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katie-josh | Josh + Katie Walters

May 8, 2025 • General

Life doesn’t slow down for love—but love can still slow down for life.

This week, Josh and I are preparing for one of the biggest milestones yet: our daughter’s wedding. It’s beautiful, surreal, emotional… and busy. The to-do lists are long. The emotions are high. And the truth is, it would’ve been easy to miss each other in the rush.

But we didn’t want to.

So before the final flurry of wedding prep, we took a quick “wedding moon”—just the two of us. A short escape to pause and reflect on our love story as we prepare to release our daughter into hers.

Because these moments matter.
The milestones are not just about what’s changing—they’re about how we walk through the change together.

Here’s what we’re learning:

1. Mark the Moment, Don’t Just Manage It

It’s tempting to slip into logistics mode when life gets big. But your marriage isn’t just a partnership—it’s a relationship. Look each other in the eyes. Say out loud what this moment means to you. Take time to celebrate before you check the next box.

2. Prioritize Your Person

When the world starts spinning faster, slow down for each other. Maybe it’s a walk, a late-night talk, or a quick getaway. Ask each other:

What do you need from me in this season?

How can I love you better this week?

Sometimes the best gift you can give your spouse is your full presence.

3. Give Grace in the Gaps

Big seasons bring big feelings—and sometimes, big misunderstandings. Grace is the glue. Assume the best. Say “I’m sorry” quickly. Choose kindness over being right. Life will give you enough tension—don’t add more by holding your spouse to an impossible standard.

4. Remember the Why

Before the job change, the baby, the move, the wedding—there was you two. Take time to remember how it all began. Celebrate the journey. Remind yourselves that love is the anchor in every transition.

Your milestone may not look like ours. Maybe you’re sending a child off to college, navigating a new diagnosis, or stepping into an unexpected opportunity. Whatever it is—mark it together. Because staying close when life speeds up isn’t automatic.

It’s intentional.

And it’s always worth it.

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  • 3 simple ways to honor each others past while building a new identity:

Practice Curiosity not Criticism or Comparing

Instead of evaluating each other’s past (That’s weird/ My family did it better), choose curiosity.

Try this:
Ask: “What did that mean to you growing up?”
Share: “Here’s what that tradition felt like for me…”

2. Name What You Want to Keep, Release, and Rebuild

Every couple needs to intentionally decide:
Keep → What from our past is life-giving?
Release → What patterns do we NOT want to carry forward?
Rebuild → What do we want to create that’s uniquely ours?

3. Create New Rhythms That Reflect Both of You

Your marriage isn’t meant to mirror one family, it’s meant to become a new culture.

Start small:
A weekly meal or tradition from each background
A shared rhythm (Friday night check-in, prayer, or date night)
Celebrating holidays in a blended, intentional way

You’re not choosing between two histories, you’re authoring a third story together.
  • If you want to “win” a marriage argument you can’t make your spouse the looser! Take the challenge and put it on the table so you can win the problem together. Two become One flesh!
  • Is there anyone else who struggles to let something go? 🙋🏻‍♀️ Well thanks to @lesandleslie for teaching us “The hand squeeze” principal!
Let us know in the comments if you have any other good tools to stop beating a dead horse!
  • Happy Easter! Jesus defeated death so that we could have abundant life. Jesus holds the Victory over your story and marriage, let Him be your living Hope! 
John 10:10
3 simple ways to honor each others past while building a new identity: Practice Curiosity not Criticism or Comparing Instead of evaluating each other’s past (That’s weird/ My family did it better), choose curiosity. Try this: Ask: “What did that mean to you growing up?” Share: “Here’s what that tradition felt like for me…” 2. Name What You Want to Keep, Release, and Rebuild Every couple needs to intentionally decide: Keep → What from our past is life-giving? Release → What patterns do we NOT want to carry forward? Rebuild → What do we want to create that’s uniquely ours? 3. Create New Rhythms That Reflect Both of You Your marriage isn’t meant to mirror one family, it’s meant to become a new culture. Start small: A weekly meal or tradition from each background A shared rhythm (Friday night check-in, prayer, or date night) Celebrating holidays in a blended, intentional way You’re not choosing between two histories, you’re authoring a third story together.
2 days ago
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1/4
If you want to “win” a marriage argument you can’t make your spouse the looser! Take the challenge and put it on the table so you can win the problem together. Two become One flesh!
5 days ago
View on Instagram |
2/4
Is there anyone else who struggles to let something go? 🙋🏻‍♀️ Well thanks to @lesandleslie for teaching us “The hand squeeze” principal! Let us know in the comments if you have any other good tools to stop beating a dead horse!
1 week ago
View on Instagram |
3/4
Happy Easter! Jesus defeated death so that we could have abundant life. Jesus holds the Victory over your story and marriage, let Him be your living Hope! 
John 10:10
Happy Easter! Jesus defeated death so that we could have abundant life. Jesus holds the Victory over your story and marriage, let Him be your living Hope! 
John 10:10
Happy Easter! Jesus defeated death so that we could have abundant life. Jesus holds the Victory over your story and marriage, let Him be your living Hope! John 10:10
1 week ago
View on Instagram |
4/4
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