“Maturity comes in three stages: dependence, independence and interdependence. Jenna Jameson
This weekend we’ll celebrate the birth of American independence.
But there’s another kind of independence that’s just as important. Especially if you’re a husband.
Here’s what I mean.
When America’s founders first created a government, they chose a system called the Articles of Confederation. It gave each state maximum independence and very little shared authority.
Sounds good in theory.
In reality?
The states argued constantly, protected their own interests, and struggled to work together. The system simply wasn’t built for long-term success.
So they scrapped it and created the Constitution to take its place.
The Constitution didn’t eliminate independence. It balanced it with something more powerful: interdependence.
That’s exactly what a great marriage requires.
Many men unknowingly approach marriage like the Articles of Confederation.
“I’ll handle my responsibilities.”
“She can handle hers.”
“I don’t want to depend on anyone.”
On the surface, that sounds strong.
But over time, it creates two people living parallel lives instead of building one life together.
The strongest marriages aren’t built on dependence.
They’re built on two capable, independent people who intentionally choose to work as one team.
That’s interdependence.
It means you keep your identity while recognizing that your choices affect your wife—and hers affect you.
It means making decisions with “us” in mind, not just “me.”
It means understanding that connection isn’t the opposite of strength.
It’s the result of it.
The best leaders know that no championship team is built on individual talent alone.
Neither is a great marriage.
Both happen because they are intentionally created to be stronger because of the relationships, not despite them.
Your Action Step This Weekend
As you’re enjoying the cookouts, parades, or fireworks, ask yourself one question:
“Where am I protecting my independence when I could be building partnership instead?”
Then do one simple thing.
Invite your wife into that conversation.
You don’t need to solve everything.
Just start with curiosity.
That single conversation can create more connection than another weekend spent assuming everything is fine.
Have a safe and happy Fourth of July.
You’ve got this. But if you don’t, I’ve got you. If you struggle with letting go (or letting your wife in), reach out with the word JULY.
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