I was talking with the ladies this morning over coffee (our regular morning meeting before breakfast) about the chronic tension that exists in so many marriages between a husband who believes there is no limit to a wife's duty to submit or obey and a wife who believes that there are boundaries somewhere beyond which a husband's authority becomes abusive and illegitimate. (Obviously if both parties believe the same thing about the limits (or lack thereof) of a husband's authority, this is not a problem. There may be other problems and tensions (such as figuring out exactly where those boundaries are), but not this particular kind of chronic tension.)
Came up with a metaphor of first impression for me: a car with its steering out of alignment. Most of us know what it feels like to have a car pulling consistently to the side, having to pull the other way on the steering wheel just to have the car move straight down the road. And some of us have learned the hard way what happens when you believe that applying equal-and-opposite counter-pressure actually solves the problem: your tires wear down to the steel belts and then just blow out. So whether you got taught, figured it out on your own before it was too late, or learned the hard way, just about all of us know that when you realize that your car is constantly pulling to one side, you need to have your steering aligned, and the sooner the better. Not to address the problem is to compound it. You can solve your immediate problem of arriving at your destination without ending up in a ditch or having a head-on collision simply by pulling on the steering wheel, but the long-term problem is the extra expense of having to replace wives, uh, I mean tires, when they wear out before their time, plus the possible expense of the wreck you're going to have when a tire blows.
And guys, if you don't like the way your car steers, it's time to do something, take action, to solve the problem. Yelling at the car to straighten up and drive right won't solve anything.
I like the car image because it paints a vivid picture of the long term wear and tear on the wives, I mean tires, when the alignment is screwed up. If you prefer a parable with a living creature instead of an inanimate machine, just think horse and rider. If the horse is not responsive to your direction, you need to train it better. Or maybe you should have bought a better horse in the first place. Or maybe you just don't understand horses at all. Or maybe you're trying to get the horse to do something unreasonable, that even a horse can figure out is a bad idea, even if the rider is clueless. In any event, beating the horse (physically or emotionally) is not going to solve the problem, whereas working with the horse to train or re-train it just might.
Absolute authority entails absolute responsibility.
Came up with a metaphor of first impression for me: a car with its steering out of alignment. Most of us know what it feels like to have a car pulling consistently to the side, having to pull the other way on the steering wheel just to have the car move straight down the road. And some of us have learned the hard way what happens when you believe that applying equal-and-opposite counter-pressure actually solves the problem: your tires wear down to the steel belts and then just blow out. So whether you got taught, figured it out on your own before it was too late, or learned the hard way, just about all of us know that when you realize that your car is constantly pulling to one side, you need to have your steering aligned, and the sooner the better. Not to address the problem is to compound it. You can solve your immediate problem of arriving at your destination without ending up in a ditch or having a head-on collision simply by pulling on the steering wheel, but the long-term problem is the extra expense of having to replace wives, uh, I mean tires, when they wear out before their time, plus the possible expense of the wreck you're going to have when a tire blows.
And guys, if you don't like the way your car steers, it's time to do something, take action, to solve the problem. Yelling at the car to straighten up and drive right won't solve anything.
I like the car image because it paints a vivid picture of the long term wear and tear on the wives, I mean tires, when the alignment is screwed up. If you prefer a parable with a living creature instead of an inanimate machine, just think horse and rider. If the horse is not responsive to your direction, you need to train it better. Or maybe you should have bought a better horse in the first place. Or maybe you just don't understand horses at all. Or maybe you're trying to get the horse to do something unreasonable, that even a horse can figure out is a bad idea, even if the rider is clueless. In any event, beating the horse (physically or emotionally) is not going to solve the problem, whereas working with the horse to train or re-train it just might.
Absolute authority entails absolute responsibility.