Archive for October, 2010

How important is honesty in marriage?

Sunday, October 31st, 2010

Dear How important is honesty in marriage?

First of all why can he not talk about his sexuality. It is very common for men to search for things they deem as forbidden or things that you think your wife may think are strange or perhaps perverted. Everything is about consent for both of you. What you may want to do is talk to him about why he is not honest about his desires. If he was honest it would create a vehicle to discuss whatever he hides in his sexual repertoire and possibly both of you could share the” hidden fruit”. I think he is making some assumptions about you that are not true and maybe these assumptions are his own insecurities about sex. At any rate maybe you could open things up to getting him to watch these dvd’s with you to eliminate secrets and possibly they could revive your sex life as long as it is not something like kiddie porn. If he is resistant then I would feel he is keeping a very personal secret from you and it should be addressed. If you wish further professional help please contact us at  robertheard@counselingonlinesite.com


Ok, I am new here and looking for a little advice. Please bare with me if this gets a little long winded.

I have been married for three years now. My husband has had only a couple serious relationships before we met so he has been single much of his adult life (he is 39). We have hardly any disagreements and we never argue but we have some issues that come up in our marriage over and over again. About a year or so into our marriage I was feeling like our sex life was a little dull and had suggested trying new things like new positions, new locations, a little suggestive talking etc. He felt a little embarrassed and confessed he felt unexperienced, but he agreed and a couple of times we experimented but a few weeks later we fell back into the same old routine and again it became a little dull.

About six months later, I was doing some cleaning and accidently found a provocative porn dvd. I was a little shocked since I had suggested us renting a few movies to spice things up a bit and he refused that idea rather quickly. I confronted him about the dvd (because it was a strange fetish type movie) and he said oh he used it every now and then when I was at work to satisfy himself but it was not an everyday type thing. I just told him it kinda made me feel like he was hiding something from me because I had never thought he was into that kind of thing. He assured me that it was something he didn’t do very often and that he loves me and was very satisfied with our sex life. OK, no problem.

As time goes on, I am getting more and more dissatisfied with our sex life. He started having problems performing and I started feeling quite insecure. He ended up seeing a doctor and was put on cialis which was very embarrassing for him. He tried the medication a few times but was always saying he was afraid of side affects and really didn’t want to take it that often. So, in turn sex life really starts sliding down hill and I am feeling unattractive and insecure.

Then one day I was on the computer and found some websites he had been visiting. They were all the same type of fetish porn websites that were the same as the dvd I had found. I didn’t say anything for a few months but I checked the history every now and then and saw that he was visiting these sites regularly. I finally ended up confronting him when one day he had accessed these sites about 30 times in one day. I asked him if there was a reason he was visiting these sites but could not perform in his own sex life with his wife. I told him how insecure and unattractive I felt and this was starting to be a big concern for me. He profusely apologized and said he would get rid of all porn movies, magazines, and delete all memberships to these websites. He told me he felt like he may have an addiction and the reason he could probably not perform well was because he would masturbate to these movies. He quickly threw everything in the trash and vowed to work on our marriage and sex life.

Things got better for us for a few months following that incident but here recently I had noticed a decline in his lack of desire and things were getting bad again. A few days ago, my 2 year old son who is into everything brought me a dvd out of the cabinet and again it was another porn dvd that I had no idea about. I feel like I have been lied to over and over again and am losing trust in him. I checked the computer and of course the history was full of those same fetish sites as before and I also learned he had been paying $15 a month for one and $30 a month for another one. After confronting him he apologizes again and promises things will get better between us. I just don’t know if I can believe him anymore and feel like I need to constantly ask him to just be honest.

I am not completely against porn but when I feel it is being hidden from me and it is affecting our sex life I just don’t feel he should continue watching it. I have tried so hard on working on our sex life by communicating and doing anything I can to get him to open up to me but it is hard for him. Is just being honest too much to ask? Any advice is appreciated. Thanks

To read on please click here

Lets Talk about sex in a marriage

Sunday, October 31st, 2010

I’ve been with my now husband for 10+ years. We have a daughter together. We broke up twice before we were married. My husband is a nice gentle guy.. The down side My husband is so self involved. I am a bundle of energy who is up early to get all the days stuff achieved. He has only been ever concerned with work. He loves starting new businesses. He loves trying new projects. So for many years I blamed his business on our love life that doesn’t exsist. I’ve went threw many losses this year and in the past alone because he has been too busy. (My sisters death, major surgery, not being able to conceive) we have a none exsistant sex life and really has been this way for many years. He just isn’t interested. He now has a job that requires little of his time. Great, I am thinking he will be able to be more focused on home and I …. Nothing has changed. I am not a grouch, I am attractive and I am not lazy. I work part time and am a full time mom and wife. I am caring and giving and really have tried. My Bible and heart don’t believe in divorce. I love our daughter too much but I am very sad. I need Your Help. He just seems to busy in his mind to even get the whole picture. I am deeply grieved because I want more children. I am 30 now and cannot help but think we might if we made love.

