3 Daily Habits That Make Or Break Your Marriage
Most marriages don’t fail from one big mistake, they fail from skipping these three daily habits.

Your marriage won’t be sustained solely by the vows you exchange on your wedding day. It’s fueled by the daily habits and choices that either build connection or slowly dissolve it. Things like valuing your partner beyond what they can do for you, carving out time to talk past your agenda or calendar, and intentionally creating romance, both hot and heavy and slow and still.
Whether you’re feeling disconnected, just “coexisting,” or looking for solid guidance before you even tie the knot, these three habits can help recenter your connection, rebuild trust, and remind you why you said “I do” in the first place.
My husband and I recently celebrated seven years of marriage. During that time, we’ve experienced our own range of connection and chaos, seasons of feeling like best friends living together, staying up late watching shows and snacking, traveling to dream destinations and making memories that will last for decades, and welcoming our sweet children into the world. We’ve also walked through harder seasons, when the demands of life took center stage and connection rode in the backseat, when we were adjusting to new parenthood, learning new rhythms, extending grace, and navigating the ebb and flow of partnership between two imperfect people.
What I’ve discovered is that all the love and emotion I invested in my husband, and the long-held desire I carried for marriage, weren’t enough on their own. As women, we often dream of marriage, yet we aren’t always taught or prepared for the maturity it requires or how to truly navigate it. Like a skilled sailor, you can love the sea and cherish the experience of sailing, but you still need a deep understanding of your role and respect for the waters you’re navigating.
Your marriage is fueled by the daily habits and choices that either build connection or slowly dissolve it.
Challenges will arise in every marriage. In fact, research from the Gottman Institute shows that all couples fight, yes, all of us. The question isn’t if conflict comes, but how we respond when the person we once dreamed about and couldn’t stop kissing becomes our lifelong partner, someone who mirrors both our beauty and our brokenness, standing beside us in the thick and the thin, when we crave closeness and when we don’t. How do we continue growing together? If we prepare ourselves and build skill for the journey, we’re better equipped to weather the inevitable waves and enjoy the adventure together.
“For love is supreme and must flow through each of these virtues. Love becomes the mark of true maturity.” (Col. 3:14 TPT)
Marriage asks us to become more mature sailors, aware of the waters we’re navigating and willing to grow our skills as we go. Maturity in marriage is an ability to respond to situations with understanding and assurance from a level of mental and emotional resolution. These skills enable us to navigate the complexities of relationships with unity, reason, and patience. Maturity sustains marriage, and small acts build bigger connections.
Here are three practical habits, key marks of mature love, that can prepare you for or sustain you in a strong, lasting marriage while also elevating the relationships you have right now.
Practice Fast Forgiveness (Before Resentment Has Time to Set In)
How quick are you to forgive others, or yourself? Forgiveness isn’t a free pass for boundary lines to be crossed or excusing without remorse. It’s a release of what attempts to separate. I’m talking about taking the emotional trash out rather than letting it pile up. No one is exempt from flaws, not you nor your spouse.
Maybe your husband forgot to actually take the trash out, didn’t respond to you with the most empathetic emotion like your girlfriend would, or was late to date night. Forgiveness chooses to believe the best, seeks to find how to learn and reconnect, and in a spiritual sense, eliminates the enemy’s ammunition in driving a wedge between two people committed to love. I like to think of it less as a “get out of jail free” card and more as a “let’s try that again,” a do-over that allows two people to realign and reset. Holding onto resentment only traps us, but forgiveness frees our hearts to move forward.
Forgiving your spouse, or your friends, family, or peers, is following the model Christ set for us. Colossians 3:13 says, “If one has a complaint against another, forgive each other; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive.” Forgiveness sustains two imperfect people aiming to love in the example of perfect love.
The story of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11–32) offers a vivid picture. After squandering his inheritance, the son returned home expecting rejection. Instead, his father ran to meet him, choosing restoration over resentment. The father’s joy shows that forgiveness can free the heart to love again. It may not always feel fair, but it creates space for healing and renewed connection.
Once we forgive and remove potential bitterness, we become quicker to see solutions and ways forward.
Now, if someone is repeatedly hurting you without resetting and continuing on the same destructive path, that is not okay. What I’m suggesting is that when someone close to you, like your husband, makes a mistake, you believe them when they say they’re sorry and believe that you can keep moving ahead after hitting a bump in the road. Jesus implored us to forgive habitually. “Then Peter came to Jesus and asked, ‘Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother or sister who sins against me? Up to seven times?’ Jesus answered, ‘I tell you, not seven times, but seventy-seven times’” (Matt. 18:21–22 NIV).
Even a kind-hearted, lovable spouse will need your forgiveness from time to time. It could be as simple as forgetting to pick up something from the store or having a moment of impatience, but this act of mature love keeps hearts mended. Once we forgive and remove potential bitterness, we become quicker to see solutions and ways forward.
