50 Ways to Love Your Lover: 21-30 (TIME)

February 22, 2010 by Venus Taylor  
Filed under Articles, Couples

Do you crave more time with your partner?
Are you enjoying making memories together?

Quality Time

We say it all the time:  Life is short.  If your primary love language is Quality Time (see Gary Chapman’s, The Five Love Languages), you may be particularly sensitive to the brevity of life.  You may uniquely treasure the time spent with people you love most.

Quality Time is more than just time spent in each other’s company.  It’s time spent FOCUSING on each other.  Talking, playing, laughing.  Really engaging with each other - not watching TV or playing on your cell phones.

A person whose primary love language is Quality Time really wants to be seen, heard, appreciated, and understood.  This person feels connected to people who deeply know her and enjoy her presence.

If your partner’s primary love language is Quality Time, here are a few ideas to help him feel fully loved by and connected to you.

  1. Ask him to retell a story from childhood – Even if you’ve heard all his stories before, listen deeply, as if you may write his biography one day. Ask, “What was that like for you? When do you feel like that now?  What makes that memory so important that you’ve treasured it above so many others?”
  2. Laugh a lot – Don’t let life get so serious that you’re not having fun together regularly. Tell jokes, funny stories, silly dreams. The memory of you rolling with laughter is the one memory you want burnt into his mind.
  3. Listen with your whole heart – When he’s sharing something that’s important to him (even if it’s something hard for you to hear),  set aside your agenda and just be his friend. Be a safe space where he can share his thoughts and feelings without judgment.
  4. Welcome him home – Stop whatever you’re doing, for just 30 seconds, and greet him when he comes home. I have a friend in NJ who has made this a practice for over 30 yrs of marriage. Once, while giving a speech, he shocked her by mentioning how much he appreciated that…how special he felt.  Such a small gesture can make a big difference in anyone’s day.
  5. Play – Board games, card games, video games.  Anything that gets you interacting with each other in a fun way.
  6. Read together – Out loud or silently.  Share a small passage of something together – one paragraph, one chapter, an interesting article from a magazine – and discuss your different perspectives.
  7. Do something healthy together – Go for a walk (even if it’s a stroll), do a paired floor stretch, walk up the stairs of your apartment complex together (do lots of reps if there aren’t many stairs).  When my husband and I lived in a 20 story building, we would sometimes walk all the way up, just for exercise.  It’s fun to share that memory together.
  8. Parallel Play – If you’re both really bogged down, and rarely make “face time,” try working in the same room at least once a week.  The goal is to give yourself more opportunities to break for eye contact and quick conversations.
  9. Attend something you wouldn’t ordinarily – Don’t like attending philosophy lectures or baseball games?  Go at least occasionally with this goal in mind:  Getting to know him better.  Afterward, ask him what he liked most, what he thought could be better.  Use the event as a doorway into his soul.
  10. Ask for feedback – From time to time, ask “How loved / respected / cherished / appreciated are you feeling this week? How ratchet that up another notch?”

Time with loved ones is what we’ll miss most when one of us has passed on.  Savor it.  Revel in it.  Especially if your or your partner’s primary love language is Quality Time.

Next Up:  Expressing love with Gifts.

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How have you used “Time” to express love to your significant other?

Comment below.

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