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A husband and wife relationship is a unique and difficult one as it brings two individuals together in the name of marriage and expects to be together rest of their lives. Before committing into any relationship It is very important to understand and acknowledge that every individual has unique personality and different in its own way. If couple learned to accept each other unconditionally by respecting and enjoying each others differences then marital life will be successful. The given real life case study describes how lack of trust and poor communication could fracture a relationship. How an external influence could sever the couple bond leaving the partners feel deserted. It also shows how marital Counseling could help the couple to communicate the messages that were not expressed earlier and to facilitate better relationship skills.
Life without relationships is impossible in this universe. We come across different relationships in every stage of our lives. Among those relationships a husband and wife bond is a unique and difficult one as it brings two individuals together in the name of marriage and expects to be together rest of their lives. What is important in a relationship or how to maintain harmony is the question arises in the minds of everyone or atleast most of the partners. In order to stay in the relationship one partner should inspire the other partner intellectually, emotionally, spiritually and physically. They should be in the same inspirational level or atleast has some part of it in order to keep the relationship going. It helps to develop compatibility between the couple. With compatibility, communication is another important aspect that helps the couple to stay connected. Active communication allows one person to know the needs of the other person and therefore keeping the feeling of love alive throughout.
In the book “Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus”(John Gray,1992) the author suggests different ways to understand the communication styles and the emotional needs of the opposite gender to improve husband –wife relationships. He says basically women have different communication style and emotional need when compared to men. For an instant; women want their problems to be acknowledged so they are complaining whereas men complain as they want to find solutions. Women are dissatisfied if their husbands do not acknowledge the problem and men feel disappointed if they do not get help from their wives to find the solution. It creates misunderstanding in between the partners and leads to conflicts.
Another point John Gray brings out in his book is men react differently under stress and women react differently in their own way. Both have specific stereotype behaviours. He explains the difference through “the cave and the wave” concept. He describes men as “retreating into their caves” when they are under stress or until they find the solution to the problem. Men’s retreatment or withdrawal is like ‘time out’ as they determined to get solution. This timeout help them to look at the problem with a different perspective when they revisit the problem.
In the case of women when they are under stress they like to talk out. Their “waves” would go high and crashes when they are under pressure and thus badly wanting to talk and share with the other partner. The natural cycle for women which is referred as wave is the ability to give their love and energy to other people. But when pressurized she expects the other person to give that energy and love to rejuvenate herself. Eventually under stress they grow closer to their partners. Under stress men move back into their caves while woman’s natural reaction is to talk out .There arise conflicts between husband and wife.
Gary Chapman , a relationship counselor argues that couple need five love languages namely words of affirmation(making positive statements),quality time(degree of emotional involvement),receiving gifts(expecting nothing in return, a voluntary act),acts of service(any sort of help) and physical touch(nonverbal communication vital in interpersonal relationship) to express and understand the emotional love. Eventhough people speak all five languages everyone will have one primary love language. Picking up that primary language and satisfying that will lead to successful and satisfactory marriage life.
A husband cannot expect his wife to react or think in that way he does. That will create frustration. Unrealistic expectations from either gender ends in disappointment. The frustration level drops when we understand every one is different and they will have their own ways or styles. This will let one to have realistic expectations from the other gender. It is very difficult to explain the gender differences as the likes and dislikes of men and women fall under a large spectrum.
Marital counseling or otherwise called as couple counseling is a recent phenomenon that gained popularity within short span of time. Until late 20th century marriage counseling was primarily dealt by elders in the family, close friends, mentors or religious leaders. With adopting westernization that gives more financial freedom to both men and women and shifting of joint family system to nuclear families, lot of issues crop up between husband and wife. Unable to disclose to any family member or sometimes no body to address the issue they started approaching professionals for help. A counselor is a person who has a balanced mind and mature disposition and non judgmental by nature handles the case with empathy, respecting their emotions, opinions and feelings and maintains confidentiality.
The following is real life case study that describes how lack of trust and poor communication could fracture a relationship. How an external influence could sever the couple bond leaving the partners feel deserted.
Overview of the case:
Sunil and Maya were married for one year. Sunil was eldest in the family with two younger brothers. He lost his father when he was doing his 10th standard. With lot of struggle his mother brought up all three sons. Sunil had high regards for his mother and very attached to her and his brothers. Maya was the eldest in the family. She had one younger sister. She also lost her father when she was 12 years old. As her mother was a working woman both Maya and her sister were left at the hostel. They had lot of financial difficulties as they never received any assistance or support from anybody including relatives. As her mother was earning they were able to manage things within the income. Maya was not very attached to either to her mother or her sister. As a person she was very quite and calm. Even in the hostel she would not mix with other students. She was not a group oriented person.
After completing her graduation she got a good job. While working for a reputed company she got the alliance of Sunil through one of her relatives .Sunil was working for MNC and earning reasonably good salary. Both the parties were convinced and agreed for the marriage. Hence they got married and Maya moved to Chennai where he was working and started staying with Sunil’s family. Things went on well in the first month. Slowly things started changing. Maya didn’t welcome the fact that Sunil was helping his last brother in his studies and supporting the whole family. She felt her husband was spending lot of money for his mother and brother. She found fault with his mother and always it ended up in conflicts and arguments. At one point of time she forced him to leave them and wanted to take another house. Sunil refused to listen to her. But his mother convinced him to go as she wanted her son to be in peace. After coming to new house Maya kept quite for sometime. Then she prevented him form giving money to his mother and brothers as one of Sunil’s brother started working. She was very firm and expected him to give all the money and credit cards as she wanted to have a hold on all his expenditure. Sunil refused to do that and continued to give money to his mother. Maya refused to take up any job. Always she was obsessive about his spending and was questioning him.
Unable to tolerate her bahaviour and cope up with situation Sunil opened up the issue with one of his office-mates. He suggested him to take Maya to a psychologist for counseling.
