U of A University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture Research and Extension University of Arkansas System

Pictures of chickens, flowers, wheat, a boy looking through a magnifying glass, irrigation pipe, soybean pods, and fruits and vegetables.

Cooperative Extension Service

Cooperative Extension Service

Agricultural Experiment Station


Search | Publications | Jobs | Personnel Directory | Links
County Offices | Departments

About Us

Find Us

For the Media

Agriculture

Business & Communities

Families & Consumers

Early Childhood
      Professional Development

Emergency Preparedness
Expanded Food &
      Nutrition Program

Family Life
Money
Smart Nutrition Active
      People-Education
      (SNAP-Ed)

Volunteer Organizations

Links
Newsletters

Health & Nutrition

Home & Garden

Natural Resources

4-H Youth Development

Public Policy Center

For Faculty & Staff

Giving

Dale Bumpers College
of Agricultural, Food &
Life Sciences


Division Home


Agricultural Experiment
      Station Home


Cooperative Extension
      Service Home

 

Drawing of a garden gateFamily Life
The Marriage Garden

Printer Friendly (PDF) Printer Friendly (PDF)

Cultivating a good marriage is like two people growing a healthy garden. To achieve a full and satisfying harvest, the gardeners must work in harmony with one another, using the right tools, gardening wisdom, and a willing spirit. The gardening process teaches us vital – and sometimes painful – lessons about life. The struggle is worth it: both good marriages and healthy gardens can enrich and delight us. But neither happens by chance. Let’s break ground!

Drawing of a wheel barrrow Commit: Make and honor promises.

We start our gardens with great visions and bold enthusiasm. But, weeds, bad weather, pests, and distractions threaten our hopes and dreams. It takes more than initial enthusiasm to get from a vision of possibilities to a healthy reality. It takes steady commitment and effort. If we are unwilling to deal with problems and differences, we will never enjoy a bountiful harvest. Each of us can commit regular time and energy to caring for our garden.

Drawing of a seedling Grow: Cultivate your strengths.

The health of the garden is rooted in the health of the individual gardeners. If we do not nurture our personal strengths and abilities – or if we fail to manage our personal weaknesses – we will not be well prepared to take on our gardening tasks. The most successful gardeners know that they must invest time in reflection, learning and improvement. They then have more strengths to bring to the garden and to their gardening partnerships.

Drawing of a watering can Nurture: Do the work of loving.

Marriage can grow from a handful of seeds to a garden filled with colorful, radiant life. But this won’t happen by accident. It will require careful attention to the well-being of the plants. We may need to increase the light of encouragement, the fertilizer of time spent together, and the water of kindness. We needs to weed our destructive thoughts and actions while encouraging healthy growth. Steady investments in the relationship will assure a bountiful harvest.

Drawing of a shovel Understand: Cultivate compassion for your partner.

Gardening can be both rewarding and challenging. At times each of us will get sunburned, poked by thorns, and bitten by bugs. During these difficult and painful times, we can be gardening partners who compassionately respond to each other’s pains rather than scold our partner for not using sunscreen or being more careful. We can be gardeners in whose gentle hands our partners heal and grow strong.

Drawing of a bee Solve: Turn differences into blessings.

We may have very different visions for our shared gardens. One gardener may favor colorful flowers, while the other insists on tomatoes and peas. These differences may not simply disappear with a calm discussion. Each partnership will have unresolvable differences. If we choose to stay calm, listen attentively, understand our partner’s view, and use creativity, it is possible to turn difference into strengths.

Drawing of a pair of gardening gloves Serve: Give back to your community

When our gardens are productive, it’s good to share the fruits of our labor with others. Just as you might share your tomatoes and zucchini with neighbors or gather a bouquet to cheer up a friend, so too should you work as a couple to contribute to your community. Our marriages are strengthened by serving one another and those around us. Sharing our time and resources can make our world blossom.

Enjoy the harvest - To have a healthy marriage garden we must nurture the best parts of our relationship while guarding against pests. If we neglect our garden we get a tangle of weeds and bugs. If we do the wrong thing (even with good intentions), we get exhaustion and failure. (This is like watering the weeds and pulling up the tomatoes!) With a little planning, a steady effort over time, and the warmth of our best selves, we can harvest sweet and enduring companionship.
 
Drawing of a sunflower Tips from Marriage Gardeners

No one has the perfect marriage, but there are many couples who cultivate strong and healthy marriages. Here are some of the things these marriage gardeners do to make their marriages grow.

   
Picture of The Marriage Garden book. Link to online ordering system. Purchase the book

The Marriage Garden

Go to  http://pubs.uaex.edu/PubsWebPublic.asp, enter your zip code and search for Marriage Garden.

Learn More About Marriage

For printed copies of this publication and more information, Arkansans may contact their local county Cooperative Extension Service agent.

Back to Family Life


© 2006
University of Arkansas
Division of Agriculture
All rights reserved.

Webmaster

University of Arkansas • Division of Agriculture
Cooperative Extension Service
2301 South University Avenue
Little Rock, Arkansas 72204 • USA
Phone (501) 671-2000 • Fax (501) 671-2209
 

MissionDisclaimerEEO
PrivacyFOI