What’s your love language?
Love-languages are the ways in which we express and receive love. If you don’t yet know yours, I can recommend taking this fun quiz to find out! There are five love-languages, according to Gary Chapman:
- quality time,
- words of affirmation,
- gift-giving,
- physical touch and
- acts of service.
These are all ways in which we can express love for others, but we will have a preference for one or two of these ‘languages’ over the others. The language that we most naturally express love for others is usually the language that we also receive love from others.
When my husband and I first discovered this concept, we had a real ‘aha!’ moment. In my family, we had always expressed love for each other through quality time and words of affirmation. In Jon’s family, they expressed love for each other not through words but acts of service – anticipating the other’s need and meeting it.
Suddenly we understood why I was always wanting to go to restaurants and talk about feelings, and Jon was always asking me to do the ironing and make cups of tea for him. I started making cups of tea for him gladly, and Jon took me out to restaurants. All was happy: we were communicating love to one another in the language that the other person could receive it.
But then I got ill, and we had to learn to adapt. In the worst stages of the illness, I can’t really talk or think at all, or even understand what someone else is saying to me and I have to spend much of my time sleeping or resting. I am now rarely well enough to go out to a restaurant and chat. (Au revoir to the way we did quality time.)
Acts of service are now very tricky as well – I can’t even make cups of tea for Jon, and he has to do everything around the house for me. So bang goes ‘acts of service’ as a way of me communicating love to Jon.
Over the past few years, as we have slowly adapted to my illness, we have both had to learn new love languages. They are not our native tongue, but there is pleasure as well as hard work in learning new ways to love.
Sometimes we mourn for the loss of the long walks together, sharing our heart as we enjoyed the countryside, but now we talk art and photography and discuss the different ways we see the world. I have surrendered some of my feisty independence and learned to lean on Jon and love him for the ways in which he selflessly and silently serves. I have been helpless: I have needed him to carry me upstairs each day, to cook and clean, to wake the baby in the morning. I see the washing up done and I now listen in and hear his lovesong, sweet and clear.
I can no longer communicate with Jon in his preferred love-language of acts of service, but I can sit with him as he washes up and I can offer him these shy words of tribute; and that quality time, these words of affirmation can become a lovesong too.
And this makes me wonder, too, about my relationship with God. I have written here and here about my recent frustration in my relationship with God.
I know that my life is hidden with Christ in God, that my salvation is sure because of His death, that I am declared righteous and forgiven in His sight because og what He has done. I know this. But sometimes you can know that your husband loves you and still need to feel it. I am still married to Jesus, but I have not taken the trouble to adapt my love languages along with my illness.
The ways that I am accustomed to expressing and receiving love from God:
- in-depth Bible study and theological lectures,
- Christian conferences with engaging talks,
- worshipping with modern songs with many other Christians,
- playing the piano and singing worship songs at home,
- thrashing out theological issues with like-minded believers –
all these extrovert, intellectual and musical ways that I connected with God as easily as my mother tongue have now been largely taken away.
I am wondering, with a little trepidation, whether I will need to let go of these ways of communicating with God and start looking at new ones. I don’t like silence and contemplation, and reading Julian of Norwich or looking at a candle for hours just makes my evangelical hackles rise. It would be the equivalent of attempting to learn Arabic or Cantonese. I’m just too cynical to be a mystic.
I need something that is a little more like Spanish or German – still strange to me, but with enough familiarity that I could begin to understand God’s love in that lexicon.
I am not sure yet what that is. Perhaps you could help?
Over to you:
- What is your ‘love language’?
- What are your ‘spiritual love languages’ – the ways that you express and receive love from God?
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Ooh sorry, forget to add the new blog address for when you have time to change the blogroll
http://anitamathias.com/
Thanks:-)
Done
Lovely. How challenging to have to change love languages. Mine too is acts of service.
Have you tried “soaking prayer?” It revolutionised my prayer life. Some of the things you mention are too noisy and extroverted for me. I need silence and stillness to hear from God and experience him. In fact, I often behave as if I have ME, am still for hours at a time, reading, thinking, writing or praying!!
I visited this place in Germany last week, at a Christian resort. http://community-without-walls.com/hisplace.html. They have had success in healing incurable things like dementia, adrenal failure, ME and CFS through mega nutrition, natural medicine and prayer. We went for a holiday, but came back with a nutritional education which has increased my energy, and cut an hour or two off my sleep. (Have gone vegan.).