Analysis of the case:
Interactions with Sunil and Maya revealed that the level of communication between the couple was very poor. The space from where Maya was hailing was totally different from the space from where Sunil was hailing. That is having lost his father Sunil became closer to his kin and kith. His was a close knitted family where they shared everything and had a strong bond among the brothers and mother. They considered that as their strength. Whereas Maya and her sister were left in the hostel and she grew up on her own. Even when she went home for vacation rarely she got to spend time with her mother as she was working. Mother always said that she had to work hard as they had none to support them. Maya was not very close to her sister who was 7 years younger than her. Having lost her father at very tender age since that time she always had a feeling of insecurity regarding money. Her mother always preached that money was everything in life. Maya grew up on hearing such advice. It was strongly registered in her mind. She never experienced the joy of any relationship. As a family they were withdrawn from others and within the family they behaved as if they were separate individuals. She agreed to the marriage since Sunil was in a good job and earning a fairly good salary. When she came to know that he was spending large amount of money for his mother and brothers she could not accept that. She developed an fear that if something happened to Sunil like her father she would be left alone like her mother and she had to struggle through out her life. Moreover she could not understand the depth of mother –son relationship or brother-brother relationship as she never had one. She thought that Sunil was giving more importance to his family than her. Like adding fuel to the issue her mother often warned her to have control over her husband and his spending. Mother influenced her not to take up a job. Mother said if she took up a job Sunil might give all his money to his family. Mother influenced Maya to move out of the house with her husband. Mother always said “be careful do not struggle like me”. Maya started feeling very insecure and wanted to have full control over her husband’s activities especially expenditure.
Counselling Therapy:
Before committing into any relationship It is very important to understand and acknowledge that every individual has unique personality and different in its own way. The value system with what the person was brought up will play a major role in shaping the person’s nature and behavior. Optimal functioning of relationship gets strained when individuals fail to recognize this fact. Counseling help to make fundamental changes in the perception and attitude of those involved in the relationship. They start looking and responding to the situation with different perspective and positive attitude. This helps to bring a viable solution to the concern. Thus counseling sessions help Sunil and Maya,
To recognize and address the destructive patterns of their behaviours-Maya was made to realize the need for Sunil to help his family and made to understand it was his responsibility, not to get influenced by anybody including mother.
To improve the style to communication to get better understanding-during the session Maya came to know that Sunil is saving one part of his income every month and it is not that he spends everything for his family.
To adopt adult-to-adult interactions during conversations- It is unrealistic to feel that arguments can be avoided. It is ok to have healthier arguments and learn to tackle them skillfully.
To develop new relationship skills-Maya felt she was ‘unheard’-Sunil realized his mistake of never listening to her, giving and receiving gifts, visiting friends and relatives.
To understand the value system and habit that have been inherited from the family in which one grew up-Both Maya and Sunil were made to become aware of the spaces from where they were coming.
To solve the problem together than as two individuals-Maya was motivated to take up a job rather than sitting at home ,she was made to become aware of her irrational thoughts and fears like something might happen to Sunil, money is everything in life.
To develop trust and intimacy-Sunil understood that he needs to spend more time with his wife and it is his prime responsibility to make her feel happy and safe.
Conclusion:
Once the couple learned to accept each other unconditionally by respecting and enjoying each others differences then marital life will be successful. Two individuals come together in the name of marriage but by and large they are two different individuals. Men are task oriented and their sense of self come from achievement but women are relationship oriented. Unless couple understands the fact that working together is very much needed inspite of their differences; it is difficult to move on in the path of marriage. Couple Counseling helps to communicate the messages that were not expressed so far and to develop better relationship skills. References:
Gary Chapman (2004). The Five Love Languages: How to Express Heartfelt Commitment to Your Mate (new edition). Northfield Press http://www.leaderu.com/orgs/probe/docs/men-mars.html

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Michael and Amy we feeling stuck and frustrated. Although they had been married for 30 years and had two grown children living on their own, they felt their relationship was just “OK”.
It wasn’t exciting or passionate. To help, they moved to a new city and to start developing careers in their newly adopted hometown.
Amy had recently completed her schooling and was looking for a job in the area. Michael was working with a small business but had not made any progress in expanding the company.
They felt stressed and didn’t feel as if their marriage was helping them deal with it. They weren’t enjoying their evenings or free time together because they were always worrying about their individual endeavors.
This was the time that they sought out coaching from Phyllis and Peter. They were surprised and inspired by what they were advised to do. In the spirit of cooperating as a team, they were told to speak of both of their professional endeavors as “joint projects” using only “we” when they talked about them. This meant saying “our business” or “our job search” when they referenced their individual tasks.
This transformed their connection to each other’s success. Now when Michael had a win, Amy did too. As you might imagine, they were also instructed to meet together and discuss how they could support each other regularly.
Their growth stemmed essentially from growing beyond their individual concerns and working together as a team, becoming a true single couple entity.
It’s like rowing a boat together: each person has individual strengths, but if the strokes are not synchronized, power is wasted. Pulling together harnesses the power of both people. You move from rowing two separate boats to rowing one larger boat together. The output is exponentially greater.
With practice, Michael and Amy are going faster together than either one could alone. Their practice requires coordination and cooperation, one of the keys to having a successful relationship.
Today, they feel like they are true assets to each other’s growth, and that together they are more powerful than they are alone.
Michael and Amy have discovered “couple power.” They are not stuck; they are moving powerfully together as a team and loving it.
If you want this kind of deep connection in your relationship, we can show you how. Contact us to learn about our couple power sessions and intensive workshops .
Case Study #2: Roberta & Charles
Roberta, a newlywed, is already angry and resentful. How could she be so concerned so soon after getting married? She and Charles had been married for just a few months when Roberta first became angry at Charles not helping out more around the house.
They went for counseling together and were guided to talk to each other as partners, seeking to accomplish the same goal of being happy together. Then they were coached on how to ask each other for help.
They realized that they both had things they wanted from each other, but did not feel comfortable asking for them. Once they saw this, they turned their complaints into requests and began to tell each other what they were feeling and wanted.

Charles shared that he was withdrawing because he felt that Roberta was not interested in the things he had to do for his work. Roberta told him some things she would like him to do around the house.
They were counseled to see that just because they asked for something or were asked to do something, they did not have to agree to fulfill the request. They could listen respectfully and make a counter-offer. When they became more comfortable with making requests of each other, they found that the resentment had disappeared.
Roberta and Charles began to operate more as a team about everything, making requests based on what they needed for the team to be successful. They began practicing every night making requests of each other, large or small.
After a while, it became fun to do, and they looked forward to it. They were no longer afraid to ask for what they wanted or needed. This exercise built trust between them and increased their openness and intimacy. All leading to a happier, more fulfilling marriage.
Case Study #3: Rick & Laura

Rick and Laura were in love but felt trapped. They got married in their thirties. He had been married twice before and she had a long-term relationship of over ten years. They had broken up with their previous partners because they felt “trapped” by their relationships and their circumstances.
Laura and Rick met at an outdoor club meeting. They were each fiercely independent and loved the freedom of being outdoors. Rick had a small cottage that had been in his family for generations. It was in the forest by a stream. They moved in together and made a home for themselves. They loved it there. Rick was a free-lance writer and Laura was a nurse.