P.S. I don’t really receive gifts( Christmas, Bdays) . I used to plan romantic getaways and suppers and am tired of doing so. Money is not a issue.
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Sex, Lies and Conversation; Why Is It So Hard for Men and Women to Talk to Each Other?

Sunday, October 31st, 2010

Sex, Lies and Conversation; Why Is It So Hard for Men and Women to Talk to Each Other?

by Deborah Tannen

The Washington Post, June 24, 1990

I WAS ADDRESSING a small gathering in a suburban Virginia living room — a women’s group that had invited men to join them. Throughout the evening, one man had been particularly talkative, frequently offering ideas and anecdotes, while his wife sat silently beside him on the couch. Toward the end of the evening, I commented that women frequently complain that their husbands don’t talk to them. This man quickly concurred. He gestured toward his wife and said, “She’s the talker in our family.” The room burst into laughter; the man looked puzzled and hurt. “It’s true,” he explained. “When I come home from work I have nothing to say. If she didn’t keep the conversation going, we’d spend the whole evening in silence.”

This episode crystallizes the irony that although American men tend to talk more than women in public situations, they often talk less at home. And this pattern is wreaking havoc with marriage.

The pattern was observed by political scientist Andrew Hacker in the late ’70s. Sociologist Catherine Kohler Riessman reports in her new book “Divorce Talk” that most of the women she interviewed — but only a few of the men — gave lack of communication as the reason for their divorces. Given the current divorce rate of nearly 50 percent, that amounts to millions of cases in the United States every year — a virtual epidemic of failed conversation.

In my own research, complaints from women about their husbands most often focused not on tangible inequities such as having given up the chance for a career to accompany a husband to his, or doing far more than their share of daily life-support work like cleaning, cooking, social arrangements and errands. Instead, they focused on communication: “He doesn’t listen to me,” “He doesn’t talk to me.” I found, as Hacker observed years before, that most wives want their husbands to be, first and foremost, conversational partners, but few husbands share this expectation of their wives.

In short, the image that best represents the current crisis is the stereotypical cartoon scene of a man sitting at the breakfast table with a newspaper held up in front of his face, while a woman glares at the back of it, wanting to talk. Linguistic Battle of the Sexes

How can women and men have such different impressions of communication in marriage? Why the widespread imbalance in their interests and expectations?

In the April issue of American Psychologist, Stanford University’s Eleanor Maccoby reports the results of her own and others’ research showing that children’s development is most influenced by the social structure of peer interactions. Boys and girls tend to play with children of their own gender, and their sex-separate groups have different organizational structures and interactive norms.

I believe these systematic differences in childhood socialization make talk between women and men like cross-cultural communication, heir to all the attraction and pitfalls of that enticing but difficult enterprise. My research on men’s and women’s conversations uncovered patterns similar to those described for children’s groups.

For women, as for girls, intimacy is the fabric of relationships, and talk is the thread from which it is woven. Little girls create and maintain friendships by exchanging secrets; similarly, women regard conversation as the cornerstone of friendship. So a woman expects her husband to be a new and improved version of a best friend. What is important is not the individual subjects that are discussed but the sense of closeness, of a life shared, that emerges when people tell their thoughts, feelings, and impressions.

Bonds between boys can be as intense as girls’, but they are based less on talking, more on doing things together. Since they don’t assume talk is the cement that binds a relationship, men don’t know what kind of talk women want, and they don’t miss it when it isn’t there.

Boys’ groups are larger, more inclusive, and more hierarchical, so boys must struggle to avoid the subordinate position in the group. This may play a role in women’s complaints that men don’t listen to them. Some men really don’t like to listen, because being the listener makes them feel one-down, like a child listening to adults or an employee to a boss.

