Marriage Is Built on Love, Not Silence: Why Respect and Consent Matter
Every marriage begins with hope. Yet not every marriage remains healthy. The difference often lies not in wealth, education or social status but in how couples treat one another every day.
Love is the starting point, but love alone is not enough. It must be reinforced by respect, honest communication and mutual consent.
Respect means recognising your spouse as an equal partner whose opinions, feelings and personal boundaries deserve consideration. Communication means discussing problems before they become crises. Consent means ensuring that important decisions—from finances to intimacy—are made freely and together rather than through pressure or manipulation.
Unfortunately, some people continue to believe that marriage gives one spouse unrestricted authority over the other. Such thinking undermines the very purpose of marriage as a partnership built on trust.
Healthy relationships require emotional maturity. Couples must learn to apologise, forgive, compromise and seek help whenever necessary. There should be no shame in consulting counsellors, religious leaders or trusted mentors.
Strong marriages benefit more than the couple involved. They create healthier children, stronger families and more resilient communities.
Marriage should never be reduced to endurance. It should remain a relationship where love inspires, respect protects, communication restores and mutual consent strengthens the bond between two people committed to growing together.
Author has 115 publications here on modernghana.com
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