength were within him-both could build
or weaken a loving home.
What happened to J.D. is one man's story, but it illustrates
crucial issues all of us men need to look at. And it
begins where I (Gary) first met him-at the end of the road.
Just an "Average" Man
Like hundreds of men I've talked to since, J.D. had no
idea an earthquake was coming. Sure, he had felt a few
tremors and emotional aftershocks. But in his mind, his
world seemed solid and secure.
At work, he was on the fast track: making decisions;
moving up the ladder; having to get tough at times.
That's the way he was at home, too: demanding; tough;
insensitive; no different from most men on his block.
His wife would ask him to stop and pick up a can of
coffee on his way home from work, and he'd thunder at
her, "Why are you always running out of coffee!" He
knew he wasn't the most sensitive person, but at least he
was there! He was providing for her financially in a way
he felt she ought to appreciate, and he figured that
should more than make up for everything else.
He knew how to be strong. He knew how to "rule
the roost." What he didn't know was that by failing to
develop a side of himself that he rarely tapped into, he
was setting himself up for a personal day of destruction.
Like many men, J.D. was blind to the pressures
building in his wife-all under the surface-that finally
blew up dramatically. Of all the things that have happened
to him before or since, nothing shook every part
of his world like the day she served him with divorce
papers and moved out.
In that first marriage book I wrote, I told how J.D.'s
experience pictured the end of the story for some men-a
jolting wake-up call that brings his family life crashing
down around him, and emotional aftershocks that affect
his life, his health and business, and what's left of his
family, for years to come. But J.D. discovered something
else that actually led to a new beginning: a way to build
up his wife and guidelines that would restore his family
and marriage-even his relationships at work-to a
place he never thought possible.
What J.D. was to learn and put into regular practice
forms the basis of this book. What did he learn? The
same types of things you'll discover:
Why and how men become so powerful and
valuable to their families
How men are given two sources of power early in
life, one more destructive than the other, but
both with tremendous impact
How to discover the secret to building a great
sense of teamwork between husband and wife
How to develop great friendships with other
married couples that will "hold up our arms"
during any times of marital difficulty
How through just one phone call to a particular
type of coach, we can join the ranks of the wise
and see nearly instant improvement in our
relationships
How to find genuine, lasting motivation to do
what we already know is right in our homes, and
to follow through on those changes until success
is reached
How to overcome five major roadblocks to building
solid relationships
We can hardly wait for you to finish this book and
join with us and the thousands of other men around our
country and beyond who are tired of the state of the
family-men who yearn for a new day of strength for
their marriages and families in the '90s and on into the
21st century.
J.D. is one of those thousands. And for him,
"school" began at a sleepy, country courthouse in Waco,
Texas. I went with him to the divorce proceedings,
where his last ray of hope seemed to end.
Hitting Bottom ...
and Finding the Bottom Solid
"She's asking for too much money!" J.D. told me in
shock. We were sitting on a well-worn wooden bench
outside Courtroom C. As we talked, I realized the counsel
I was giving him would have turned his lawyer's hair
white.
We sat in the hall mulling over his soon-to-be ex-wife's
monetary request as part of the divorce settlement.
I knew his reaction wasn't based on finances. J.D. was on
his way up the ladder toward the top of a large company
and had far more than she was requesting in the bank. It
was a question of control and breaking the emotional
stranglehold he had placed around her neck for years.
"That's not the issue," I told him. "You're going to
get the money back anyway when you two get back
together. So why not take this opportunity to show her
you really value her and give her double what she's asking
for!"
I'll never forget his look. "Double!" he growled.
I knew I was taking a risk. But I had also been counseling
for years and had interviewed scores of men and
women across the country who had been in J.D.'s shoes.
And I knew this man's wife. His smothering, crippling,
demeaning control had finally snuffed out any flame of
feeling she had for him. But as yet, there wasn't another
man who had lit a torch in her heart. It would take a lot
of work to rekindle the dying embers, more work than
he ever imagined. But he was desperate and willing to do
anything it took to try to win her back.
J.D. had let her have it for 28 years. But now, in a
monumental act of the will, he finally let her have her
way for once-and the money. In fact, he ended up giving
her the entire checkbook that held their savings and
saying, "Honey, you use this for you and the kids. I trust
you. And I know you'll use it wisely." (To his amazement,
she never took advantage of that generosity.)
A man who never, to his remembrance, cried in
public stood with tears streaming down his face. All J.D.
could do was watch as Judge Mormino lifted his gavel
and pounded out the death sentence on a marriage J.D.
had surely killed. "Divorce granted."
Before his wife walked out, J.D. had held all the
power cards in their relationship: He called every game.
Dealt out every decision. Changed any rule he wanted
just so long as he won his way. But the day she quit playing
the game and left, his life folded, too.
Suddenly he couldn't rely on his verbal strength to
bully and control her. He no longer had a voice in her
life. And like an East Berliner, once she escaped from
those walls of emotional bondage and first tasted freedom,
she swore on her life that she would never be dominated
by him again.
J.D. had hit rock bottom. But after the divorce, in
those few breakfasts I had with him before we moved, I
gave him a glimpse of a different kind of power. And
when he joined with a small group in Waco (led by Ken
Nair, a close friend, and Scott Baird, another close friend
who was one of our national board members), he really
came to understand this different type of power that can
build up relationships instead of breaking them down. It
can also open closed doors ... even padlocked ones.
It took J.D. 28 years to lose his wife. But once he
put the principles he learned into practice, it took only 8
months to win her back. In front of the same judge, in
the same courtroom where everything had ended, they
were remarried and began life together again. And this
time, they built a life worth living for both of them. In
fact, their relationship became so strong that they
stopped counting their wedding anniversaries from the
first year they were married and started counting from
the date of their remarriage.
For 12 years, J.D. loved and cared for his wife, drawing
on a type of power he had never even considered
before. They reunited on November 16, 1978. And by
his account, they experienced more happiness and fulfillment
than they ever thought possible until November
16, 1991, when at last she left his arms for the strong
arms of her heavenly Father.
In this book, we want to introduce you to that rare
type of value and power J.D. discovered. Not the kind of
power that's normally found in the workshop or office,
but a power every husband and father already has that is
absolutely necessary if he's to win and hold the hearts of
his loved ones. It's the kind of power that can turn around
a broken home and family and, in time, a broken world.
For the many men whose relationships are far from
being on the rocks, what you find here are clear charts
pointing out the fast currents and hidden rocks in life's
river, charts that can help to keep you and your family in
safe waters.
You may not be a "reader"-many men aren't. But if
you are a man, you need to read this book. For in it you'll
gain a clear vision of how you can use your natural power
for good. You'll also discover how to draw up a specific
plan with your wife to raise your relationship with her to
greater heights. Further, you'll come to understand why
it's so difficult for most of us men to take on the task of
building strong marriages and families, as well as how to
overcome those mile-high roadblocks.
Every man has tremendous value. It's hidden at
times, perhaps, but always there-a worth based on a
type of power each man has within his grasp at home
every day. In fact, during the writing of this book, we
realized more completely just how influential the average
man is. When you discover how to use this age-old
power, you'll see a closeness and fulfillment in your marriage
and family that you wouldn't have believed possible.
And this power to build and bless others is
captured in the reflection of a sword.
(Continues...)