But often when women tell men, “You aren’t listening,” and the men protest, “I am,” the men are right. The impression of not listening results from misalignments in the mechanics of conversation. The misalignment begins as soon as a man and a woman take physical positions. This became clear when I studied videotapes made by psychologist Bruce Dorval of children and adults talking to their same-sex best friends. I found that at every age, the girls and women faced each other directly, their eyes anchored on each other’s faces. At every age, the boys and men sat at angles to each other and looked elsewhere in the room, periodically glancing at each other. They were obviously attuned to each other, often mirroring each other’s movements. But the tendency of men to face away can give women the impression they aren’t listening even when they are. A young woman in college was frustrated: Whenever she told her boyfriend she wanted to talk to him, he would lie down on the floor, close his eyes, and put his arm over his face. This signaled to her, “He’s taking a nap.” But he insisted he was listening extra hard. Normally, he looks around the room, so he is easily distracted. Lying down and covering his eyes helped him concentrate on what she was saying.

Analogous to the physical alignment that women and men take in conversation is their topical alignment. The girls in my study tended to talk at length about one topic, but the boys tended to jump from topic to topic. The second-grade girls exchanged stories about people they knew. The second-grade boys teased, told jokes, noticed things in the room and talked about finding games to play. The sixth-grade girls talked about problems with a mutual friend. The sixth grade boys talked about 55 different topics, none of which extended over more than a few turns. Listening to Body Language

Switching topics is another habit that gives women the impression men aren’t listening, especially if they switch to a topic about themselves. But the evidence of the 10th-grade boys in my study indicates otherwise. The 10th-grade boys sprawled across their chairs with bodies parallel and eyes straight ahead, rarely looking at each other. They looked as if they were riding in a car, staring out the windshield. But they were talking about their feelings. One boy was upset because a girl had told him he had a drinking problem, and the other was feeling alienated from all his friends.

Now, when a girl told a friend about a problem, the friend responded by asking probing questions and expressing agreement and understanding. But the boys dismissed each other’s problems. Todd assured Richard that his drinking was “no big problem” because “sometimes you’re funny when you’re off your butt.” And when Todd said he felt left out, Richard responded, “Why should you? You know more people than me.”

Women perceive such responses as belittling and unsupportive. But the boys seemed satisfied with them. Whereas women reassure each other by implying, “You shouldn’t feel bad because I’ve had similar experiences,” men do so by implying, “You shouldn’t feel bad because your problems aren’t so bad.”

There are even simpler reasons for women’s impression that men don’t listen. Linguist Lynette Hirschman found that women make more listener-noise, such as “mhm,” “uhuh,” and “yeah,” to show “I’m with you.” Men, she found, more often give silent attention. Women who expect a stream of listener noise interpret silent attention as no attention at all.

Women’s conversational habits are as frustrating to men as men’s are to women. Men who expect silent attention interpret a stream of listener noise as overreaction or impatience. Also, when women talk to each other in a close, comfortable setting, they often overlap, finish each other’s sentences and anticipate what the other is about to say. This practice, which I call “participatory listenership,” is often perceived by men as interruption, intrusion and lack of attention.

A parallel difference caused a man to complain about his wife, “She just wants to talk about her own point of view. If I show her another view, she gets mad at me.” When most women talk to each other, they assume a conversationalist’s job is to express agreement and support. But many men see their conversational duty as pointing out the other side of an argument. This is heard as disloyalty by women, and refusal to offer the requisite support. It is not that women don’t want to see other points of view, but that they prefer them phrased as suggestions and inquiries rather than as direct challenges.

In his book “Fighting for Life,” Walter Ong points out that men use “agonistic” or warlike, oppositional formats to do almost anything; thus discussion becomes debate, and conversation a competitive sport. In contrast, women see conversation as a ritual means of establishing rapport. If Jane tells a problem and June says she has a similar one, they walk away feeling closer to each other. But this attempt at establishing rapport can backfire when used with men. Men take too literally women’s ritual “troubles talk,” just as women mistake men’s ritual challenges for real attack. [See box.] The Sounds of Silence

These differences begin to clarify why women and men have such different expectations about communication in marriage. For women, talk creates intimacy. Marriage is an orgy of closeness: you can tell your feelings and thoughts, and still be loved. Their greatest fear is being pushed away. But men live in a hierarchical world, where talk maintains independence and status. They are on guard to protect themselves from being put down and pushed around.