Things seemed perfect.
Laura was speaking with a friend at work who was thinking of becoming a certified massage therapist. Laura saw this new opportunity for herself to train in an area she really loved. She wanted to enter a 3-year training program. She excitedly told Rick of the new possibility.
He was happy to see her so lit up until he found out that the training was 3,000 miles away. He said, “That sounds really great, but we would have to leave our home, and I am not willing to do that.” She was upset that she would be trapped again.
He suggested that they split up so he could stay in his home where he felt comfortable. He did not want to be trapped either in a faraway strange place without “roots.” Laura asked, “What about us?” They were at an impasse. How could they love each other and still feel that special experience of their little home together.
Laura and Rick got some coaching from Peter and Phyllis. They asked about what they liked about the home they had together. They explained the warmth, coziness, the feeling of rootedness was what they loved and they were able to share that way.
They loved each other but seemed to be divided about what to do. Their coaching taught them that the feeling of belonging and safety they so deeply treasured was not about the cottage they lived in, but about their relationship.
It was the relationship and the love that was their “home.”
That home could be anywhere they both were. They created a statement, a proclamation really, that: “We are home for each other.” Where they lived and for how long was not as important as being together.
Afterward, they moved to where her training was and explored life there. She completed her work and they moved back and built a new cottage near where they used to be.
All the while, they were home for each other.
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- Read the case study with your group, discuss and identify all the issues.
- In your opinion what seem to be the real issue?
- Review questions and discuss within the group.
- Choose one person from the group to present both parts of the scenarios and group solutions to the issues
CASE STUDY:
Akbar and Sajda came to me for counseling. Their first comment was please help us save our marriage. We think we have come to a road block. Both of us want to stay together but the arguments are becoming unbearable. Both Akbar and Sajda are professional and between the two make over quarter of a million dollars per year. Both are financially independent and pitch in on a percentage basis in the home expenses. They maintain their own bank account as they felt there was no need for a joint account. I was surprised and totally taken aback when in one of the sessions they told me, “We talked about this before we got married and felt that this way it is a clean break in case we decide to break up and divorce”.
After the sixth session when it seem that they are coming on board in resolving their issue,s I asked if they were ready to start tackling the main issues, they agreed but would not stop bringing the small petty issues back in the discussion. I realized that there is something else that they are keeping from me. I decided to talk to them individually instead of as a couple.
My next session was with the wife and she once again talked about the issues that we had discussed before. She went on and on with all the life problems and how she has struggled to reach this status. She has seen tough time growing up and had to support herself and siblings. Her father had anger issues and was not supportive of their mother or children. That resulted her being very protective of what is hers and did not trust anyone including her husband Akbar.
When it was husband’s turn one issue that came out was that it started with a dream that she had about her husband having an affair with another woman. When she told him about the dream, he (according to him) jokingly said that he was and he is seriously thinking about a second wife and that he is seeing someone. That flared Sajda so much that they have not talked to each other with a straight face for months now. The husband assured me that he loves his wife and that was only a joke.
I also found out that despite the fact that they were only married for two and half years their marital relations were not healthy. According to her she allows him to have the marital relation but she is frigid and shows no response or emotions to his approach or during the course. Her mind wonders about all the negativity and bad things that have happened in the past and presently between them.
He on the other hand was a passive person, especially when it came to defending his wife. His family members would take a jab at his wife, or pass negative remarks towards her and he always would ignore saying they are just joking. That time and time again would bring back horrible memories to Sajda of her childhood the treatment of her father toward her mother. This has been the case well before the dream, but came out in the open after the dream.
She wants to have children from him.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
- How can they resolve their marital issues?
- What is your advice for the Sajda?
- What is your advice for the Akbar?
- What are the real issues?
- Can their marriage survive without loving marital relationship between them?
- How can they bring sparkle in their marriage?
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Case Study #1 - Sally
Sally has been married four times. Now in her 50s, she is a cyber crime expert and describes herself as "married yet again, but I'm sure this is my last marriage."
Sally'sparents divorced when she was 8; she was one of four children. "Although I remember my parents fighting when I was small, even then I kept hoping I would have a happy marriage one day," she recalls. Right after divorce proceedings started, her Mom moved Sally and her sister from New England to Southern California, to be near a good friend. The three moved around quite a bit and finally settled in Oxnard, California, where Sally went to school from 4th grade through high school. "Mom would be in a good mood one minute, and a bad mood the next. I think she was bipolar, but back then it wasn't cool to have a mental illness, so my sister and I dealt with her as best we could."
Sally continues, "My childhood was slightly unhappy. Before the divorce, we were upper-middle-class, but in California we were on welfare. I had hand-me-downs and homemade clothes. I was also sick a lot. But I became an honor student, a science fair winner, a total nerd. I was bullied a lot and didn't have too many friends. Then I skipped my junior year in high school , and in my senior year, I was chosen class secretary, wrote a column for the local newspaper, entered a beauty contest, and was on the drill team. That year, I had a lot of friends!"
Looking back at her history of relationships, Sally says her first kiss was in the 4th grade. The boy (now a man) who gave her that kiss contacted her a year ago and asked if she remembered; she didn't! In elementary school, Sally recalls sneaking out of class to kiss "older" boys who were in the 6th grade. But in junior high school, she had her first serious romantic relationship, with a tall, handsome, blond-haired boy. When they went to different high schools, they parted ways. In high school, Sally briefly became engaged to someone else -- she says her mother was NOT amused by this. But in senior year, that boy moved to Oklahoma and they broke up.
After Sally moved back East following high school graduation, she worked at a local restaurant and "had a huge crush on the guitar player in the house band." He was a few years older, and they started dating. Within a year, they were married by a justice of the peace, with a formal church ceremony "for the family" about a month later. Sally was 19. "I had no idea what attributes I was looking for in a marriage partner. I was young and foolish; he was in a rock band. Need I say more?" But then reality set in: Sally got sick of being on the road with the band, and she and her husband realized that they had fun but they weren't really in love. Three years later, they split up, amicably. "We really did remain friends," she comments.
After this, Sally decided she wanted to eventually find the perfect man who had a good career, and have the traditional "little house with a white picket fence." At 26-- she had been divorced five years earlier -- she married again, but..."He kept his alcoholism hidden very well. Also, it turned out that he'd cheated on me, both before AND after our marriage. Four months after we got married, we left a Halloween party and went home. He was drunk, began to slap me around, and then tried to strangle me. I told everyone I was NEVER going to get married again!"
