Marital APGAR Part 3

Every marriage is different and contains its own nuances.  If your marriage were a newborn baby, what would its APGAR score be?  For those of you who don’t know, the APGAR score is what a doctor looks at one minute and five minutes after a baby is born.  They check for five things:  activity, pulse, grimace, appearance and respiration. I have adjusted the five categories tested in the APGAR chart to reflect what we do and how we respond to one another in our individual marriages.

Today’s topic is about GRIMACE. For the sake of BMWK, this category covers whether or not you and your spouse have the ability to fight fair with one another. Every married couple encounters disagreements and heated arguments. The key is how you, as a couple, deal with them. See the chart below: (Click the image to enlarge)

Prior to going into too many details, let me just say that if you feel like your marriage is in the 0 points category, please seek counsel. If there is physical or emotional abuse, you also need to seriously consider getting to a safe place and employing some tough love to ensure that your individual life is not in jeopardy.

My husband and I have definitely been in the 0 points category. Thankfully, we did not deal with physical abuse, but we both drained one another’s emotional bank accounts during our first 18 months of marriage. He was a ring bearer, and I was a flower girl, and neither of us wanted to take the adult route when we engaged in disagreements. We would run to our pastors, whom we considered spiritual parents, and tattle on one another, refusing to take the time to understand each other’s point of view.

Now we’re at the point where we realize how counterproductive that childishness is to a healthy marriage. We also do not have a dysfunctional marriage as part of our “Activity” category in our marital vision. If we don’t commit to keeping the lines of communication open, even in disagreement, we are apt to raise children that do not know how to communicate when they are angry, either.

We have learned to expose any adversarial attitudes that could possibly hinder our marriage. Our pastors gave us an exercise that we engage in quite often. We sit down with one another periodically, and say, “Let me tell you what the devil is trying to tell me in this situation.” Then we proceed with revealing every thought in our minds that either makes us feel belittled, or feel like we are purposely being hurt by one another, or any other kind of negativity that could potentially blow up in our faces down the line. Then we sit down and discuss it calmly, being transparent and vulnerable with one another so we can have a full understanding of one another’s viewpoints.

As a result, we have come to a score of 2 points in this category. Once again, by the grace of God, we have learned how to communicate our disagreements without hitting one another below the belt.

Do you fight fair in your marriage? Has it always been that way? What kinds of tools to you and your spouse use in your attempts to fight fair?

God bless!

~ Harriet

Harriet is a hilariously joyful married woman who resides in northeast Louisiana with her husband who is a restaurant manager. She works for a local University and along with her husband is the proud parent of a 3 year old son and a 10 year old stepson (who lives in NC).


About the author

Lamar and Ronnie Tyler are the creators of the award-winning blog BlackandMarriedWithKids.com . They also are behind the Amazon.com bestselling DVDs Happily Ever After: A Positive Image of Black Marriage, You Saved Me and Men Ain’t Boys that explores manhood in the African American community. The Tylers are also the proud parents of four children.



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  • King James

    What’s the frequency of couples being 2 on some things and lower on other things… consistently?

    I personally think the ‘agree to disagree’ mentality that most have should be saved for coworkers, associates, some friends, family.. whatever.

    while I DO understand that we both won’t feel exactly the SAME way about EVERYTHING. That doesn’t mean we are disagreeing. Seriously, having to ‘agree to disagree’ is something I hardly want to do with a SPOUSE. I’m thinking that she doesn’t have to make cookies and cream her fav ice cream.. nor do I have to LOVE watching HGTV… BUT… on whether we use the belt on the kids, let mama come stay, iron at night or in the morning, etc… are things that we should be together on.

    Don’t take it out of context folks… there’s just something funny about it all for me. Sorry to get off topic. :-)

  • King James

    also… in the 2 section, there’s the point of discussing all issues.

    I assume that NOT fully discussing issues would fall inside the grimace, heh? it can be seen as not being fair and respectful.

    Great post H!

