
Hosted by Stephen Waldo · EN

Most marriage problems aren't caused by terrible people — they're caused by blind spots. Habits you don't notice that are producing outcomes you can't see. In this episode, I break down five of the most common blind spots I see in the marriages of men I coach: your tone, domestic load, the self-care spectrum, yelling (and the +2 Rule), and your view of sex. Each one comes with a specific fix. If you're in separation, at least one of these probably played a role. 🔗 Full show notes + free PDF one-sheet: husbandhelphaven.com/episode-35 🔗 Join Husband Help Group: husbandhelphaven.com/group **Timestamps:** 0:00 — Introduction & framing 1:29 — Why these are dot-connecting problems 3:07 — This is not a guilt trip 4:51 — Blind Spot 1: Your tone 7:00 — Why it sounds like a teenage boy talking to his mom 9:12 — Your tone trains how she reads your texts 10:16 — Blind Spot 2: Domestic load 12:15 — Two correctives: acknowledge + predictable help 16:02 — Mental load / emotional labor 17:13 — "Saturdaddy Day" personal example 18:40 — Blind Spot 3: The self-care spectrum 20:26 — Escapism disguised as self-care 21:43 — How to split buffer time equitably 22:54 — Blind Spot 4: Yelling 24:24 — Why a man's yelling lands differently 25:22 — The +2 Rule 27:47 — Boundaries vs. yelling back 28:12 — Blind Spot 5: Your view of sex 29:05 — Sex is a symptom, not the cause 30:18 — How to enjoy courting without sex as the end goal 30:45 — Ladder of Intimacy + HHG 32:00 — Where to start & closing encouragement

🔗 Full show notes + free PDF one-sheet 🔗 Episode 32 (Destination vs. Journey Goals) 🔗 Episode 33 (Why the Husband Makes or Breaks the Marriage) Most husbands don't struggle with feeling love for their wives. The struggle is in the application — doing the love, not just having it. In this episode, I unpack five principles of applied love from Ephesians 5, explain why fear (not her, not the separation) is the real enemy of your marriage, and introduce the concept of leading the way in goodwill. This is the finale of a 3-part series on husbandly leadership. **Timestamps:** 0:00 — Introduction & series recap 1:16 — The noun vs. verb problem with love 3:58 — Reading Ephesians 5, verse 25–32 5:53 — Principle 1: Love means taking the initiative 7:19 — Principle 2: Be a leader worth following 8:21 — Submission reframed: "sub-mission" — supporting a mission 10:18 — Principle 3: Be the first to sacrifice 11:06 — Principle 4: Keep the union as your highest priority 13:33 — Principle 5: Love is a mystery — built by giving yourself away 15:06 — Fear: The real enemy of love 16:45 — Fear and passivity 17:26 — Personal story: how fear of divorce became an idol 18:55 — The Let Her Go mindset 20:47 — Lead the way in goodwill (practical application) 21:46 — The Mutual Love Matrix 23:22 — Goodwill in practice + in separation 25:47 — Series recap & closing

Women file for about two-thirds of all divorces (source). But this isn't a commitment problem — it's a belief problem. In this episode, I break down why wives leave more often, why that same pattern means she's more primed to respond to genuine change than you think, and why the husband's proactive leadership is the thing that makes or breaks the marriage. Plus practical steps whether you're in separation right now or trying to prevent it. 🔗 Full show notes + free PDF one-sheet 🔗 Peace & Control course Timestamps: 0:00 — Introduction & thesis 1:00 — The difference between men and women in marriage 2:46 — "A wife decides to leave two years before she does" 4:55 — Why women invest more in marriage improvement 6:50 — Men's problem-solving nature works against us 8:10 — The flip side: she's more primed to respond than you think 8:59 — Why the husband has more capacity to restart the marriage 10:45 — The door-knock analogy 12:39 — "Call it leadership or call it proactivity — just understand it's real" 13:14 — What about type A wives? 14:02 — What happens when nobody leads 15:31 — It's a belief problem, not a commitment problem 17:01 — What to do if you're NOT separated 17:45 — What to do if you ARE in separation 20:06 — Stop the bleeding: reactive vs. proactive behaviors 21:30 — Be easy to come back to 22:12 — Integrity vs. insecurity: two paths through separation 24:04 — Peace & Control course 25:11 — The silver lining of the statistic

Most men are decent at setting goals for where they want to go. Almost nobody sets goals for who they want to be on the way there. In this episode, I break down the difference between destination goals and journey goals, share my actual present-tense vision statements across six life areas, and give you a framework for writing your own — even if you're currently in separation. 🔗 Full show notes + free PDF one-sheet: https://husbandhelphaven.com/podcast/destination-vs-journey-goals/ 🔗 Join Husband Help Group: husbandhelphaven.com/group Timestamps: 0:00 — Introduction 0:31 — Why separated men especially need this 2:36 — Why most men don't goal-set like they think 3:41 — "I never cheated, I never hit her" — why bare minimum isn't enough 4:51 — The "passively decent husband" trap 6:58 — The absence of intentionality 7:49 — Two types of goals: destination vs. journey 9:33 — Terry's story: what happens with only destination goals 11:30 — Vision ≠ vision boards (the sprinter analogy) 13:33 — How I structure goals by life area 16:36 — My actual vision statements (marriage, family, faith, mind) 20:15 — The four layers of goal setting 21:45 — Husband Help Group + free one-sheet resource 23:37 — Action steps: what to do from here 26:14 — Separation-specific application 28:17 — Should you share this with your wife? 30:09 — Next episode preview