This explains the paradox of the talkative man who said of his silent wife, “She’s the talker.” In the public setting of a guest lecture, he felt challenged to show his intelligence and display his understanding of the lecture. But at home, where he has nothing to prove and no one to defend against, he is free to remain silent. For his wife, being home means she is free from the worry that something she says might offend someone, or spark disagreement, or appear to be showing off; at home she is free to talk.

The communication problems that endanger marriage can’t be fixed by mechanical engineering. They require a new conceptual framework about the role of talk in human relationships. Many of the psychological explanations that have become second nature may not be helpful, because they tend to blame either women (for not being assertive enough) or men (for not being in touch with their feelings). A sociolinguistic approach by which male-female conversation is seen as cross-cultural communication allows us to understand the problem and forge solutions without blaming either party.

Once the problem is understood, improvement comes naturally, as it did to the young woman and her boyfriend who seemed to go to sleep when she wanted to talk. Previously, she had accused him of not listening, and he had refused to change his behavior, since that would be admitting fault. But then she learned about and explained to him the differences in women’s and men’s habitual ways of aligning themselves in conversation. The next time she told him she wanted to talk, he began, as usual, by lying down and covering his eyes. When the familiar negative reaction bubbled up, she reassured herself that he really was listening. But then he sat up and looked at her. Thrilled, she asked why. He said, “You like me to look at you when we talk, so I’ll try to do it.” Once he saw their differences as cross-cultural rather than right and wrong, he independently altered his behavior.

Women who feel abandoned and deprived when their husbands won’t listen to or report daily news may be happy to discover their husbands trying to adapt once they understand the place of small talk in women’s relationships. But if their husbands don’t adapt, the women may still be comforted that for men, this is not a failure of intimacy. Accepting the difference, the wives may look to their friends or family for that kind of talk. And husbands who can’t provide it shouldn’t feel their wives have made unreasonable demands. Some couples will still decide to divorce, but at least their decisions will be based on realistic expectations.

In these times of resurgent ethnic conflicts, the world desperately needs cross-cultural understanding. Like charity, successful cross-cultural communication should begin at home.

Deborah Tannen, professor of linguistics at Georgetown University, is the author of “You Just Don’t Understand: Women and Men in Conversation,” published this month by William Morrow.

To read on please click here

Why is sex such a taboo subject-Laura Brotherson

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

Why is sex such a taboo subject-Laura Brotherson (9/08-Pt1)

12 Causes of Sexual Problems in Marriage

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

  • Efoghor Joseph Ezie

Sex is one of the gifts God has given to couples to enjoy their marriage and promote the intimacy between them. However, marriage could sometimes experience sexual problems or difficulties that make the partners to be unease. Some of these problems include:

  1. Past traumatic sex experience: A woman who has experienced severe pain or trauma during sex in the past (especially as a result of rape or sexual violence) before marriage is likely to suffer from sexual problems when married. She is going to find it very difficult to adapt to sex in her marriage.
  2. Disease: Certain diseases can make the act of sexual intercourse a difficult one especially if such disease is not properly treated. Diseases like gonorrhoea could produce pains in males while herpes could cause pains also in females.
  3. Lack of privacy: Women particularly don’t enjoy sex when privacy is not guaranteed. If there is no adequate privacy provided before sex the woman would find it very difficult to relax during the act and this invariably affects her lubrication and in the long run she is unable to reach orgasm.
  4. Alcohol: The use of alcoholic beverage could interfere with sexual enjoyment because alcohol is known to reduce sensation.
  5. Hormones: Certain hormones like oestrogen play some roles in the female to ensure the vagina remains regularly wet; but with the onset of menopause these hormones production may be reduced leading to dryness in the vagina thereby making sex less enjoyable.
  6. Misconceptions about sex: Some people grew up with certain misconceptions about sex that sex is a taboo; that sex should not be enjoyed; that only promiscuous women enjoy sex, etc and when they become married this mindset becomes difficult to change.
  7. Anger: This can be energy sapping and could as well make it difficult for one to relax during sex.
  8. Psychological problems: One who has some kind of psychological problems would definitely not be in the best state of mind to enjoy sex. Even when such person tries to please the spouse there would be no concentration during the act.
  9. Fears: When one nurses fears in him/her it would be difficult also to relax and enjoy coitus.
  10. Broken home: One who is a product of a broken home carries with him/her some mental pictures from the parents into marriage and find it difficult to enjoy sex, especially if he/she still nurses a grudge against the parents.
  11. Nicotine: This is also known to interfere with blood flow and sexual enjoyment.
  12. Bullying/Nagging: When a spouse bullies or nags, the partner loses interest in him/her and this invariably affects their sexual enjoyment.

