12 – Making Decisions

Making decisions in a mixed faith marriage can be painful- but it does not have to be. If you want to make decisions around kids, baptism, Sunday attendance and more it is helpful to take a close look at your current decision making process. If decisions ultimately leave you frustrated, it may be time to change the decision making process used in your marriage.

11. Difficult Conversations

This is part 2 of a 3 part series on communication. Here I share a tool that will help you succeed in having a difficult conversation in your mixed faith marriage.

9. Guilt and Shame

Guilt and shame almost invariably show up in a mixed faith marriage whether you are the active believing spouse or the spouse with the faith transition. The issue with guilt and shame is they do not motivate us and help us show up in helpful ways.

8. The Truth About Emotions

When faced with emotions in your mixed faith marriage there are a few ways you can respond. My recommendation is to process those emotions. Emotional processing is a skill anyone can develop. You just need to learn how and practice.

7. People Pleasing

People pleasing is common in Mormon mixed faith marriages. It is one of the biggest blocks to emotional intimacy and causes tons of resentment.

5. Stress

If you believe a mixed faith marriage is hard and not ideal, you will most like experience a marriage that is hard and not ideal. There is another choice.

4. Manuals

We often have a set of rules on how we think our spouse should act, speak, dress, think, believe, and show up in our family. A faith transition can bring this to the surface fast!