Here is an example, if I hurt inside, I can't put that burden on my wife. I have to protect her from it. So I bear it alone. Well not alone because I have Christ, but you catch my point there. I can't impose my hurts, or angers, upon her. She will empathize and feel my feelings and carry that as her burden, no way will I do that to her.
Thank you for the kind words, for sharing your wisdom and experience in such a personal way, and thank you for discussing this topic so honestly.
Please, if you are willing and feel comfortable to do so, we singles need to hear more of the realistic versions of marriage as you are giving us here. Married people don't seem to talk to us singles that much outside of, "Don't do this, and definitely don't do that!", so I greatly appreciate those who share about themselves and the realities that they face.
I have said this often: one of my favorite threads ever posted here in Singles was from a married woman who told us what her Valentine's Day was really like -- just another day of caring for her family -- and that thread alone spoke volumes that an entire Christian book on marriage could never even touch.
I am so sorry for the times when you feel you have to hold things in and not burden your wife. Just as a reference, I was married once -- but he chose someone else -- and so I do have some insight on the challenges that married people face (not nearly as many or as wise as yourself, but in some small ways, yes, I can relate.)
I have often wondered about how lonely men must be, as culture and even the church tells them that they must be able to handle so much by themselves.
My own picture of marriage has always been a scene from the movie, Terminator 2, in which Arnold's character, The Terminator, rescues Sarah Connor from the mental hospital. Another terminator, the T-1000 has them trapped in an elevator, and Arnold's Terminator is doing everything he can to protect his family -- Sarah and her son. But in that situation, Sarah just grabs another weapon from his on-persons reserve without hesitation, and is jointly firing away at their unseen enemy by his side.
This has always been my view of God's vision as a "helpmate" for a spouse -- I see my single time as being a period of life in which I can hopefully allow God to strengthen me enough to fight right alongside my husband, if I should ever have one, rather than letting him try to fight the battle from every angle alone. Life is hard and even the strongest of men can't fight it all by himself. As a woman, I feel a need to try to be smart enough and strong enough to know when and how to jump right in and do my part in keeping the enemies at bay.
Goodness knows I have a LOT to work on, and maybe that's why my wait has been so long -- or perhaps I'll always be single, it's up to God -- but I am truly sorry for the battles that men, whether single or married, feel they have to weather alone.
My prayer is that God would teach us all how to "Carry each other's burdens" (Galations 6:2,) no matter our social status, and in a way that alleviates so much of the terrible loneliness we see today, even within the church.
Blessings to you, your wife, and your family, Blackpowderduelist, and thank you again for sharing!