Cheri wrote this article about having a complaint-free month. Well, let’s do it for all the days of Advent (Don’t take off Sundays….it needs to be a Day of Rest from complaining, too!)
Then, by the time Advent is over, we will be more aware of our complaining habit…not just with our husbands, but with everyone we come in contact with.
with permission by Cheri Gregory on Happy Wives Daily Blog
Every January for the last seven years, I’ve taken the Complaint-Free Challenge: one whole month without complaining.
Of course, this has not meant ignoring legitimate problems. Will Bowen, author of A Complaint-Free World, makes a clear distinction between complaining and problem-solving. Complaining is making energetic statements focused on the problem at hand rather than the resolution, while problem-solving is speaking directly and only to the person who can resolve the issue.
Complaint-Free: Who Me?
The first time I tried the Complaint-Free Challenge, I discovered how rarely I used true problem-solving techniques. My mouth seemed set on negative auto-pilot. I griped endlessly out of habit rather than choosing my words with care.
To become more aware of my complaining tendencies, I started each day with a purple “Complaint-Free World” bracelet on my left wrist. Each time I caught myself complaining, I changed the band to my other wrist.
I soon became conscious of one specific complaining habit involving my husband.
Every time Daniel came into my home office, I’d stop working and start complaining. This habit was so automatic that the moment I’d hear him walking downstairs, I’d feel irritated and find something wrong to report the moment he walked in.
This is ridiculous! I thought. What’s going on here? Why do I drop what I’m doing and fabricate a complaint whenever Daniel appears?
Finally, after some soul-searching and a good laugh at my own expense, I realized what I was doing:
I was trying to reconnect with my husband.
We’d been apart for a while, and I was trying to re-engage with him. Of course, the method I was using was counterproductive; my complaints often resulted in disagreements or Daniel retreating in haste.
Once I recognized my true desire, I tried a new approach. I replaced all my complaints with one simple word:
“Hi!”
It worked like a charm.
3 Reasons I Aim to be Complaint-Free Wife
1. I am more pleasant to be with. Daniel stops by to see me far more frequently, and with far less trepidation!
2. I am happier. I’ve found that what I hear, I take to heart. And since I hear myself 24/7, complaining words and thoughts cause a cacophony of “baditude” in my heart. Less complaining has created space for peace, quiet, and contentment.
3. I’m more grateful. I used to think that I’d get around to gratitude when I didn’t have so much to complain about. When I intentionally quit complaining, I suddenly had time to notice and point out all the good. The more appreciation I expressed, the more I noticed things for which I was grateful. As gratitude became my new default, complaining naturally died off.
I recognize that going complaint-free isn’t for everyone. But I’ll tell you from experience that each time I take the Complaint-Free Challenge, I become more the happy woman–and happy wife–I most want to be.


Valuable lessons are learned when a family works together. A child learns to respect authority. He becomes independent, does not expect others to pave the way before him, but learns that working is part of earning his way. The discipline he develops will be invaluable to him all through his life. -Finer Femininity

Advent is creeping up and with it… the most wonderful time of the year! Celebrate by having a meaningful Advent! Below are some helps along the way!
Advent Journal ~ Available here.
Advent and Christmas Books ~ Available here.
Spiritual Christmas Crib Flip Cards ~ Available here.
St. Andrew Christmas Novena Chaplet ~ Available here.

With his facile pen and from the wealth of his nation-wide experience, the well-known author treats anything and everything that might be included under the heading of home education: the pre-marriage training of prospective parents, the problems of the pre-school days down through the years of adolescence. No topic is neglected. “What is most praiseworthy is Fr. Lord’s insistence throughout that no educational agency can supplant the work that must be done by parents.” – Felix M. Kirsch, O.F.M.
Necessary advice to Catholic parents building a Catholic home. Reliable advice that is almost completely lost today, from people who know how it’s done. How to make it. How to live it. How to keep it. This book covers every aspect of Catholicizing your home–from spiritual matters like prayer and catechism to nuts and bolts topics like Keeping the Family Budget, Games and Toys, Harmony between School and Home, Family Prayers, Good Reading in the Home, Necessity of Home Life and much more
This post contains affiliate links. Thank you for your support.

















That is interesting.. She wanted to reconnect with her husband, and that way her way of starting a conversation… This is really good to think on… How to start up talking about important things with our sweetie without incessant complaints. 😊
Thank you!
I’m trying to and it is difficult. I still have half the day left. I guess it’s one day at a time.😊
.
Boy, do I need this article!! Today has been one of those days for sure. My mom used tell us 12 kids: “if you complain about something, then you can’t offer it up”. Even if you’re just complaining to yourself in your mind. No “extra credit” when complaining!