You did everything right. You provided. You showed up. You stayed. You worked yourself raw for decades so your family would never go without. And somewhere in the middle of all that doing, your marriage went quiet. Not the peaceful kind of quiet. The kind that sits between two people at a dinner table where nobody has anything left to say.

She is across the room. She has been across the room for years. You share a house, a last name, a bed, and almost nothing else. You are not fighting. You are not falling apart in any way the outside world would recognize. You are fine. And "fine" is the most dangerous word in the English language, because it is the lie two people agree to tell when the truth is too heavy to hold.

Together on Paper: Strangers in Reality is not a marriage book for newlyweds. It is not a devotional. It is not a twelve-step program wrapped in Bible verses and tied with a bow. It is a direct, unflinching conversation written by a man, for men-specifically for men in their fifties and sixties who have spent decades building a life and only recently realized they forgot to build a marriage.

David Bishop writes the way an engineer diagnoses a system failure: methodically, honestly, and without sentiment. Using the language of process control-setpoints, drift, calibration, autopilot-he maps the slow erosion that turned your marriage from a living relationship into a routine you maintain out of habit. Every chapter is anchored in scripture, not as decoration, but as the diagnostic manual for a covenant you made before God and have been running on fumes ever since.

The book is built in six parts. The Diagnosis names what is happening in your marriage and why you cannot see it-the performance you put on at church, the slow fade you mistook for stability, the word "fine" you use as a shield. How You Got Here traces the forces that pulled you apart: the career that consumed you, the children who became the center, the phone in your hand, and the silence you built brick by brick. The Man in the Mirror turns the lens inward, because before you can fix the marriage, you have to face the man who broke it-his ego, his emotional bankruptcy, his spiritual drought, and the anger he has been drinking like poison for years.

Then the book shifts. The Woman Across the Room asks you to see your wife again-not the woman you married, but the woman she became while you were not looking, the weight she has been carrying alone, and what she stopped telling you because she gave up believing you would hear it. The Rebuild gives you the tools: the conversation that changes everything, the slow work of rebuilding trust, learning to fight clean, and the recalibration that a dead marriage requires. The Long Road is about staying-not staying married, which you have already done, but being married, which is something else entirely. Covenant versus contract. Daily bread versus grand gestures. And the legacy you are writing for your children whether you intend to or not.

Every chapter ends with The Mirror-a set of reflection exercises that will not let you hide. This is not a book that lets you off the hook. It is a book that hands you the hook and says, here, this is yours, you put it there, now do something about it.

The final chapter is a letter. Not to you. To her. Because the hardest words a man will ever write are the ones that begin with I see you now, and I am sorry it took me this long.

If your marriage is not in crisis but it is not alive either-if you are sharing a life on paper but living as strangers in reality-this book was written at a kitchen table for you.



Autorentext

Two lives,
one story.

By day, I'm the President of , an industrial automation firm where I've spent 39+ years making very complicated things work properly for Fortune 500 companies.

By night, I write about marriage?sometimes with humor, sometimes with hard truth.

Wide Awake goes deeper. It's for the 3 AM version of you?the one lying awake, worried about your marriage, wondering if things will ever change. The Mirror Principle at its core is simple: before you examine your spouse, examine yourself.

The Sacred Off Switch challenges our addiction to infinite distraction. We check our phones over 2,600 times a day, but what if the path back to God, your spouse, and yourself begins with choosing to turn it off?

I've also written the "Definitely" series?satirical takes on marriage that let couples laugh at themselves?and a children's book about a very good dog named Henry.

Titel
Together on Paper: Strangers in Reality
EAN
9798232402730
Format
E-Book (epub)
Hersteller
Veröffentlichung
10.02.2026
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
0.65 MB