When your wife won't acknowledge the hurt or accept your apology, what then? This episode breaks down forgiveness as a transaction — why it always has a cost, how to pursue it when you're the only one willing, and why one-sided forgiveness still brings real freedom. Learn to let go of emotional debt, avoid the resentment trap, and become someone who leads with grace. For men navigating separation who want to respond with integrity. 🔗 husbandhelphaven.com/episode-31 Timestamps: 0:00 — Introduction 1:40 — Why forgiveness has a cost (the bank analogy) 3:40 — Two choices when emotional debt exists 7:00 — Full forgiveness takes two 9:15 — What if you're the only one forgiving? 14:00 — What if you're the one who needs forgiveness? 17:00 — The parable of the ungrateful servant 21:30 — Forgiveness sharpens your problem-solving 26:45 — Recap and why the world needs forgiving men

You've been told "midlife crisis" means your marriage is doomed. Not true. In this episode, we break down what's really happening (identity crisis + FOMO) and how to respond in a way that actually helps—without chasing, lecturing, or pressure. WHAT THIS COVERS What a midlife crisis really is: an identity crisis where one role feels good (work, friends, gym) and others feel punishing (wife, mom) Why she skews toward the one rewarding identity and away from the rest The "FOMO" driver: "There's something I can only get outside the marriage" Escapism loops and why there's lots of talk but slow follow-through Your role: guide and endure—not fix TWO QUESTIONS THAT CHANGE EVERYTHING Identity: How can you support a positive view of who she is inside the marriage (wife, mom, family)? Make those roles feel rewarding again and show the real return on her sacrifices. Possibility: How can you support a vision of marriage that includes healthy versions of what she wants outside it (freedom, independence, novelty, meaning)? ENDURING THE IN-BETWEEN Expect one step forward, two steps back. Use the "walkabout" mindset: keep home base safe and positive for the moments she circles back, and quietly embody your answers to the two questions above. NEXT STEPS Episode notes, quotes, and overview: episode overview Want support while you walk this out? Join the Husband Help Group waitlist FOR WHO Husbands in separation, men navigating a wife's identity/midlife crisis, and any couple who wants a path forward that's pro-marriage, pro-hope, and pro-wife. If this helped, like the video, subscribe, and drop a question in the comments—I read them all. #marriage #midlifecrisis #relationshipadvice

Has your wife ever said, "You don't validate me," or "Stop trying to fix it"? This episode is for the guys who love solutions—but keep getting told they're not listening. I'll show you why solution-first often backfires and exactly how to lead with validation so your solutions actually land. Big idea: When she brings a problem with hurt feelings, she needs an emotional landing pad before logistics. Start with validation, add curiosity, and remember imperfect is allowed—then offer a concrete action you'll take. 00:00 Welcome to Husband Help Haven 00:27 The Fixer Mentality 02:39 Understanding Your Wife's Feelings 05:57 Example of My Failure to Validate 10:27 The Importance of Emotional Engagement 13:44 Validation First 18:28 Curiosity, Not Judgment 20:44 Imperfect Is Allowed 24:03 Recap and Key Takeaways What you'll learn Why "being a fixer" frustrates her (she feels unheard or dismissed) The skill most men skip: say the truth she already knows, in your own words Three cues that change everything: Validation first Curiosity, not judgment Imperfect is allowed How to own impact (move from "sorry you felt…" → "I'm sorry I did ___ that led to ___") Why you should state what you'll do (don't make her manage you) Try these in your next hard talk Validation: "You're right—this is a lot. I left too much on your plate. I'd feel overwhelmed too." Curiosity: "Can you help me understand which part felt worst today?" / "What would feeling supported look like right now?" Action (no permission required): "I'm taking A, B, and C off your plate. If you want me to swap anything, tell me." One line to remember "She still wants to SEE the solution, but she wants to HEAR validation first." Resources & next steps Episode notes, quotes, and quick-reference cues: https://husbandhelphaven.com/episode-29/ Husband Help Group (waitlist): https://husbandhelphaven.com/waitlist (A private, pro-marriage, pro-hope community for men navigating separation or working to rebuild.) Who is this for? Husbands in separation, men feeling stuck under the same roof, and any guy who wants a clear, compassionate way to calm conflict and build connection. If this helped, like the video, subscribe, and share it with a friend who needs it. Much manly love, Stephen | Husband Help Haven #marriage #validation #communication #husband #relationshipadvice #marriageadvice #conflictresolution #emotionalintelligence #separation #HusbandHelpHaven

