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The Surrendered Wife Principles: Why This Idea Still Resonates (Even if it Makes You Cringe)

  • Writer: Tehilla Luttig
    Tehilla Luttig
  • Aug 12
  • 3 min read

When women hear the phrase “The Surrendered Wife,” many either light up… or bristle.

Some feel hope: “Yes! I’m so tired of doing it all - maybe this is the answer.”Others feel their stomach drop: “Oh no. Here we go again. Be smaller, do less, stay quiet.”

Both reactions are valid - and they come from lived experience.

Before we talk about whether this concept is helpful or harmful, let’s start with what Laura Doyle actually teaches in her book, The Surrendered Wife.


The Surrendered Wife

What Laura Doyle Meant by “Surrender”


Doyle wrote The Surrendered Wife after realizing her marriage was strained, not because her husband was failing, but because she was trying to lead both of them. Her core principles include:


  • Respecting your husband’s thinking - trusting him to make decisions without constant correction.

  • Expressing desires without criticism - replacing “Why didn’t you…?” with “I’d love it if…”

  • Letting go of control over finances and decisions that impact the whole family.

  • Focusing on your own happiness instead of micromanaging his behaviour.

  • Prioritizing self-care so you have more to give.

Her promise? That if a woman stopped running the entire marriage and started trusting her husband, she’d find more peace, intimacy, and joy.


Why So Many Women Loved The Surrendered Wife Principles

This message took off for a reason.Modern women are exhausted from holding the mental load, emotional load, and often the financial load, too. Doyle offered a way to set some of it down.The appeal was clear:

  • No more feeling like the default project manager of the marriage.

  • The relief of not having to control everything.

  • The possibility of feeling cherished again.

In other words - she gave permission to rest. And for many women, that was revolutionary. The Surrendered Wife principles hold value.


Why It Makes Other Women Clench Up

But here’s the thing: surrender is only beautiful when it’s safe.If you don’t trust the person leading - if you suspect he’s thinking more about his man cave than the wellbeing of the family - then surrender feels like stepping into oncoming traffic without looking.

This is the unspoken truth: Many women aren’t afraid of letting go. They’re afraid of what will happen if they do.


Women are exhausted by carrying an invisible load. Men are exhausted from feeling nothing is ever good enough.

Where I Think the Conversation Needs More

While Doyle’s principles offer genuine relief, they also put the responsibility almost entirely on the wife.The truth is, marriage is a mutual dance.For surrender to work, leadership must be servant-hearted, visionary, and trustworthy. Without that, “surrender” risks becoming self-abandonment.

And that’s where the conversation needs to go next - how to create the kind of partnership where surrender is not only possible, but life-giving.


Coming next: Why women crave surrender (and why it feels unsafe) - a deeper dive into the longing for rest, release, and trust in relationships, and what makes it work in real life.




Tehilla Luttig - Relationship And Identity Coach
Written by Tehilla Luttig

Tehilla Luttig is a former play-therapist turned global relationship coach who discovered that healing parents creates the deepest, most lasting impact on families. Now, she helps individuals and couples reclaim their joy in love, life, and relationships—because happy parents create thriving families.


Known as the Fairy Godmother of Relationships, Tehilla’s work focuses on healing the past, rebuilding emotional resilience, and empowering clients to experience true safety, connection, and fulfillment in love.


Drawing from a rich, psychology-based toolbox that blends neuroscience, somatics, faith, and relational EQ, she guides clients to release old patterns, rebuild self-trust, and transform their relationships from strained to soulful.


As a mom, wife, writer, speaker, licensed counselor, and coach, Tehilla is passionate about helping you rewrite your love story—where joy, intimacy, and emotional freedom are your new normal.


Disclaimer: The information shared in this blog is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for therapy. For personalized guidance, consult a licensed therapist or counselor.

 
 
 

1 Comment


happytherapist
Sep 06

Strong family ties need regular emotional support 💖. Counselling therapy highlights the value of simple but meaningful routines 🌼. Sharing a good morning prayer 🌸 is one way to remind loved ones they’re cared for. 🌞 These daily gestures create a peaceful environment at home, complementing therapy sessions and reducing emotional distance.

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