To read on please click here.

What’s Your Relationship IQ?

Friday, October 29th, 2010

What’s Your Relationship IQ?

Diane Sollee, SmartMarriages.com
Tango June 2007

Questions:

1) The number one predictor of divorce is:
a) Ongoing disagreement over money and financial issues.
b) The habitual avoidance of conflict.
c) Yelling and screaming during fights.

2) Couples that “go the distance”—whose marriages are successful—have fewer disagreements about the three core issues: sex, money, and housework.
True or False?

3) Couples that are constantly yelling or complaining are doomed.
True or false?

4) When discussing a problem or disagreement, it is important to:
a) Keep feelings out of the discussion, and try to stick to the facts.
b) Be sure you can accurately state your partner’s position, including his or her feelings and fears about the
issue being discussed.
c) Focus on practical solutions—on solving the problem. Too much discussion can sidetrack you.

5) Extramarital involvement occurs in happy marriages and is not necessarily a symptom of a distressed relationship. True or False?

6) After the birth of the first child:
a) There is little impact on the marriage; the quality of a marriage depends more on issues of couple compatibility.
b) The marriage enters the “warm glow” stage and stays there for several years.
c) Marital satisfaction drops.

7) Couples should try to resolve most of their disagreements as soon as they com up. True or False?

Answers:

1) b. Which is sad, because we usually avoid conflict precisely because we are so much in love, and we fear that disagreeing or fighting might cause a divorce. We’re aware that there has been a 50-percent divorce rate for 30 years, and we’re scared. But the way to have a happy marriage is to understand that disagreement is a normal and expected part of any loving relationship and to learn how to handle the inevitable disagreements that will come up.

2) False. Research shows that the couples that make it and the couples that fail disagree the same amount. They also disagree about all the same issues, and there are five core issues, not three—add children and in-laws/friends to the list. It turns out it’s not whether you disagree that makes a difference (that’s normal and very much to be expected); it’s how you handle your disagreements that matters.

3) False. Yelling, complaining, crying, and even revisiting the same issue “over and over and over” might be annoying, but it’s behaviors like avoidance, disengagement, contempt, blame, criticism, and “the silent treatment” that lead to divorce. Complaining is saying, “It drives me totally crazy when you call and get the answering machine, and don’t leave a message!” Criticism is, “You are so inconsiderate! You never leave a message when you call.” Contempt is deadly: “Some people know what an answering machine is for. I guess that takes a brain. More proof that you’re as dumb as your mother.” Complaining—even if you yell, even if it’s the same old complaint—brings up the issues. That’s a good thing. Criticism and contempt erode love.

4) b. Many disagreements have nothing to do with the facts, and everything to do with our feelings about them. It is crucial that you understand each other’s positions—both what you think about the issue, and also how you feel about it, your fears, ambivalence, and dreams. Oftentimes understanding and mutual respect are all you really need; some issues don’t have solutions. In fact, most disagreements in a marriage have no solution—they are chronic or “irreconcilable.” Couples simply need to how to manage them and keep them from contaminating the rest of the marriage. Mary Matalin and James Carville are the poster couple for how this can work.

5) True. Many people who have affairs report that their marriage is fine, they love their spouse and family, and they don’t love their paramour—they just wanted excitement or variety and deluded themselves into thinking that if they were clear about that then it wouldn’t hurt anyone. Frank Pittman, M.D., author of Private Lies and Grow Up!, says a man’s male relatives’ and buddies’ views on monogamy are a better predictor of affairs than the quality of the marital relationship. For example, if a Kennedy was faithful for too long, his dad might have asked if he was eating his Wheaties. Barry McCarthy, Ph.D., author of Rekindling Desire, agrees. McCarthy believes that a commitment to honesty is as important as a commitment to monogamy. Often couples discuss how they will deal with money, kids, and housework before they marry, but not what they’re going to do when sex gets stale or someone’s attracted to a coworker or neighbor.

6) c. There is so much more to disagree about. This is when couples really need skills. In 70 percent of couples, marital satisfaction drops during the three months before and the three months after the birth of the first child.

