Blindref757 wrote:I asked for advice...I got it!!! No disrespect intended, but I asked for compelling arguments to help sway her position...not marital advice. I appreciate those who might suggest that there are issues behind her protest, but I think after 21 years together, I know her pretty well. I'm convinced that this is more about image and her feelings of safety than it is about a deficiency in our relationship. My wife is my most prized possession...and I say that with utmost respect (she isn't my property). I'm not going to get a divorce over this. We were married 20 years without a CHL. If not carrying at church is a big deal, I'll adapt. Being the spiritual leader of my household involves listening, compromising, and not always being heavy handed. To me, that's a prescription for many wives!
I appreciate all of your responses. I'm going to try a couple of these out when the time is right. She has talked about going to the range with me. As I stated earlier, she isn't anti-gun. She has no opposition to me carrying daily. I think she just needs to warm up to the idea that bad things can happen anywhere and everywhere. The world won't end if it takes a little time for this transition.
Thanks again to everyone who has replied.
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I'm going to suggest something different. My guess is that your wife has unvoiced reservations about your carrying other places besides church and that for her, your wanting to carry in church just put her "over the top."
For reference, my wife and I will be married 41 years this December. I didn't originally get my CHL with the idea to carry daily. We have an RV and I wanted something besides the shotgun that we've had with us since we bought the RV. When I found this board and started reading, I found myself on a journey. This happened before my plastic arrived.
When I even suggested my Wally Walk, my wife nearly came unglued. She supported my getting a CHL but saw no need for me to carry other than the RV. I discovered that while I had made a journey through reading this forum, she had not. I just started carrying without saying any more about it. When I posted here that I was doing things that way, I was roundly criticized. I, however, knew my wife and how to go about working with her.
Over weeks of suspecting that I was carrying but not knowing for sure, she grew more and more comfortable. Like you, I got push back when I first mentioned carrying in church but by then, she was far enough along her own journey that she recognized that there was no exposure to my being "exposed."
Now, she often asks if my gun is on hip when we go out, just to make sure. And I just smile.
I'm willing to bet that if I had sat her down in the beginning and asked her what was triggering her concerns, she would not have been able to articulate those concerns. I suspect that it was multi- faceted and that the biggest problem was that she hadn't thought it all through herself.
- would I have an ND?
- would I be detected? (she knew about Costco)
- would I be arrested?
- if I were detected in church, were there pacifists/antis in the congregation? We've already left one church because non-religious conflicts and she isn't anxious to go through that again.
If you talk to marriage counselors, they will tell you that a lot of couples have conflicts over finances but when you dig under it, the root of the conflict really isn't money. If you talk to weight loss counselors, they will tell you that many times, the underlying problem isn't food. Taking that type of logic one step further, I don't think all gun related conflicts are what they are initially thought to be either. But maybe that is just me.