But then..."A friend was singing with a house band and asked me to come to her opening night. I told her I thought the bass player was cute, and she introduced us on her next break. He was handsome, funny, and caring. We became a couple soon after that. He asked me to marry him five months later, and I did. I was 31 years old. He was the first person I dated after I got divorced from my second husband."
Sally goes on, "Then he joined the Marines. And that's when my life changed. He had dark moods when he'd get really depressed, but we tried to work through them. After he got out of the Marines, he went into his family's business. But in 2006, his dad got cancer. My husband started drinking every day and ended up in the hospital himself. I wanted us to see a marriage counselor, but he wasn't keen on that. We had been married almost 20 years, and I hoped we could save our marriage."
And then, "I had to go to a speaking engagement in New York. His dad had died the day before. When I got home, I discovered that my husband had killed himself. I was devastated."
"About a year after this happened," Sally recalls, "a friend who worked for a dating site kept telling me I was too young to be alone. So I finally relented, signed up, and eventually met my current husband through the site. I married him in 2008, when I was 50."
What does Sally now think an "ideal marriage" is? "Actually, there is no ideal marriage," she says. "Yes, I finally do have that little house (but no white picket fence), stepkids (who don't live with us), and a dog. But it's not perfect. He sometimes does thoughtless things, but I've come to realize it's because he's a man, and they're wired so differently from women. I've grown to appreciate his good points, such as when he picks flowers from the garden for me, or when he made a wood table and carved 'I love you' with a heart on it for me. We do have a lot in common, he makes me laugh, and sometimes we get along so well, we say we must be from the same family."
In closing, Sally says, "If I were asked to give advice to someone about to get married for the first time, I would say -- I hope your marriage lasts a long time, but if it doesn't, it's not the end of the world, no matter how bad it seems at the time. Give marriage another go!"
Case Study #2 - Marilyn
Marilyn has been married four times. In her late 60s, she has a Ph.D., teaches writing classes and the occasional management seminar. She and her current husband are now retired and blending their responsibilities for children and grandchildren with community activities and interests. She comments about her current marriage, "Got it right this time!"
Marilyn, who grew up in a rural area of upstate New Hampshire, was the eldest of two children who lived with happily married parents. The family was active in church and had cousins and friends who lived nearby. She comments, "I had a very happy childhood. We had a comfortable, upper-middle-classlifestyle with lots of freedom, some responsibilities, and many activities outside of school. We did change schools often because of the redistricting that went on, but we stayed in the same house."
As for when Marilyn's first boyfriend appeared on the scene, she recalls, "That was in the fifth grade. I actually had several proposals from boys I walked to grade school with. I was quite impressed with that! Dating, and my first serious romantic relationship, came in junior high."
Marilyn was engaged for the first time at age 19, and married at 20 -- interestingly enough, she was one of the last people in her high school class to marry. At the time, the qualities she was looking for in a marriage partner were: ethnic, religious, and educational similarity, attractive, common interests. But at 19, she had a pretty vague idea of what an "ideal marriage" might be -- equal partners, mutual support, lots of friends, activities we could do together.
Her first marriage lasted 18 years and, as Marilyn remarks, "I spent years and years trying to make that marriage work. So I experienced a lot of guilt feelings about the fact that I was unhappy. Basically, my first husband was a nice, responsible man. In fact, we're still friends, and the kids love him. But he's a scientist and not in touch with ordinary reality. I was often lonely, and the loneliness led to my fooling around. But then I would feel so guilty after doing that, I knew I would have to leave the marriage in order to be able to live with myself from a moral point of view."
Marilyn continues, "After my first divorce, I couldn't wait to get into a more positive relationship. In hindsight, what happened was that I rushed into a second marriage, with someone I thought would be fun. It turned out that he was an alcoholic, and the alcoholism ultimately took his life when he was just 48. We had been married for 14 years. Before he died, he really did a lot of damage -- to me, to the kids, and to our budget."
After her second marriage ended with the death of her husband, Marilyn never said to herself, "I'll never remarry." Instead, she just vowed to do better next time. "Now I was very sure about what I didn't want: addicts, and absent-minded, physically absent scientists. What I did want was a good companion, a real partner."
"Shortly after my second husband died," Marilyn goes on, "I met a widower who worked as a manager for one of my client companies. He was bright, attractive, ethical, and interested. We dated for a few months and then had a small family wedding. It was 1995; I was 53."
Relating a shocking turn of events, Marilyn says, "We left for our honeymoon in Cabo San Lucas, and had a magical five days before my new husband died of a massive heart attack."
After that completely unforeseen event, Marilyn was in shock for a while. When she decided she was ready to date again, she knew that her goal was still to find a life companion and partner, but preferably a healthy one. She dated about eight men before becoming involved with the man who is her current husband. They married in 1997.
Marilyn now has this picture of what comprises an "ideal marriage": "For me, an ideal marriage means putting your partner's interests above your own, at least part of the time; being with each other's friends and family; taking a lively interest in each other's health and happiness; building memories together; planning a future together; and working together for the community, the church, and the environment. The list of attributes I used to have for an ideal husband have evolved into some non-negotiables and a lot of negotiables that make up the ideal marriage."
Marilyn and her current husband have an activity that they call "earning martyr points" -- for engaging in, or tolerating, any activity one partner dislikes but the other partner likes. This is not a formal process with scorekeeping and figuring out how much a certain "sacrifice" is worth, but just an opportunity to become more aware of the other partner's likes and dislikes. The martyr points are now more of a joke, used to ease tension when one partner is making an unreasonable request of the other. Sometimes one partner will do an activity alone or with friends, if the other one really does not want to participate. The couple also makes an effort to find activities, such as tai chi, that both of them enjoy.
"And," she adds meaningfully," this is the magic element to an ideal marriage: Give each other a lot of space and trust."
Case Study #3 - Vincent
Vincent has been married five times. Now in his early 60s, he is a retired college professor and author who holds multiple B.A. degrees. Vincent owns a private practice in the healing arts on the West Coast. His two grown male children live in other parts of the U.S. He says of his current relationship, "It is perfect. We are similar in our likes and habits, despite a significant age difference."
Raised by happily married parents in a lower-middle-class background, Vincent hasa younger brother. They had a stable life, insofar as they stayed in the same home and the boys went to the same schools. However, Vincent describes his childhood as only moderately happy, since his mother and father were quite strict with their children.
When did he have his very first girlfriend? "I was 14; the relationship lasted about a year." Vincent recalls that his first romantic experience took place at age 17, and his first serious romantic relationship occurred the following year, when he was 18. That relationship led to his first marriage, at 19 1/2. "We met in community college. I wanted to be responsible."
