How We’re Surviving “Stay at Home” During Coronavirus

MCM blog

My husband and I have been fully home together for almost three weeks now. And you know what? There have been no blow-ups, no periods of not speaking, and no disconnection.

We’re both working (from home) and trying to manage the household needs. For people who were often on the run, preparing and cleaning up after three meals a day is quite a shift. We have a kitty with some medical issues who needs care three times a day and weekly trips to the vet, even in this craziness. I’m working more now than I usually am and he’s working very long hours 6-7 days a week.

We’re not in vacation mode.

In all this, we’ve had our moments of frustration or being short with one another, but overall we’re navigating this as a team.

We realized a few crucial things:

1 | We're in this together. There’s no one else to depend on right now other than the people in our house. In some ways, it’s truly us “against” the world. There’s no break of going to work for 8 hours or grabbing a drink with a friend. It’s me, him, and the cats - so, we better make it work.

2 | This is temporary, but our relationship is not. After this crisis, life will return to some level of normalcy and we will still want to be married. We’ll go out to dinner again, spend time with friends and family, and travel. This is one of those hard times in life where we should be grateful for having a partner to share it with and seek support from.

3 | We’re both stressed and anxious. It’s not about one person more than the other or competing for who’s under more stress. We work off the assumption both of us are equally stressed, tired, overwhelmed, and anxious and treat each other with compassion. Sometimes, he might need a little more support. Sometimes, I might need a little more. That’s okay - this is not the time to demand a 50/50 perfectly equal split. We need to be a bit flexible.

One thing that’s made all this possible is our communication. Our ability to share how we feel, what we need, and speak openly (no walking on eggshells in this house) are key to this quarantine going well.

That’s why I created Communicating for Closeness: A 4-Week Course for Couples Who Are Ready to Ask for What They Want (And Get It). Now, more than ever, we need to be able to speak to our partners freely, honestly, and get the kind of support we need.

We need to be able to say:

“I need a break - I’m going to go take a walk. Can you watch the kids for a half hour?”

“I’m so overwhelmed right now, I feel like I’m going to lose it. I need a hug!”

“I feel really alone in managing the food shopping and it’s become really hard. I would really love some more help with this.”

You’ll learn:

  • How to tackle tough topics with it turning into an argument

  • What to do when you’re stuck in an unsolvable argument

  • How to reach a true compromise you’re both comfortable with

  • How to prevent arguments from escalating into blow-ups

You’ll get:

  • 4 training modules with 7 video trainings and accompanying worksheets

  • 2 group coaching calls on Zoom (live coaching + q+a)

If you have questions, send me an email at meredith@marriagecoachmeredith.com and I’ll be happy to answer them. If you feel like this is exactly what you need right now, you can get on the wait list: Join the Wait List.

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