6 Easy Ways to Exceed Your Spouse’s Expectations

By Fawn Weaver on Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Exceed your spouses expectations

Do you remember when the women of this club sponsored a national holiday for our husbands?

Last year, on January 22nd, we designated a special day to celebrate those fabulous hubbies of ours and we’re doing it again this year!

We’re working on something pretty cool for your husband so make sure to check back here tomorrow.

Until then, we continue our countdown to the 5 year anniversary or this club and the unveiling of our new site by counting down our top 20 posts of all time.

Coming in at #15 is a post originally written as a part of our popular 12 Weeks to a Happier Marriage series.

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

Email Signature transparent

____________

I don’t know about you but I don’t want to just meet my husband’s expectations, I strive to exceed them. 

From the moment we said ‘I do’ (really, from our very first date), he’s put me on a pedestal and refuses to take me down.  I am, after all, the woman he pledged to be with until the very end of time.

So in deciding on the 5th installment to our 12 Weeks to a Happier Marriage series, I looked to him for inspiration.  How does he manage to -so consistently- exceed my expectations? 

And even in those rare moments when he falls short of meeting them, how does he redeem that so quickly?

Thank the awesome Mr. Keith Weaver, for these tips.  Because I’m the recipient of all six on a very regular basis, I can attest that they do indeed work:

6 Ways to Exceed Your Spouse’s Expectations

1. Know what they are.  You’d be amazed at how many people are disappointed by their spouses each and every day.  The sad part is most of these disappointments could be avoided if only their spouse knew their expectations –and preferably, before they failed to meet them.  You cannot exceed your spouse’s expectations if you don’t know what they are on the most basic level.  The wisest people ask the most questions.  Be as inquisitive as a child when it comes to your spouse.  Just keep asking questions until you fully know their expectation of you, and once you know that, you can knock that ball out of the park.

2. Know your spouse’s love language.  Now, if you’ve been reading this blog for some time, you know my husband and I didn’t know our love languages (as defined in the best-selling book, The 5 Love Languages) until we’d been married nine years.  And that seems to be okay because we always spoke to one another in the greatest amount of respect and reverence.  But I must say, learning each other’s love language helped clarify so much.  I was pretty shocked to find out Physical Touch is my love language and Keith’s is Words of Affirmation.  I would have thought the opposite.  But learning this one little truth has helped me exceed his expectations far more often than I did in the past.

3. Do the unexpected.  Little things.  Tiny things really.  It’s those small things that add up to the largest equation in marriage.  Find one additional thing a day you can do to bring a smile to your spouse’s face.  For Keith, I know if I make him a cup of coffee in the morning before he gets out of bed, the aroma of a freshly brewed cup will bring a smile to his face even before he’s opened his eyes.  Maybe for your spouse, it’s testing out some new lingerie or picking up some freshly cut flowers from your local farmers market (or florist).  Remember, this isn’t something big…it’s something really small, yet thoughtful.

4. Don’t expect anything in return.  The greatest key to exceeding your spouse’s expectations is whenever you do something  -no matter how big or small- do not expect anything in return.  I know that can be hard to do but it’s paramount.  Don’t keep score of all the wonderful things you do because that will eventually lead to comparisons.  And you and I both know comparisons are dangerous in every area of life, especially, marriage.  The goal here is to give with your whole heart without expectation of reciprocation.  The interesting thing is when you give with your entire being, expecting nothing in return, what you give always comes back to you ten-fold.  It’s one of those beautiful mysteries of life that continues to be proven true.

5. Don’t make assumptions.  As best-selling author Miguel Angel Ruiz so wonderfully put it, “Find the courage to ask questions and to express what you really want.  Communicate with others as clearly as you can to avoid misunderstandings, sadness and drama.  With just this one agreement, you can completely transform your life.  One of the greatest skills in marriage is to assume less and learn more.  Nothing pushes us to grow quite like marriage.  When you look at it as an endless opportunity to learn about the person you love most, yourself, and the world around you.  Assume as little as possible…discover as much as possible.