But that first marriage ended in a couple of years because Vincent caught his young wife cheating on him. Despite that unhappy discovery, he was not disillusioned about marriage, and in fact was open to the possibility of remarrying.
And he did remarry, at 23, but that wife turned out to be mentally unstable and a crack addict; he divorced for the second time. Soon after the divorce, he started dating again; one woman he was dating had a young child whom Vincent had grown very attached to (he admits, "I actually fell in love with her boy and wanted to help raise him"). He proposed to the woman, and they got married. Although that union did not last long either, because his wife was an alcoholic, Vincent adopted her 6-year-old boy. When his ex-wife decided to move to another state with her older child, but not with the younger boy, Vincent became a single dad.
After his third divorce, loneliness was a big factor in Vincent's decision to start dating yet again. This time he was 32 when he married, and that marriage lasted for 20 years. Then "mutual disillusionment" set in. After being involved in a bad motorcycle accident that had taken him six years to recover from, he rethought the basics of how he wanted to live. Although his wife assumed that Vincent would continue to be a hard-driving corporate business owner, which he had been when they met, his idea of what was important to him had completely changed. His choice was to lead retreats, establish a private practice in the healing arts, and live a more or less contemplative life. So it became quite obvious that the couple was interested in following completely different life paths. Eventually, they divorced. And this time, Vincent was single for eight years before he married for a fifth time.
Vincent says that actually he has always been looking for these attributes in all his marriage partners -- honesty, intelligence, sincerity, humor, and sexual compatibility. But it wasn't until his current marriage partner that he found that entire combination of attributes in one person.
Calling the relationship "a miracle" and "delightful," Vincent says the couple has their own private "sign language" that they use at a party, for example, to alert the other partner -- from across the room -- that it's time to go home. And they have a process that he calls "Mind Meld," where the couple literally "puts their heads together" and then tap their hearts, to show that they are in sync.
Vincent met his current wife through a mutual colleague, and remarried, for the fifth time, at age 60. It's this marriage that, he says, is really "ideal." He explains, "Sometimes couples have complementary styles -- as in, opposites attract. But this is so much better, because we are very similar in our outlook and our tastes -- we even have the same songs on our iPods! After learning so many lessons from past relationships, this relationship seems effortless. We have clear, open communication, a joyful energy, a strong friendship, and a spiritual connection that is very blessed."
Case Study #4 - Evan
Evan has actually been married 14 times -- but...and here's the surprising part...each of those 14 times, he's been married to the same woman!
A 40-year-old speaker, best-selling author, and global entrepreneur, Evan is indeed very happily married; he and his wife have two children and a stable relationship. They have simply chosen to affirm their love (in an unusual way) by renewingtheir vows annually, each year in a different state or country.
"I was 26 when we first got married," Evan recalls, "and that's when we decided to remarry every year in a different location. At that time we had no money and no idea how we would pull off our imaginative idea. We just made the decision, and then found a way to make it happen."
So far, some of the places the couple has been married are: at the Versailles Garden in Paris; at a 300-year-old windmill in Germany; in the water, surrounded by dolphins, at the Atlantis resort in the Bahamas; on the beach in Washington state; at the Excalibur Hotel in Las Vegas, where they were King and Queen; on the beach in Maui, Hawaii; and in a little church with a great view in Park City, Utah.
Evan explains further: "One year my bride chooses where we will remarry, and the next year I do. Half the fun is just planning the whole adventure. This year, for example, we've decided to renew our vows in a hot air balloon over Santa Fe, New Mexico."
Most of the couple's friends and family are very, very excited and supportive about the annual renewing of vows. "In fact, they sort of live vicariously through us," Evan observes. One friend, though, when he learned that Evan and Susan will do their ceremony this year in a hot air balloon, remarked, "My marriage is definitely going in the opposite direction from yours!"
Usually a pastor officiates at the annual marriages for Evan and his bride, but one year they asked a good friend to preside over the ceremony. "It was a blessing, to him and to me," Evan comments.
So far there have been no complications, from a legal or tax standpoint, to the annual vow renewals. "We have our original marriage license from our first wedding in our home state, California. So we don't apply for paperwork in other states because we're only renewing the original vows we made."
Evan was born in California to parents who divorced when he was about 4 years old. After the divorce, during the week he and his brother stayed with his mother and went to his father's house on the weekends. "I had a great childhood," Evan recalls, "but I didn't know how much damage the divorce had done until I was in my mid-30s. I had really needed a father figure when I was a kid, and my dad simply wasn't around." Evan's mother never remarried; his father remarried, then divorced, and is now married for a third time.
Evan and his brother grew up in a very happy, middle-class background. "We had the stability of staying at the same school. Mom moved to a condo about 10 miles away from our original home, and she made sure we were loved and very well taken care of."
As a young person, Evan had his first romantic experience in high school, and his first serious romantic relationship a few years later, when he was 19. "The woman I was involved with was a little older, more established and much more mature than I. Thank goodness this situation did not lead to marriage! The relationship was founded only on physical pleasure, and that only lasts so long."
When Evan was younger, the attributes he was looking for in a marriage partner are not necessarily what he needs and wants now, at 40. "My bride and I have grown together, and that's good, to be in a mutual growth process."
As for his picture of an "ideal marriage" before he got married: "I definitely did not want to be one of those guys who get married and then become fat and miserable. I knew that I wanted to live my dreams, and also to live 'happily ever after' with my wife."
Now, Evan says he has a new picture of what an "ideal marriage" is. "My bride and I still live 'happily ever after,' but the seasons of life are constantly changing -- what with raising children, moving, career demands. So I think that an ideal marriage is something that responds to the changing seasons of life. After you have children, everything changes! We don't have the same quantity of time to spend with each other that we did before the kids came along, so instead we focus on the quality of time we can spend together. We didn't want to look at each other after the kids are grown and say, 'Who are you?'"
Case Study #5 - Barbara
Barbara has been married five times. A 60-year-old tech writer with degrees in Engineering and Biblical Studies, her hobbies are "spending time with kids and old people." She is originally from New York, but now lives in California. Barbara has been happily married to her fifth husband, who is ten years younger than she, for sixteen years.
During her childhood, Barbara grew up in a middle-class home; she has one brother. Her father was a factory worker, and her mother was a seamstress. "There was a lot of hurt, because my father was abusive to my mother. And I remember them fighting all the time." Her parents divorced when she was 9, and her mother's economic status rapidly went downhill, from middle-class to "poor." Barbara only saw her dad a couple of times a year, and that made her sad, because she missed him. She and her mother and brother always stayed in the same town while she was growing up, but relocated to different homes several times within that town.
