Most cops can diagram a use‑of‑force or OIS timeline down to the second. But ask us to explain why we’ve been in the same argument with our spouse for three days straight, and it suddenly gets foggy. Underneath a lot of that confusion is a simple pattern Emerson Eggerichs calls the “Crazy Cycle” (Eggerichs’ book, Love & Respect: The Love She Most Desires; The Respect He Desperately Needs, is a must read). Once we understand the cycle, we can start to break it.
This cycle is amplified by two realities: men and women often fear different things, and law enforcement culture intensifies those fears. The good news is that Scripture and solid research give police couples a way to calm the chaos instead of feeding it. Men and women often fear different things, and law enforcement culture intensifies those fears. Share on X
Sociologists and researchers asked men and women to share their greatest fears, and here’s what they found: most women reported fearing isolation and abandonment, while most men reported fearing shame and failure.
That doesn’t mean every person fits the mold perfectly, but the pattern is strong. Women often counter their fears by building deep relational networks so they’re not alone, even if their marriage is struggling. Men often counter their fears by hiding weakness and avoiding situations where they might look incompetent (think of how most officers feel about “performing” in front of peers on training days).
In a police home, those fears are often exacerbated by the job. Shift work and missed family events can feel like abandonment to a wife who already fears isolation. Constant evaluation, body‑cams, social media, and command scrutiny feed a husband’s fear of shame and failure.
Emerson Eggerichs’ “Love and Respect” framework captures how those fears collide in marriage. Scripture (Ephesians 5:33) calls husbands to love their wives and wives to respect their husbands, targeting exactly those core needs. The “Crazy Cycle” starts when those needs are ignored or abused:
- A husband does or says something unloving – maybe he tunes out after shift, makes a harsh comment, or minimizes his wife’s concerns.
- His wife, who can’t respect a man she feels is unloving, responds with disrespect – tone, words, or withdrawal.
- He feels disrespected, which hits his deepest fear (shame/failure), and he reacts with more unloving behavior.
- She feels even less loved, fears isolation or abandonment, and her disrespect ramps up.
And there you have it. Round and round you go. Add sleep deprivation, trauma, and shift changes, and the dial spins faster for police couples. Neither spouse set out to attack the other’s core need, but that’s exactly what happens.
In this pattern, both spouses feel like the victim, He thinks, “I’m busting my tail at work and getting disrespected at home.” She thinks, “I’m carrying so much alone and getting zero love back.” See the problem?
Telling either one to “just try harder” doesn’t help much, because each is waiting for the other to blink first. That’s where Christian humility and God-directed service makes all the difference. Someone has to decide, “Even if I don’t get what I want right now, I will give what my spouse most needs.”
So, if you’re in a law enforcement marriage, here’s how you can shift from reacting to responding:
Identify that you’re on the Crazy Cycle. Together, agree on language: “I think we’re on the Crazy Cycle right now.” Naming it out loud turns it from a foggy feeling into something we can fight together instead of fighting each other.
Husbands: lead with love when you feel disrespected. This is the opposite of what we’ll feel like doing. When you sense disrespect, instead of withdrawing or snapping back, do something concretely loving: listen without interrupting, offer a specific encouragement, or take a task off her plate unasked. You’re telling her, “You’re not alone; I’m with you,” which speaks to her deepest fears.
Wives: offer respect when you feel unloved. When you feel hurt or ignored, everything in you may want to cut him down. Instead, choose one respectful action or phrase: “Thank you for providing for us,” “I’m proud of how you handled that situation,” or simply softening your tone. You’re telling him, “I still see you as competent and worthy,” which speaks to his deepest fears.
Both: remember your real audience. Remember that your ultimate audience is God, not each other. You’re not rewarding good behavior; you’re obeying Christ. That mindset keeps you from quitting the moment your spouse doesn’t immediately respond the way you hoped.
Once we’ve broken a particular spin of the Crazy Cycle, we can stay off it longer by changing what you mentally rehearse. Philippians 4:8 gives a powerful “thought filter”: whatever is true, noble, right, pure, lovely, admirable, excellent, or praiseworthy; think about those things.
When we find yourself replaying our spouse’s worst moments, we must force ourselves to identify at least one thing from that list we saw in them today. Maybe it’s the way they handled a issue with the kids, showed up after a long shift, or tried (awkwardly) to reconnect. This doesn’t mean ignoring real sin or problems; it means refusing to let the negative dominate our thoughts. Gratitude and generous interpretation take fuel away from the Crazy Cycle before it even starts.
If you haven’t yet embraced the serving Savior who gave his life for others and can show us how to do the same, there is no better time than now to start life anew and share God’s life-changing message with others. The wisdom, guidance, and protection of God is available for anyone who seeks Him.