6. Strive for WOW…but don’t forget about the now.  I don’t know if you’re guilty of this but sometimes when I’m working on surprising my husband with a “Wow,” I forget the little things I should be doing now just to meet his expectations.  Remember it’s consistency in the little things that will always matter most.  The ABC’s of Marriage: Always Be Consistent.

YOUR TURN: What would you add to this list?  What do you do to exceed your spouse’s expectation?

JOIN THE 1,000,000 MEMBER CHALLENGE: If you haven’t already done it, what are you waiting for? Join the club! It takes only a few seconds and, of course, is free.

Happy Wives Club Book

 

THE NEW YORK TIMES® BEST-SELLING BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club book.  I had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book like none other.  Guaranteed.

Fawn Weaver is the USA Today® and New York Times® bestselling author of Happy Wives Club: One Woman's Worldwide Search for the Secrets of a Great Marriage, adopting the same name as the Club she founded in 2010. The Happy Wives Club community has grown to include more than 900,000 women in over 110 countries around the world. When she’s not blogging or working on her next project, she's happily doting over her husband of nearly eleven years, Keith.

 

Please note: I reserve the right to delete comments that are snarky, offensive, or off-topic. If in doubt, read My Comment Policy
  • kristi

    I will tell you yo show appreciation for the things he does. That means sometimes make a big deal out of the liytle stuff. This makes him feel good and boosts his confidence. It becomes a never ending circle of goodness.

    • Kristi

      *to and *little. Sorry.

      • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

        How right you are! When you make a big deal of the little things, it shows your spouse you noticed – and are grateful.

  • nicole

    The little things, absolutely! I try to remember to tell him I love him every day, with feeling, and not just when we’re coming or going. It reminds him that I still love him as much as ever, and it means a lot to take just a moment between the two of us to bask in it before we get swept up in our busy lives again.

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      Oh so important! Because these busy lives of ours truly do get to sweeping us away, don’t they?

  • http://www.nursingnapsnostalgia.blogspot.com SK Bell

    I’d love to add a suggestion… learn each other’s love language OFTEN! After I read a blog post about someone else’s love language changing, I decided to re-take my quiz and have my husband take his as well. Although most of our answers were still the same, both of us had shifted into a different love language. Maybe it’s just been the years since taking it the first time and maybe it’s been the way marriage has changed a little since having a baby, but either way, I’m now planning to re-take it every year or two! =]

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      Oh wow, I had no idea your love languages can change! That would explain why I thought my husband’s was one when we married but when we took the test 9 years later, that had become my love language and vice versa. So fascinating! Now, it all makes a little more sense :) .

  • Elay

    This weekend is our 4th wedding anniversary and one of the best things I’ve learned about marriage is that we have to learn to out-love each other. For example, when he sees my effort in controlling what I say when I’m angry, he out-loves my effort by giving me some space to cool down and when things are okay, he’d thank me for being careful and showing him respect. When he makes me dinner, I out-love that by massaging his hands while we watch t.v. after we eat. It has become something we both understand without saying anything. This is where knowing your spouse’s love language is very important!

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      Oh, that’s a great phrase, Elay: “out-love each other.” Love it!

  • Megan Walker

    Say Thank You even when your spouse does the expected. I cook dinner almost every night. My husband always thanks me after we eat. Regardless of how tasty the meal was. When he thanks me, he always means it. Similarly, I always thank him for taking out the trash, his regular chore. In this way we avoid taking each other and what we bring to the relationship for granted.

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      Great addition! Thanks, Megan.

  • Amy

    I’ve learned there is nothing that says “I love you, I need you, I want you” more than a passionate kiss “out of the blue.” I’ve noticed my husband and I can fall into a “rut” of half-listening to one another or half-paying-attention to the other while we go about our day-to-day business. Taking 30 seconds to grab him and kiss him blows him away and brings us both back to the present.