At the age of 11, Barbara was sent off to work as a tailor's apprentice, and stayed at that job until she was 16. Child labor laws were certainly ignored at that New York tailor's shop. The tailor abused her sexually for years, but Barbara did not tell anyone about it for a long time. The abuse, however, caused her to have many fears and feelings of guilt that stayed with her.
For part of each year, Barbara was sent to live with her aunt in Bermuda, where she was quite happy.
Her first boyfriend in junior high used to eat lunch with her in the school cafeteria. In high school, Barbara dated a football player -- she was a sophomore, and he was a senior. The first time Barbara married, she was 19 and in college. She had a son, who is now 39, with her first husband, but the couple divorced two years later. She was 22 when she married the second time, and the union lasted for eleven years. Her third, very brief, marriage was at 35. Barbara's fourth marriage at 37 also produced a son, who is now 22. Each time she was divorced, it was her husband who filed; Barbara was the one who packed up and left.
When she met the man who is now her fifth husband, she was sure she was "done with marriage." But he convinced her to think otherwise. The night before they were going to get married in 1995, her husband-to-be was under the impression that she had been married once or twice before. He definitely did not realize that she had been married four other times! Barbara was afraid of what he would say when he saw all four of her previous last names on the application for the marriage license. So, hours before they were about to head to the marriage license office, she "came clean" and told him the exact number of her previous marriages. He was cool with the disclosure, assured her it was okay and that everything would be just fine.
Here is a humorous example that clearly shows how considerate and thoughtful Barbara's current husband is: "We went to a dear friend's wedding. We had been there since early morning, helping with preparations, and now we were sitting at the wedding reception. Lovely music was playing. My husband invited me to dance, but I quickly declined. He gently asked, 'Do your feet hurt?' I nodded yes. My feet were in undeniable pain. I was wearing gorgeous, but very uncomfortable, high-heeled shoes."
"As soon as I nodded yes, my sweet husband unbuttoned his jacket and pulled out a very pretty pair of ballet slippers that were the exact color of my dress! My mouth fell open in surprise. He tenderly put the slippers on my feet, and we danced like a couple of teenagers for the rest of the night."
Before she got married for the first time, Barbara had no clue about what an "ideal marriage" might be like. Now that she is in a very happy marriage, she says, "I finally know what it's like to be loved, cherished, and respected. " Her picture of an "ideal marriage" these days is very specific: "Two people who are already happy, satisfied, mature, thinking adults, but who could be happier if they were married. It's so important to listen to each other, to respect each other, and to promote each other's best interests. Do what you can for each other."
Case Study #6 - Perry
Perry has been married seven times. The owner of a music production company (with a separate day job), he's in his early 70s and lives in Idaho. His four grown children, "who are all very successful and have well-adjusted lives," live elsewhere. Perry adds, "I am not against having more children, but there is a lot of freedom in being an empty nester."
As the oldest child and only boy, he grew up in a middle-class home with both parents, and three sisters. "My parents were very much in love, albeit very different types. They were married 62 years!" In retrospect, his stable childhood (he attended one school system from kindergarten through 11th grade, when he left school) in a suburban neighborhood was quite happy.
"I was the apple of my Father's eye," Perry recalls. "My Dad and I did many activities together from the time I was 6 years old. Dad was a model airplane pioneer, and is in the Radio Control Model Airplane Hall of Fame. It was a challenge trying to understand his electro-mechanical techno language (Dad had a genius IQ), but we complemented each other in many ways. Before radio control, we flew control line, where the planes go round in circles and the pilot controls their movements with his hands and his wits. I was a very good pilot; Dad was not, but he was a great builder and mechanic. So I did the competition flying, and he was the mechanic. We did very well, and filled the attic with trophies and other prizes."
Perry continues, "I was an above-average student, and lettered in baseball and swimming for three years. I started working part-time from age 12 on in my Dad's home-based business, and went to work full-time at the end of my third year in high school. I had a thirst for building my own business at that early age. Then I was in the Navy for six years, beginning in 1958."
On the subject of girlfriends, Perry recalls that he dated many girls from age 12 on, but met his first "steady" girlfriend when he was 14. "This established a pattern of monogamous relationships that included intimacy," he remarks. "And that pattern has continued throughout my life." Perry also notes another pattern in the type of woman he has chosen for his wife: "I have married three addicts, and have been in serious-enough-to-get-married relationships with two more addicts."
Perry was 17 when he married for the first time, 27 at the time of his second marriage, 31 for his third marriage, 37 for his fourth marriage, 39 for his fifth marriage, 47 for his sixth marriage, and 63 for his seventh marriage.
His first wife and he parted and reconciled several times, but divorced after three years of separation. When their two boys became teenagers, his wife couldn't handle them and willingly gave Perry custody. "That was the best move for everybody," he believes.
After each divorce, he usually didn't start dating until the divorce was final. "That was my time to reassess, regroup and reshape myself for the future," Perry observes. Interestingly, after four out of the seven divorces, he married the very first person he dated. The time between his divorces and remarriages mostly varied from six months to a year.
Perry always had a picture of an ideal marriage in mind, and still does, although it has been slightly modified over the years. What attributes has he been looking for in a partner? "I am seeking someone who would make me feel complete. She will be a supportive woman who wants to be my partner in all things business, and has a solid understanding of her sexuality. A high libido is desirable."
Why did Perry want to be interviewed for this book? "My experiences may help someone to keep on keeping on. It has been the most difficult thing for me to do, to make a lasting marriage. But I know it is the best way of life and I will not give up the search for the woman who wants what I have to offer. Satisfying each other's wants and needs is what builds intimacy and love in a marriage."
In his late 30s, Perry was baptized in a church. "Oh, there are still mountains to climb and valleys to traverse, but my life now is better than it's ever been. I trust that the Lord, in His own time and wisdom, will send me the woman that I have been looking for… for 60 years."
Ever the idealist, Perry comments, "I have a picture in my mind of saying to a prospective bride, 'I want to marry again, but I don't want to fail again,' and hearing her say convincingly to me, 'I won't let you fail.'"
Case Study #7 - Jack
Jack is a 62-year-old retired engineer and an Army vet who had two tours in the Vietnam War. He is originally from a small town in Oklahoma, but now lives in Panama. He has been married and divorced four times. Interestingly, his picture of what an "ideal marriage" was -- before he took his first walk down the aisle -- was based on his parents' relationship and values. His mother and father were married 65 years, "the most wonderfully affectionate, sensual, loving relationship I (and many of my friends) have ever witnessed," he observes.