7) False. All couples have approximately ten issues they will never resolve. If you switch partners you’ll just get ten new issues, and they are highly likely to be more complicated the second time around—especially if kids are involved. What’s important is to develop a dialogue or “dance” with your particular set of irreconcilable differences, just as you would cope with a chronic bad back or trick knee. You don’t like them, you wish they weren’t there, but you keep talking about them and learn how to live with them.

T read on please click here

Ways to pull off the Perfect Disagreement

Friday, October 29th, 2010
Tuesday 29 december 2009 2 29 /12 /2009 08:19
http://www.momlogic.com/images/couple-disagreeing-250.jpg

Ways to pull off the Perfect Disagreement

Are you the type of person who can argue and disagree with others?  Or, do you let people walk all over you? There are many who avoid confrontation at all costs, while others are more than willing to jump in and argue away.  Some are even uncomfortable disagreeing with their spouse, while others may have a problem challenging any type of authority.
While I tend to not enjoy disagreements, I can disagree with my wife or others if the need arises and I have to get my point across. I am writing today to let all of those people who are deathly afraid of confrontation know that it is OK, and downright American, to disagree with others. The art, though, is in how you disagree.

So to help all of you who, like me, shy away from confrontation, here’s

  1. Listen closely to what is being said – You must first and foremost listen and hear what the other person is saying. You may not agree with what is being said, but to make a response you must try and remain calm and listen to the whole argument before responding.
  2. Stay away from name-calling – Make the disagreement about the issue not about the person. Calling people names will only anger the other person and close down pathways to communication.
  3. Discern the tone of voice that the person is using – Depending on how the person is talking with you, you need to respond in kind. There are many times where the other person is not trying to pick a fight, but instead he is simply trying to make a point of view understood.
  4. Address a specific point the other person has raised instead of the entire position – Be specific to the points you are concerned with after hearing their argument. Not only does this keep you focused, but also it allows the person to remain open to your perspectives without completely shutting down and putting up their defenses without hearing your side of the disagreement.
  5. Don’t deny the person, deny the perspective they are taking – Focus on the issues being discussed and do not make this about the person. Once you start focusing and attacking the person, the disagreement becomes personal and the barriers that I mentioned earlier will be raised and nothing productive will come out of the conversation.
  6. Remain calm – Above all, you must remain calm when you disagree. You need to make sure you have a level head so that you can speak in a way that others will want to listen. Once you become angry, you will likely start to attack the other person and turn the disagreement into a argument.
  7. Speak for yourself – When disagreeing always make sure you are speaking for your self and not for the masses. You can only speak for yourself in any situation – try not to bring others into your disagreement.
  8. State the facts – Similar to the above point on focusing on one thing instead of an entire perspective, it is important to be clear and succinct about the points you are trying to address. You must be able to stay to the facts in the disagreement. It’s up to the other person to decide whether or not your facts are enough to change a position.
  9. Clear the air, don’t attempt to win – Depending on the situation it is always best to talk about the issues that are bubbling under the surface, even if this will start a disagreement between you and your wife or another person. You need to make sure when you disagree or when you bring up these issues that you do not enter into them with the preconceived notion that you will “win” the argument. Instead, go into the situation with the idea that you want to clear the air helps keep disagreements from escalating into arguments.
  10. Validate the other perspective – One way to bring someone to a point where they will listen with an open mind is to validate their perspective. This does not mean that you agree with their perspective, but it does mean you understand what they are saying. Think empathy here. By doing this, it lowers defenses and raises awareness of other points of view.
  11. Agree to disagree / Consider compromise – There are going to be many situations where you will not see eye to eye with another person. In these situations, both people may need to either compromise their own positions or agree to disagree. Agreeing to disagree does not denigrate your position in any way, but it does validate the other person’s position, make them feel respected and help them to not have any hard feelings.

To read on please click here

Intimacy and Connection-Dr. Sandra Parker

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

Intimacy and Connection-Dr. Sandra Parker

7 STAGES OF MARRIAGE — Stage 7: Completion (The 7 Stages of Marriage)

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

7 STAGES OF MARRIAGE — Stage 7: Completion (The 7 Stages of Marriage)

7 STAGES OF MARRIAGE — Stage 6: Explosion (The 7 Stages of Marriage)

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

7 STAGES OF MARRIAGE — Stage 6: Explosion (The 7 Stages of Marriage)

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