Are your "shoulds" stalling progress in your marriage? In this episode I unpack the trap of turning personal standards ("shoulds") into boundaries ("musts")—and how that pressure slows connection and blinds you to better solutions. See episode recap, key themes and quotes Many husbands (me included at times) think too much in terms of "should" Here are some common examples I see come up in coaching: "My wife should go to counseling." "She should talk about the affair and apologize before we move forward." "She should have told me before she left." Some of these are good standards. But when you elevate them into musts, you create pressure, enable self-justification, and blind yourself to better solutions. The fix isn't to ditch standards; it's to keep standards and boundaries in their proper places*, extract the *core need under your "should," and find unconventional paths that meet that need with more buy-in. --- What you'll learn Standards vs. Boundaries: How to stop lumping "shoulds" and "musts" together. Order matters: Why the affair conversation often seals healing rather than starts it. Alignment over pressure: Pressure creates standoffs; alignment creates dialogue. Find another path: When counseling or a marriage retreat is a "no," other options can still meet the same need. Avoid self-justification: Swap "she should…" for "what can I do today that moves us forward?" For conflict-avoidant men: Don't demote true musts into "shoulds" just to keep the peace. --- Memorable lines "Keep your shoulds in their proper place." "Standards are the bar you set; boundaries are the line you won't cross." "The conversation about the affair often seals the healing, not initiates it." "When we take the pressure off, we find alignment—and alignment invites dialogue." "Don't let a good 'should' become a bad 'must.'" --- Who this helps Husbands in separation, men navigating reconciliation after an affair, or any couple trying to rebuild trust without blame, bashing, or quick fixes.

Episode notes & quotes: https://husbandhelphaven.com/episode-27/ You've been lied to about your marriage. If the same problems keep showing up, you've probably heard: "That means it's unfixable—just leave." In this episode, we explore why that advice quietly wrecks good marriages—and what actually helps. Big idea: In every lifelong relationship, issues often feel cyclical because two steady humans bring steady strengths, weaknesses, and sensitivities. Healthy marriages don't permanently erase friction; they learn to manage it well. That's where commitment and self-awareness come in. In this episode, you'll learn: Why the "unfixable problems = divorce" script is a lie Why conflicts can feel the same even when the topics change How every strength has a shadow side (e.g., independence ↔ distance) A working definition of commitment you can use on hard days What real change looks like: mitigate weaknesses, amplify strengths Where boundaries and safety fit in (commitment isn't enabling abuse) Hope for separated men—why honoring your vow still shapes you into a better man One line to remember: "Happy marriages aren't the ones that fix every problem forever; they're the ones that learn to manage friction—over and over—together." Resources & next steps: Husband Help Group (waitlist): https://husbandhelphaven.com/waitlist (A premium, pro-marriage, pro-hope support group for men navigating separation.) If this episode helps, share it with a friend who needs encouragement—and leave a review so more men can find the show. Much manly love, Stephen | Husband Help Haven

What if the marriage you're living is the exact marriage you deserve? I know—sounds harsh, right? But hang with me. In over ten years of coaching men through separation, I've learned that treating this "what-if" as true is the quickest way to spotlight the blind spots you're contributing to the breakdown of the relationship. Go to https://husbandhelphaven.com/episode-26 for a full episode overview. 00:00 Introduction 00:20 You Get The Marriage You Deserve... Sort of 01:00 Key to Uncovering Blind Spots 03:44 How to Use this "What If" 04:29 Am I Too Harsh on Husbands? 05:42 Why You Should Want This To Be True 08:17 Addressing The Peace Keepers 12:10 The Danger of Peacekeeping 14:22 Key Takeaways 16:11 If you remember one thing... 17:33 Moving Forward With Self-Awareness "Stephen… isn't that a little harsh?" Yes, and it's meant to jolt us awake. I'm not saying you deserve pain or betrayal. I'm asking you to imagine you might be a bigger part of the problem than you realize. I often see two typical reactions to this statement: "Nope, not me!" → usually indicates pride, unwillingness to self-examine. "Okay… maybe." → usually indicates humility, openness to learn, far easier to coach. The question forces healthy self-interrogation: "What would I need to be blind to for this to be true?" Why You Should Want This To Be True You have more power than you think – If your habits helped create the mess, your new habits can help clean it up. Divorce ≠ Automatic Fix – You can't divorce yourself. Growth—not escape—is the thing that brings lasting change. Pride Shattered, Humility Unleashed – Humility and marital satisfaction rise (or fall) together. Most lessons in this series seek to help you do one of three things: Set aside ego, Consider your wife's experience, Proactively do better—because there is better to do. Big Takeaways You'll Hear It's not literally true you always get exactly what you deserve—but acting as if can uncover life-changing blind spots. Every marriage contains two flawed humans carrying baggage and ignorance. When those go unexamined, dissatisfaction skyrockets. "You don't have a ceiling—you do have blind spots." Deny that, and your best-possible marriage stays out of reach.