I have moved to wordpress recently. Would you be able to change the link on your blogroll, please.
Thanks much,
Anita
Thanks for the link! Will change your blog roll link, no prpb
http://nontwistedknickers.blogspot.fr/2012/09/desert.html
xx hugs xx
Thank you!
my love language is acts of service, and my husband’s is quality time… it’s challenging but we attempt each day to speak each other’s language. thank you so much for talking about this tanya. it needs to be foremost in our minds. bless you.
It’s cool to find out what your love language is! I guess you guys are the opposite of us, so I sympathise with the trying to work out how best to show love to one another. Thanks so much for stopping by here – it’s much appreciated!
What you say here about the love languages is very insightful. It shows that we don’t have to stay in their boxes. I never would have thought to apply the love languages to my relationship with my heavenly Bridegroom. That has left me thinking. So has your question.
The one thing that keeps echoing in my mind is some wisdom another woman gave me long ago: that feelings aren’t facts. Illness can distort our feelings strongly, so if we put our trust in them, we’ll be so deceived and misled.
Faith is about facts, not feelings. You know He loves you. Hang onto that, and when that knowing starts slipping away, keep crying out to Him. I think one of my most often repeated prayers is, “I believe; help Thou my unbelief!”
And Amen to what Ro Elliot says, above.
God bless you and keep you as you move through this trying time.
Thank you Sylvia, for your encouraging words!
Writing your words down here are an act of worship in and of itself. You are ministering to your readers by sharing your struggles and your story. That’s no small thing.
Your thoughts on love languages really made me think. I am fiercely independent. My husband’s love language is acts of service. We butt heads a lot when he tries to do everything for me. Perhaps we should revisit this topic together.
Blessings!
Thank you so much for your encouragement – I don’t think I’d really seen my blog in that way before, perhaps because I feel it’s meeting my needs! Maybe that is one of my new spiritual love languages – I shall have to ponder that. Thank you.
You expressed this so well…and if anyone has ever been or is really ill…this will truly resonates with them…to be honest…I never stopped to think about how so much had to change with my earthly husband and heavenly one when I was so ill…but I do remember that stripping…the painful process of having to relearn all my ways with God…I saw much more clearly how I was always working in someway to earn God’s love…to receive His kind words for me…to know He found pleasure in me…works were woven deep into my fiber…but i can truly say…it was through these “dark” years is where I really started to know…really know how much He loved me…and i think it was because I could do nothing for Him…I used to describe myself as a “blob for Jesus”…but I learned how much He loved me…blob and all… So my friend…He will meet you…and provided the healing as you go through this stripping process…but you will find a deeper intimacy with Him because of this place…and He brought me to this place…to be able to mean these words…”It is good for me that I have been afflicted; that I might learn your statutes.” thanks for being real and honest here…blessings and grace to you~
Thank you – I am really hoping to be able to truthfully say those words – it is good for me to be afflicted’… Not yet, but perhaps at some point.
Hi Tanya,
I was struck by these things you listed which you can not do now
>>in-depth Bible study and theological lectures,
Christian conferences with engaging talks,
worshipping with modern songs with many other Christians,
playing the piano and singing worship songs at home,
thrashing out theological issues with like-minded believers ->>
I miss in-depth studies too. Now, I have tried to learn to be content with bite-size chunks. Something like ‘promise cards’ which can store single verses on separate cards.
I can no longer cope with boisterous modern Christian songs.
However, something more formal, like the radio 4 Daily Service I find helps. It is structured, with hymn/prayer, Scripture reading, talk/ musical piece, prayer incl Lord’s Prayer, final hymn/song blessing.
It only lasts 15 min and the concentration required is not too great.
I would prefer more modern music but if you have a hymn book you can follow the words and enjoy some old classics.
It is surprising what you can find in traditional hymns that will uplift you.
Again I understand about not being able to play the piano or sing. Where has my voice gone!
But, I’m sure the Lord is happy with just a line from a song that you might be able to sing. Have you tried whistling? It may be easier than singing.
Blessings
Helen
Thanks so much for sharing your experience, Helena – there are some really helpful tips here!