He grew up on a cattle ranch and farm, the youngest of three children in an affluent family ("although we did not know we were well-off early in our lives"). Jack was in and out of schools as a child. "I was a problem child, was arrested many times for violence, theft, auto theft, and drunk and disorderly conduct. My parents could never understand why I was this way." As an adult, however, he earned two college degrees. "I have never been able to satisfy my need for more education," he remarks.
Jack's parents created a generous, kind atmosphere in which all the children could experiment and explore at their own pace. He recalls, "My parents were not doting. Their philosophy was to allow us to fall down and learn to pick ourselves up and get going again. They never interfered with a fight or a problem, but rather, taught us to resolve these issues on our own. I remember Dad saying once, 'Learn that failure is a more probable eventuality, and that as long as your parents are there to help you understand the mistakes you make, we can help you get back on your feet and learn from the experience. We cannot do this when you are an adult.'"
Regarding when Jack had his first girlfriend: In the fourth grade, he kissed a girl in class and then ran away because he was afraid of her reaction. He and that same girl actually dated later, in high school. When he was 16, he experienced his first serious romantic relationship, but it did not lead to marriage because he found out that she was simultaneously having a relationship with one of his friends.
At that time of his life, Jack was looking for someone who had a similar emotional and economic upbringing to his, as a possible marriage partner.
The first time Jack married, he was 18; the second time, 32; the third time, 48; and the fourth time, 53.
His first marriage ended because he is an alcoholic, and "My wife had enough and told me I had a choice: the family, or the bottle. I woke up one day after my first divorce and finally realized what I had thrown away: a loving wife, four kids, and a lifestyle most people would die to have. I decided that for Christmas that year, I would give up smoking, drinking, and drugs." And, since Jack got sober, "my first wife and I have remained good friends."
After his first divorce, he became reacquainted with his childhood sweetheart. They were married after two years of courtship and one year of living together. But then...Jack found out, quite by accident, that his second wife had over 14 affairs in the 12 years of their marriage. "This came to my attention because the state I was living in mailed me a questionnaire about my sexual partners. I discovered that my wife had a sexual relationship with a man who had AIDS; the state was developing a database of people with potential problems." This led to their divorce.
After his second divorce, Jack found a woman he thought had the qualities he was looking for. He hoped that the cliché "Third time's the charm" would be true. But...the marriage lasted only 80 days. The divorce, however, took four years to finalize.
His soon-to-be third ex-wife told Jack that he could not trust his brother, who had managed his investment portfolio since he was 23 years old. "My brother's education made him a much better and more effective portfolio manager than I, but I determined never to allow a relative to have access to my investments, and ended up losing over $2 million in my third divorce."
When Jack was divorced for the first time, over two years went by before he remarried; he was working in the Middle East and wasn't involved much with dating at that time. Only six months went by before he remarried after his second divorce, four years after his third divorce, and he started dating a year after his fourth divorce, as "I felt I needed to get back in the saddle quickly before I became embittered."
One of the major negative influences in Jack's early life is that he was sexually abused at age 11 by a schoolteacher. He never spoke about this experience until he was in his 40s, but the experience "led to a lifetime of disliking myself, and never being able to emotionally bond with any other human beings, including my siblings and my parents."
In his later years, Jack has been diagnosed as bipolar, diabetic, as having acute chronic pancreatitis, and recently, Parkinson's disease. He comments, "This means that my life will be challenged again, and I will probably be a burden to any future spouse. This may prevent me from looking for another relationship."
Jack says he does have a new picture of what an "ideal marriage" is, but that "it would require several pages to describe what I now understand is perfect for me."
Case Study #8 - Karen
Karen has been married eight times, although she has had seven husbands -- she remarried her 5th husband a year after they were divorced. Now 65 and happily married for ten years, she is a minister and lives "in paradise" -- in a town right on the beach in southern Florida.
Her family included an older brother and two younger sisters; the children were raised in a middle-class home. Karen's parents never divorced, although only one was actually in the house while the kids were growing up. As she recalls, "My father spent most of my life in VA hospitals and nursing homes. Mother sought her companionship from another man during all the years my father was sick. My father died in 1998; mother and her companion are still together -- she's 87 now, and he's 85."
Karen considers her childhood to be moderately happy. She describes herself as "a loner, a dreamer. I internalized everything, and didn't usually share my feelings or thoughts with others, because it was obvious that nobody felt or thought the same way I did." Karen continues, "I always saw myself as an 'observer.' I enjoyed that role, and decided that most people were creating their own soap operas. I always believed I could become better than I was. Also, I was never looking for bliss in a relationship, just passion."
In the third grade, Karen had her first boyfriend. She came home from school one day wearing his ring on a chain around her neck. "My mother almost died when she saw that," Karen remembers. Her first romantic experience, and her first serious romantic experience, was at 14. "At that time, everything was serious to me. I was devastated when the boy broke up with me, but I quickly found another boy -- even better -- to take his place."
Karen married for the first time when she was 17 and pregnant; they lived together for nine months. "At the time (1963), abortions were not an option, and being an unwed mother was sacrilege. I decided to divorce him when it sunk in that if I weren't pregnant, he never would have married me."
She was 22 at the time of her second marriage, and describes herself as "wild and crazy. We lasted a year." Karen married again at 27, "still wild and crazy, but he was even wilder and crazier. We lasted three months." She married for the fourth time at 32. "This was pretty much a carbon copy of the previous two marriages. It also lasted three months."
Interestingly, after her first divorce, Karen was open to remarrying. "I didn't believe then, nor do I believe now, in mistakes. Everything that doesn't kill you makes you stronger." When she divorced a second time, she was still open to remarrying. "I feel, 'If at first you don't succeed,...." Even after she was divorced for a third time, she took a chance on a fourth marriage because, as she admits, "I am the eternal optimist."
Contrast Karen's positive attitude about the possibility of having a better marriage with her sister's truly fatal attitude about marriages that end in divorce. One of Karen's sisters literally gave up on living, and eventually died, so humiliated was she that her third marriage had failed.
Marriage Number Five took place when Karen was 36. "This time, I married someone totally different from my normal 'type.' It lasted for two years." Then, when she was 38, Karen remarried her fifth husband. But, after six months, "I felt like I had dug a grave for myself, and was suffocating." Divorce soon followed. At 41, she married her sixth husband. Trouble ensued. After 8 years of marriage, her parting words to him were, "I love you very much," while his parting words to her were, "That doesn't mean anything to me, because you love everybody."
