TIME MAGAZINE  JANUARY 22, 2001 VOL. 157 NO. 3

I Surrender, Dear -- Why should wife 'surrender' to husband for a happy marriage?

A controversial new book argues that 
An acquiescent wife is the key to a happy marriage


Doyle (hugging her husband John) says wives should show respect-as in the old days

We all know the kinds of charges that get thrown across marriage counselors' desks. She nags. He's withdrawn. We don't talk, laugh or have sex anymore. What to do? Well, what about this: the wife should stop controlling, criticizing and interrupting her husband. If she slips up, she should apologize for being "disrespectful." She should give him the checkbook and leave the bills, investments and purchases to him. She should tell him what she wants, but if he doesn't agree, she should stay mum and do what he wants. As for sex, at least once a week even if she's not in the mood. And while she should express herself in terms of what she feels rather than what she thinks, she should never ask about his feelings.

It would be easy to scoff at such ideas, elaborated by Laura Doyle in her book The Surrendered Wife (Simon & Schuster) as retro or ridiculous. But last week Doyle made the national media rounds, and her book is already on Amazon's Top 10. Surrendered Wives circles have sprouted in cities like Los Angeles and Chicago. The book has understandably provoked strong reactions. Popular therapist and author John Gray praises it, on the front cover, as a "practical and valuable tool." But UCLA psychologist Andrew Christensen moans, "It's destructive. It's a throwback, and it doesn't protect women."

Doyle, 33, a robust blond from Huntington Beach, Calif., was reared by battling parents who taught her that marriage should be an equal partnership. But the writer, who bills herself in her biography as "a feminist and former shrew," says she nearly ruined her marriage to husband John, 44, by becoming a control freak, constantly nagging and demeaning him. Doyle says she turned to happier friends for advice. One told her she never criticized her husband; another said she gave hers control of the money. From there, and aided by ideas in other self-help books, Doyle formulated the concept of the surrendered wife. She says her marriage thrived, causing friends to ask for her help. Now she runs workshops. "My mission is to teach women about the power of surrender," she says. "It's my own world peace crusade."

Some of Doyle's ideas have the imprint of sanity. Being the commanding, demanding warrior goddess may work in the office, she argues, but you should leave her there and treat your husband like a friend and grownup. "Honor his choice of socks and stocks, food and friendships, art and attitudes...have regard for his ideas, suggestions, family and work," she writes. There is a lot to be said for apologizing, for walking away rather than escalating an argument. And Doyle, like many therapists, urges women to do nice things for themselves and build on their interests and friendships outside of marriage.

But some of Doyle's ideas seem demeaning and questionable. Men are to be given the finances, regardless of who in the relationship is better with money. (Doyle says men need this in order to feel masculine.) Wives are to request a weekly or monthly cash stipend. Even if men make some early bad decisions, she argues, they will learn quickly, and wives will find them generous. (Try telling that to the naive women standing in divorce court or dealing with their dead husbands' debtors.) If your husband misses the right freeway exit, stay quiet, she counsels, even "if he keeps going in the wrong direction ... past the state line." If he asks for your opinion on which shirt to wear or how to deal with the boss, you should smile serenely and say, "Whatever you think," because by "telling him what you think you risk contradicting him...he wants to know you bless what he thinks more."

"What she is saying here is how to manipulate your husband," warns Philadelphia therapist Michael Broder. "True intimacy comes from being able to express your true thoughts and feelings." But Doyle counters that her book is not hard doctrine or meant for everyone. "If your behavior is extreme, and you're being pushed to the other extreme, you're likely to end up in the middle. I don't expect you to do this perfectly. I still don't." (She does it well enough for her husband, who has called their marriage "an empowering" experience.)

Doyle refers naysayers to her pleased disciples. Rachel Godwin, 23, used to demand that her husband Lenny wear his Adidas socks only with his Adidas sneakers, never his Nikes. Now, she says, Doyle's methods have salvaged her troubled marriage. Yet Judy Divine, 61, a remarried retiree, has a mixed reaction. Divine turned over the finances to her husband Bob and became less critical. But Bob, it turns out, likes her opinion and doesn't want to hear "whatever you think" all the time. Divine says she would give the book to a friend but would tell her, "You may not want all of this, but there's some valuable stuff here." It may be tougher for the rest of us to find the diamonds amid all the coal.

Laura Doyle Author site: http://www.surrenderedwife.com/


Saturday May 05 03:39 AM EDT

Wives Surrender To Husbands To Save Marriages

Yearning for a better marriage, a group of women have developed a unique approach to building a building a better connection with their husbands.

Known as being a "Surrendered Wife", the approach requires a wife to surrender control over her husband and his decisions.

"Surrendered Wife" author Laura Doyle said that she knew that she needed to make a change in her marriage as she and her husband were backing out of the driveway for a date and she began telling him how to drive.

"When I was telling my husband what to do all of the time I thought I was being helpful," Doyle said. "I thought that I was just telling him how to get somewhere faster."

Instead, Doyle said, she was expressing to her husband that she didn't have faith and trust in her husband's ability to do things correctly.

Doyle's marriage-changing measures struck a chord with Angela Kruse after she saw a story about the surrendered wife theory.

"It was like somebody slapped me in the face," Kruse said. "It said to me, 'What you are doing is so wrong.'"

Kruse reluctantly went to the bookstore to purchase a copy of the "Surrendered Wife" book.

"I was indentifying with those wack jobs and then I realized that I am one of those wack jobs," Kruse said.

Despite indentifying with the dissatisfaction of a unfulfilled marriage, Kruse was apprehensive about making such sweeping changes to her life.

"I, the strong independent woman that I had worked so hard to become, was buying this book," Kruse said. "But there was nothing in that book that I had not done or said."

Doyle said that many women have to learn how to relate to their husbands.

"Most of us have pretty great husbands if we just, you know, give them a chance to be themselves without trying to tell them how to do that," Doyle said.

Kruse said that she wanted an intimate marriage, but she had to let go of her fears.

"I had the fears of not having my needs met," Kruse said.

Both of the women said that they need to be clear about expressing their desires, but in a non-demanding manner. They also said that they have to know how to ask for what you want.

"A big part of surrendered wife training is that you have to learn to say how you feel and what you want," Doyle said.

The basic tenants of being a surrendered wife are that a wife:

Relinquishes inappropriate control of her husband.

  • Respects her husband's thinking.
  • Receives his gifts graciously and expresses gratitude for him.
  • Expresses what she wants without trying to control him.
  • Relies on him to handle household finances.
  • Focuses on her own self-care and fulfillment.

As a result of the changes, a surrendered wife is

  • Vulnerable where she used to be a nag.
  • Trusting where she used to be controlling.
  • Respectful where she used to be demeaning.
  • Grateful where she used to be dissatisfied.
  • Has faith where she once had doubt.

Doyle said that the surrender in surrendered wife is not about submitting, but instead about surrendering control over your spouse.

Source: http://dailynews.yahoo.com/htx/kprc/20010505/lo/393521_1.html

 

Updated
11/24/2005 08:30:14 AM

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