So choose to forgive your spouse. Make way for reconnecting and redirecting conversations, addressing what transpired and how it affected you, but let your heart be set on forgiveness so that you’re able to come together with accountability over accusations, kind words over name-calling, and clarity over calamity. Let forgiveness work to your advantage, whether in your relationship now or in preparing for the future.
I wrote Future Husband, Present Prayers for the woman who wants to begin growing in preparation as a wife and to bless her spouse. Relationships are not always straightforward, however, there are rhythms that can lead us on straighter paths to deep connection and close-to-the-heart desires.
Build Trust Through Radical Honesty and Follow-Through
Something I appreciated about my now-husband, Arden, and that set him apart in our dating is that he never made me question where we stood. He told me early in our time together that he dated with the intent to marry, with purpose and a goal. Dating wasn’t just fun and games to him or a way to test the waters. To him, love was for marriage, and dating was for finding his spouse. He proved trustworthy in remaining honorable in his actions, clear in his communication, and present in making progressive steps to truly know one another. I was impressed by his approach, but even more impressed by its authenticity. Seeing his words and actions align showed me he was trustworthy and that if I could trust him at his word, I could trust him with my heart.
Being honest and trustworthy leads to falling in love more readily, but it also allows for staying in love. If rumors come against your relationship, you’re separated in times of travel or distance, or you face trials together, trust will be a tightrope to carry you over what would otherwise seem too great a downfall. Trust creates safety, security, and closeness between a couple. In our experience, the deepest trust has been forged as we’ve learned to trust Jesus together.
Trust isn’t merely something we hope for. It’s something we cultivate.
When He is our example of how to walk in honesty, and also who we will have to answer to if we don’t, it amplifies our conviction and commitment. In a powerful example of trustworthiness, Jesus told His disciples that He would not forsake them, even prophesying His own return from the grave (Matt. 16:21). Even in the realm of impossibility, He kept His word and shook the natural limits of love. He showed that love is more powerful than death and taught that truth is a means for miracles.
“Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.” (1 Cor. 13:6–7 NIV)
In a day and age where we constantly hear of another marriage failing or worry about who we should and shouldn’t believe, it can seem that trust would be hard to find. But I implore you to pray for trust to be a priority in your marriage. You’ll seek to trust your spouse’s character, actions, and level-headedness.
Trust is built by admitting when you’re wrong, honoring your word, and talking well about your partner to their face and behind their back. Trust isn’t merely something we hope for. It’s something we cultivate. I also trust his character. More than I trust that he’ll never let me down or forget something I already told him, I do trust that he is a man of integrity and that when I do need him, I can depend on him.
My husband was able to share some of the most important factors in establishing our relationship and trusting that we were making the right choices in a spouse on a recent episode of the Dear Future Husband Podcast.
Choose Calm Responses Over Emotional Reactions
Real love is steady. It’s thoughtful, patient, and grounded, even when emotions run high. It’s the kind of love that thinks beyond the moment and considers the life you’re building, not just the feelings you’re having. Immature love tends to be quicker, louder, and confident in shortcuts, focused on what feels good now rather than what will truly endure.
Anyone who’s been married long enough knows this: feelings come and go, chemistry ebbs and flows, and not every moment is fueled by sparks and butterflies. What sustains a marriage is love that knows when to slow down, respond wisely, and choose care over impulse, especially when emotions run high. The story of David and Bathsheba reminds us that unchecked desire can bring lasting harm, while thoughtful love protects what is sacred.
For women who want to do marriage well, the invitation isn’t to eliminate passion but to anchor it in wisdom, commitment, and self-control. Love that lasts learns to think beyond today, protect what’s sacred, and choose faithfulness, even when impulse would be easier. As Hebrews 5:12–14 reminds us, “Solid food is for the mature, for those whose powers of discernment are trained by constant practice to distinguish good from evil.” Mature love grows over time through patience, wisdom, and a willingness to learn and adapt.
Love that lasts learns to think beyond today, protect what’s sacred, and choose faithfulness, even when impulse would be easier.
And there is one habit that makes all the others possible: prayer. Prayer reconnects us in every season, especially the tough ones. As Ecclesiastes 4:12 says, “A person standing alone can be attacked and defeated, but two can stand back-to-back and conquer. Three are even better, for a triple-braided cord is not easily broken.” Prayer unites two hearts and connects them to Someone bigger than themselves.
I’ve experienced the Lord answering specific prayers over my husband even before we met, prayers that protected him, clarified his path, and prepared us both. I’ve seen Him unite us in areas I never thought possible, draw us back together after conflict, and guide our shared dreams and calling. In seasons when our own wisdom might have driven us apart, His guidance drove us closer together. As Luke 1:37 reminds us, “With God, nothing is impossible.” That’s the kind of superglue and superpower I want in my marriage.
If you’re looking for prayer prompts, scriptures, or guidance on how to pray for your spouse or future husband, the Dear Future Husband Prayer Journal can help you cultivate this essential habit.