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      Oh yes! And the hormones that are released after 15 seconds of a passionate kiss will stay with you long after that 30 seconds is up. Thanks for adding this one, Amy!

  • http://grabyourexback.com/ RelationshipMagic

    When you think you are about to complain about something that your husband does… find something good to be grateful about him. This way you are able to curtail negative vibrations and maintain positive vibes in the relationship.

    Helen

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      That’s a great addition, Helen. Thanks!

  • Allison

    These stand true even if you’re not married. My fiancé and I try to live up to each other’s expectations daily. It can be hard, especially when you are doing distance as we are currently while finishing the last of school. I would add learning how to take a compliment. It sounds strange but it can truly hurt a person when you shoot down their compliment. It’s like telling someone they are lying. I went through a low self esteem stage early in college and I know it hurt my fiancé, at the time boyfriend, when I disagreed with any compliment he might give me. That’s no longer an issue for me but even if you’re having a bad day, don’t shoot down the messenger of the compliment. Disagreeing hurts them and that does not make for a happy relationship. Doesn’t quite fit with exceeding expectations but something I think is important.

  • Shiluba H Mhlongo

    Say I Love You! whenever he says it, it feels like the very first time he said it and no matter how down or exhausted I feel, it makes me happy and feel appreciated

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      Great addition. Thanks!

  • Just me

    So, what if you ask your spouse questions to learn about them and their only reply is “I don’t know”

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      Just keep asking…over time…and at the right times. They may truly be learning more about themselves and trying to figure out how to answer that question at that moment (or they could just be tired and not wanting to think). Don’t give up and see if there are other ways you can phrase your inquiry to be received more openly. Does that help at all?

    • coachbyron

      Just Me, this is a very good question. One that (as a man) I’m glad you asked. Being careful not to project too much on to your husband (because I do not know him), here are some general things to be mindful of: 1. The response “I don’t know” is a conditioned response that allows us to permission to avoid the task of thinking for ourselves. Here are my suggestions: Rephrase you question(s) from “what do YOU think about…” to “What do MEN, generally speaking, think about…” This little tweak takes the pressure off us as individuals and can sometimes help us share our thoughts and perspectives. 2. When we say “I don’t know” often it’s a sign that we’ve allowed ourselves to slip into a habit of what I call “Passive Thinking,” (Thomas Jefferson said, “…the hardest work a person will ever do is to think mindfully about what they do”). It’s simply easier not analyze and draw clear conclusions about WHY we do what we do. We all do it from time to time. If you think this may apply to your husband at times, indirectly coach him out of that learned response by reframing your questions so that they trigger his attitude and invites him to share his “opinion.” We all have opinions about everything. The problem is, for many of us, we don’t share them out of fear of being “wrong” or having those opinions challenged. You may have to continue to be patient with him and encourage him through the growth process of becoming more confident in sharing his thoughts. Continue to be open and model for him how to share your thoughts openly. I hope this was helpful.

      • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

        Great advice, Byron! Thank you.

  • http://www.osasandgodwin.com osas R.

    hey Fawn! I was going to print out the old certificate for National Husband’s Day. i was hoping you would have the updated the certificate. i would have love to give my hubby the certificate in the morning but i will have to wait for what you have in store for us.because of the time limit between WHERE YOU ARE and where i am, i will have to wait late @ night to give him, i was hoping to give him a copy early morning on our way to the office….Thanks Fawn

    • http://www.happywivesclub.com/ Fawn @ Happy Wives Club

      Hi Osas! It’ll be going up soon just in time for January 22nd (we decided to keep the holiday on the same date every year for ease of promotion since some of our members -like you- are on the other side of the world. Stay tuned (or if you email me at fawn@happywivesclub.com), I’ll send it to you as soon as it’s complete. It’s a proclamation you’ll be able to print out for him.