The First Step To Peace In Your Marriage: Recognizing Your Own Pain

The First Step To Peace In Your Marriage: Recognizing Your Own Pain

The journey towards peace and harmony in marriage begins with the recognition of our own pain. By acknowledging and addressing our inner wounds, we lay the foundation for healing, growth, and a renewed sense of connection with our partners. Here are some of the ways that recognizing your pain helps improve your marriage. . .

5 Steps To Effective Apologizing

I joke with my clients that 100% of my couples have been raised in different households, so injuring one another is inevitable even if you’re the most well-meaning couple. As a consequence, I believe the skill of apologizing is more important than avoiding injury. In fact, if you’re telling yourself you’re doing something to “avoid injury,” you’re likely withdrawing instead, which can cause more harm than good.

Experiencing A Drought of Gift-Giving From Your Spouse?

Every couple is different. I tell my couples that 100% of my couples have been raised in different households. So of course injuries are inevitable. Different families have different traditions. Different gestures and words carry different meanings. Today, we’re talking about gift giving as a gesture, and specifically, a lack of gift giving.

Vulnerability Is Not Optional In Marriage

Vulnerability is a powerful and essential aspect of marriage. Vulnerability is often seen as a sign of weakness in our society, but in marriage, it is a source of strength that fosters intimacy, trust, and emotional connection. It is a key ingredient for a healthy and fulfilling marital relationship, and plays a crucial role in building a strong foundation for long-lasting, meaningful partnerships.

How Withdrawing Affects Relationships

Withdrawal is one of the most common and damaging patterns of behavior in romantic relationships. It occurs when one partner becomes emotionally or physically disengaged from the relationship and stops responding to the other partner's attempts to connect. This can be a result of many different factors, including stress, conflict, or emotional wounds from past relationships. However, regardless of the cause, withdrawal can have serious negative effects on a relationship.

Does Your Spouse Have A Disorganized Attachment Style?

How would you feel if you crave closeness but your partner tells you they need more space? This may sound ominous but it’s not necessarily a sign of problems. More likely, you have some attachment style differences to navigate. You see, there’s a whole lot more to relationships than love at first sight and happily ever after. No one writes fairy tales about attachment issues but they should. It would save a lot of us a whole lot of stress. 

How Common Is Infidelity?

How do you keep track of something that people will go to extremes to hide? Sure, there is research on infidelity. Esther Perel in her book “State of Affairs” states: Because there is no universally agreed-upon definition of what constitutes infidelity, estimates of its prevalence among American couples vary widely, ranging from 26 to 70 percent for women and from 33 to 75 percent for men.

How To Listen To Your Partner's Insecurities

They may need constant reassurance, be very controlling, or behave in a manner that is over-sensitive. Perhaps worst of all, you get a sense that they don’t trust you. You didn’t ask for it but the onus is mostly on you to bring this topic to the forefront. Obviously, such a conversation must happen face-to-face. But what else can you do to make the discussion productive and helpful?