    I love this part,,
    “We have learned to expose any adversarial attitudes that could possibly hinder our marriage. Our pastors gave us an exercise that we engage in quite often. We sit down with one another periodically, and say, “Let me tell you what the devil is trying to tell me in this situation.” Then we proceed with revealing every thought in our minds that either makes us feel belittled, or feel like we are purposely being hurt by one another, or any other kind of negativity that could potentially blow up in our faces down the line. Then we sit down and discuss it calmly, being transparent and vulnerable with one another so we can have a full understanding of one another’s viewpoints.”

  • Harriet

    @ KJ

    “What’s the frequency of couples being 2 on some things and lower on other things… consistently?”

    I really don’t know. Like I said earlier, this is not a scientific study. I created this strictly for the BMWK community, so I wonder what everyone else’s take on it is. In terms of couples that have actually answered the question (just my husband and I), then 100% of couples have been 2 in some areas and lower in other areas consistently. LOL

  • Harriet

    @ KJ

    “Seriously, having to ‘agree to disagree’ is something I hardly want to do with a SPOUSE. I’m thinking that she doesn’t have to make cookies and cream her fav ice cream.. nor do I have to LOVE watching HGTV… BUT… on whether we use the belt on the kids, let mama come stay, iron at night or in the morning, etc… are things that we should be together on. ”

    Awesome point, and I agree wholeheartedly. My husband and I don’t fuss about what movie we decide to go see. But let me give you an example of what I’m talking about. I feel pretty exhausted in this particular season in my marriage. A “season” could be a few days, months or years, but basicalyl I’m talking about the ebb and flow of what we deal with daily on a consistent basis.

    A new season started for us with our son going to a private school, and my husband being transferred to a restaurant a little further away than the one he’d been working at for three months. In the meantime, with only one vehicle (by choice, by the way), I’ve got to be creative in fixing lunches, getting folks dressed, getting up at 2 or 3 am to drive 15 more minutes to pick up from work, going to work myself and being productive…it’s a lot, and at times, I feel like I’m not getting any help from my husband.

    We both agree that we have to work. We both agree that right now, one car is all we can handle, unless the Lord gives us a car (which is not beyond the realm of possiblity). We both agree that our son needs to be in a good, loving, structured environment around other kids. Where we have to agree to disagree and exercise flexibility is in the tasks that comprise getting all those agreements fulfilled. It’s a true balancing act, and I have to differentiate between settling for doing it all (which I won’t), and understanding where my husband is coming from in terms of him needing his rest.

  • King James

    Thanks.. I guess I mean what’s ur opinion and is it normal… to be 2 in some areas and then 0 in others. Thanks!

  • King James

    Thanks.. on your agree to disagree example.. it doesn’t make me feel any differently. Actually, it doesn’t sit well with me at all as far as making sense.

    But hey, I suspect b/c I don’t know all of the situations and history. No worries. Thanks!

  • Christina

    Hi Harriet,
    I guess I would say my husband and I have moved from 0 to 1 and 2 in some areas. I have found depending on the issue agreeing to disagree is good. We don’t have to agree on everything. But some things we have to stand somewhere. I have learn to listen and then respond. I learn even though my husband will make the final decision- it is now off my shoulders. Some things seem serious at the moment eventually becomes not that serious after all has been said and done. Sometimes when we let go of our way and reasoning it seems to work out. My husband and I are about as opposite you can get. We had to learn how we compliment each other. He doesn’t have to change who he is and I do not have change who I am. But we do have to change the way we do things because it only works if we were by ourselves. As far reaching agreements and never following thru, now that drives me crazy, but I learn to listen to him and just let him do his thing. As long as he does something. Things concerning people lives don’t just get done hanging without action.

  • Anna

    I think it is completly ok to agree to disagree. I wouldn’t want a replica of me in a spouse. That would be so boring. I already debate with myself in my mind. LOL. Nice to debate with a live person.
    @ Harriet. I suppose if I look up the phrase “balancing act” there would be a pic of you. I got exhaused just reading your daily routine. We do what we do for our family. My motto has always been “the investment you put in is the return you get back”. I don’t care what anyone says or how much money the man makes the woman has and will always be the backbone of her family.