Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to his life?
    Luke 12:25

    “I am sure that when we spoke our marriage vows,” said Janet, “Bob added ‘to have and to hold as long as I’m the boss.’”

    She was sitting in our office after four years of trying to stand on equal ground with her husband. According to her, Bob never lets go of the reigns. Literally.

    “He would have to be in a complete body cast before he would let me drive the car,” she complains. On a few rare occasions where Janet does get behind the wheel with Bob in the car he tells her everything to do: Stop here, speed up, pass this guy.

    “Then there’s the remote,” Janet said. “Need I say more,” she gracefully dismissed this easy target.

    But before the end of our counseling session, Janet summed up her husband this way: “He believes he is the knower of how to do everything and, by natural right, the boss of anybody found standing in his vicinity, including me and the kids.”

    Sadly, Bob is known as a Control Freak. And truth be told, over-controlling tendencies are always linked to anxiety.

    It’s the result of over-amped worry. That’s why almost all of us are over controlling on occasion –whether we admit it or not.

    “‘Kindly let me help you, or you will drown,’ said the monkey, putting the fish safely up in a tree.”
    -Alan Watts

    Isn’t a little controlling behavior healthy?, you might be asking.

    Sure. Research indicates that feeling in control is vital to mental and physical health, as well as happiness at home and satisfaction at work. And even scripture urges us to be in control of our tongues (see James 3:2).

    Being in control, however, can be too much of a good thing. That’s why it’s beneficial for all of us who value our relationship to take a personal inventory of our controlling ways. Here’s the key: Know where you can and can’t exert explicit influence on each other.

    We know of a pastor who nearly lost his marriage because he was treating his wife like a staff member. He would order her around the home, never asking for her advice or input.

    If you want to keep your controlling tendencies from getting out of control, you have to decide where you can exert your influence and where you can’t. And that usually comes down to handing over your anxieties to God.

    As Luke says, “Can all your worries add a single moment to your life? Of course not!”

    Reflect and Respond

    When do you tend to be most over controlling with your spouse?

    Go ahead, tell us in the comments.

    Related Resource

    product pictureThe Control Freak

    Are you ready to find out if you or those around you are a control freaks? The Control Freak will provide you valuable information to help you:

    • Know When Control Is Good or Bad
    • Recognize the Top Ten Qualities of Control Freaks
    • Cope with a Coercive Colleague or a Supervising Spouse
    • Relinquish Unhealthy Control
    • Repair Relationships Damaged by Over-control