Orlando Sentinel

Love is the glue in a home

- Marni Jameson By Design

Experts share advice on how to turn your house into a home.

Love. We want it. We get it. We lose it. We mess it up. We try again. That’s because love is what binds us, beckons us, blinds us and brings us home. In fact, love is why we have a home in the first place.

Without love, a home is just housing.

I’m bringing all this up because of Valentine’s Day. As a home (not house) columnist, I’m here to remind you that love is the glue in a home. It’s the foundation for our commitment, our attachment, our responsibi­lities and much of our behavior. Love is why we cook, clean, decorate and try to smell good. It’s what drives us to make a comfortabl­e, welcoming nest.

And so, we need to protect the love in our home like a church relic, and tend it like a hearth fire.

Besides having a home that looks the way you want, your home should also, more importantl­y, make you feel better than anywhere else. And that has a lot less to do with your décor, and a lot more to do with how y’all get along, though, I confess, a new piece of art does make me feel pretty good.

This week marks three years since I married DC. My toes still curl when I hear his car drive into the garage. That’s a good thing, which neither of us takes for granted. We’ve learned firsthand, marriages can end in death and divorce, so we take care of what we have.

One way we do that is with the 52 Rule, which I learned, like most things, the hard way. It works like this. Many couples see their roles as 50-50 partnershi­ps, which leave little margin for error. When Partner A gets annoyed, he or she often pulls back to 48 percent, and waits for Partner B to step up. (I’m speaking generally, here, not that I know from experience.) This bugs Partner B, who also starts giving only 48. The 4 percent gap becomes the divide where the loveeaters (tension and resentment) live.

However, when both partners give 52, not 50 or 48 — when they step up consistent­ly, not back, when she empties the dishwasher though it’s his turn; when he makes the bed though she usually does; when he brings her car home washed and full of gas; when she knows he has a jammed day and packs his favorite lunch — they create not a gap but an overlap, a grace zone where grudges can’t live.

Because I have no business giving relationsh­ip advice, I shared my 52 Rule

with Dr. Jeannette Lofus, a New York-based psychologi­st, remarriage expert and founder of The Step Family Foundation.

“Absolutely right,” she said. (Thank goodness.) “Acts of service are an often-overlooked love language that, when practiced, create a great buffer and make partners feel cherished.”

I don’t know about that, but I do know that when my husband does more, it makes me do more.

Besides leaning in — not out — at home, here are five more ways Lofus said couples and families can keep the home fires burning, kick the love up a notch and create a home that you and those you live with love to come home to, not just on Valentine’s Day, but every day:

Make greetings warm.

When your partner or your kids come in the door, make them feel welcome. Don’t sit staring at your phone laptop, the newspaper or the TV. Get up and greet them with a smile and a hug or kiss. Show them you’re happy to see them. “Make it a moment,” says Lofus. “If you were upset last time you saw each other, go past that, and say, ‘I’m glad you’re home.’ ”

Create rituals. Routines are important for all families, especially for blended families, said Lofus, who notes that 64 percent of families today live in some form of divorced or stepfamily relationsh­ip. A common ritual at my house has always been the evening meal. Make it a point, even when schedules are whacky, to sit down for a meal together, with no technology on the table, and connect. Use excellent manners. Good manners aren’t just for your public side. Use them at home, too. Opening even the smallest request with “please” shows graciousne­ss. Saying thank you often, even for routine gestures — thank you for making the coffee or getting the door or doing the dishes — expresses appreciati­on. Answering, “You’re welcome,” acknowledg­es the other’s gratitude. These small civilities create a culture of kindness.

Make room. Every person in a home should have his or her own space. But if you’ve bled into the common area, like the kitchen table or counter, with your stuff, clear it when your partner comes in. “This literally shows you’re making room for the relationsh­ip,” said Lofus. “If the others in the house feel like there’s no place for them, that’s a real discount. But if you move your stuff, you’re saying, there’s a space for you here.”

Say it with flowers. You

don’t need a dozen red roses each week. A bunch of daises or other fresh flowers from the grocery store in a simple vase on the kitchen table or in other shared areas tell those you live with that you care. Flowers elevate the everyday.

Happy Valentine’s Day — all year long. Syndicated columnist Marni Jameson is the author of “Downsizing the Family Home – What to Save, What to Let Go” and “Downsizing the Family Home: A Workbook.” You may reach her at www .marnijames­on.com.

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 ?? HLAURA FOR DREAMSTIME ?? A loving feeling at home starts with a warm welcome. When your loved ones come home, make it a habit to greet them with a smile and a hug.
HLAURA FOR DREAMSTIME A loving feeling at home starts with a warm welcome. When your loved ones come home, make it a habit to greet them with a smile and a hug.
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