“The choices we make are ultimately our responsibility.” Eleanor Roosevelt

There’s a moment in the movie Jay Kelly that’s easy to miss if you’re not paying attention.

Tim—not the main character—looks at Jay and accuses him of “stealing my life.”

It’s a loaded statement. Emotional. Convincing. And deeply revealing.

Because what Tim is really saying isn’t, “You wronged me.”

It’s, “I don’t want to face my part in how my life turned out.”

That single line exposes a trap many married men fall into—often without realizing it.

When life or marriage doesn’t look the way we hoped, the mind goes searching for a culprit.

  • A demanding job
  • A difficult wife
  • A missed opportunity
  • Someone else who “had it easier”
  • Someone who made a different choice—and now seems to be living your life

Tim’s accusation lets him avoid a harder truth:
No one stole his life. He participated in giving it away.

And it also makes him stuck.

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    Responsibility Isn’t About Fault—It’s About Agency

    Many men hear responsibility and immediately think blame.

    “So this is all on me?”
    “You’re saying I caused everything?”
    “What about what she did?”

    That’s not what responsibility means.

    Responsibility means recognizing where you still have agency—even if things didn’t unfold the way you wanted.

    Tim’s pain is real. But instead of asking, “What choices did I make—or avoid?” he focuses on what Jay supposedly took from him.

    In marriage, this shows up when a man says:

    • “She changed.”
    • “I never get credit.”
    • “I gave everything and got nothing back.”
    • “This isn’t the life I signed up for.”

    Those statements may contain truth.
    But they often hide a refusal to look at your own participation.

    Will you keep telling yourself your wife is to blame for the state of your marriage?
    Or will you take responsibility for your part?

    You’ve got this. But if you don’t, I’ve got you. Contact Me with the word Responsibility if you’re ready to make your marriage what you want it to be.

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    GOOD GUYS, GREAT HUSBANDS