Karen notes that she found her calling as a minister during this seventh marriage!
At 55, she married for the eighth time. "When I met him, I had been divorced for five years and was seriously intense about my 'mission' to start my church. I wasn't really looking for a husband; I was actually looking for someone to 'partner' with me in starting the church."
"Frustrated, tired, and discouraged that my vision was going nowhere, one day I said to myself, 'The heck with it. I'm going dancing.' I went online and found this guy's bio on Yahoo Personals. We went dancing on our first date, and it was as if we'd been dancing together all our lives. Dancing made our hearts sing."
"When the band took a break, we walked over to a quiet spot. I asked him what his purpose in life was. He answered, 'Duh, to have fun!' What a concept! Something shifted inside me. It was like a rocket being launched! His penchant for having fun was not the only thing that attracted me, though; it was his total acceptance of me, with my seven divorces, bad credit rating, and tendency to stretch the truth. I so appreciate him, for the total love that he exemplifies."
With the exception of her seventh marriage, Karen started to date immediately after each divorce. Then after her seventh divorce (sixth husband), she stopped dating, and socialized only with her ex, who was still her best friend. However, as Karen notes, "He stopped being my best friend when I dated and then married my current husband. Now, he won't even speak to me."
Before her first marriage, Karen had no picture of an "ideal marriage" in mind, "...other than watching those stupid sitcoms on TV. For sure, I knew I had never seen an 'ideal marriage' in real life." Nowadays, Karen remarks, "I don't have a 'new picture' of an ideal marriage. I think it's what I've been asking for my whole life, but didn't know it."
Here's how she describes her ideal marriage today: "Two people (non-gender-specific) who allow each other to grow, in their own way and in their own time. No one can hold anyone back from their purpose in life. But if their purposes are at odds, divorce will be the natural course of evolution." She addsa wise observation, "No one's self-esteem should be attached to another human being!"
Case Study #9 - Connie
Connie has been married six times. She observes wryly that her husbands who were supposed to be the most likely to succeed, the ones she had married for all the right reasons, lasted only a relatively short time. But the husband who was supposed to be the least likely candidate for a lasting, compatible marriage is the one she's been married to happily for over 25 years! Connie is in her early 70s and lives near Miami, Florida, with her husband and two sons.
She was born in Pennsylvania and lived with both parents in a stable household. Connie was an only child, but her parents adopted three girls, her younger sisters." My mom was only 19 when I was born; she was a kid herself, and we used to dress my dolls together and set them in a row on the sofa."
Connie continues, "My childhood was so happy, I believed that life was a combination of Disney World and Mayberry, USA. There were nice kids I played with in my neighborhood. I loved our huge, old house with about 18 rooms. My grandmother and grandfather lived in the other half of the house, and were a daily part of my childhood. "
She recalls, ""It seemed we were always having parties -- Halloween, sleepovers. And I remember that my mom baked for months preparing for the Christmas holidays. In the summertime, I used to walk to a beautiful park called Buhl Farm Park. I would play tennis, swim in the pool, go to the swings, and visit the Sunken Garden, which was full of flowers, cat tails, and water lilies. Until I got to high school, I thought we were very rich. We owned our own home, had a nice car, and went for rides on Sunday. It was all good."
There was a surprise turn of events that upset the traditional "happy marriage" picture, however. When Connie was about 40, her mother suddenly left her father and ran away with a farmer who worked as a skating guard at the local Skating Alley. They moved to Alaska, and lived happily ever after!
Connie had her very first boyfriend in the 5th grade; he was a romantic, held her hand and walked her home from school. Her first serious romantic relationship came in college. She got engaged to her friend's older brother; he was a veteran , an all-star basketball player for the state and the college, and was getting his Master's degree. But then "I broke it off. I wasn't in love with him, and I didn't think he was really in love with me, either. Also, my mom objected to the potential marriage."
Connie was married for the first time at 21, but got divorced after she found out her husband had sexually molested a child. She always thought she'd remarry, and at 34, she did. But it didn't last; "I kept thinking that I'd keep trying marriage until I got it right. Life is too hard to live alone."
Why did she decide to remarry after her second divorce? "I think I was both in heat and insane!" And so, at 38, Connie married for the third time, and "just thought that this time it would be right and lasting -- as I had thought for all of my marriages." Soon after -- in fact, a year after -- her third divorce, she took a chance on a fourth marriage. "This marriage was like a business deal -- I wanted his insurance and airline passes, and he needed the insurance I had through the airline I was working for. (I workedfor Pan American World Airways for 37 years.) We married legally, but never lived together. It's true that this was really my most successful, and least stressful, marriage of all!"
They eventually divorced, and she married for the fifth time at 45. After that marriage ended in divorce, she married her sixth husband when she was 48; and that marriage is going strong 25 years later!
Connie was actually dating and going out before each divorce was finalized, because "The marriages were over long before the actual divorce took place. The ink on paper saying the divorce was official meant nothing to me. To me, the divorce happened when I separated from my husband. My motto was, 'Do it right, or do it to someone else’.”
As for what attributes Connie was seeking in a marriage partner she reflects that, "I wasn't that well-organized in my younger years, either intellectually or emotionally, to have a set of preferred attributes. Other than good sex, I didn't much care."
What is Connie's picture of an ideal marriage now? "Well...I really don't think such a thing as an ideal marriage exists, except in the movies or in fiction novels. I never had an ideal marriage myself, until now, because something was always missing. But the marriage I would consider ideal would probably have these components: sexual compatibility, humor, being best friends, enjoying unbroken trust, and true compassion for each other. All of that equals love to me."
She has very definite ideas about what's great in her marriage now. "That we never argue, never. Oh, sometimes we disagree, but it never reaches the stage of being an argument. We laugh out loud a lot, and support each other when comfort when disappointments come. That's so wonderful!"
Case Study #10 - Sam
Sam is a 75-year-old retired engineer, a homeowner who lives in New Mexico and does computer repair work as a hobby. Although he has not been in a committed relationship for 27 years, he's been married eight times -- and six of those marriages happened in one very busy decade, the 1960s!
Sam comes from a middle-class home in California; he was raised by parents who divorced during World War II, when he was seven years old. He remembers his childhood as being "not too pleasant, as I was tormented by an older brother." Sam also comments that neither side of his family was good at keeping in touch with each other. "Probably until I was in my 40s, I had met a total of exactly three relatives."
His first girlfriend, Marylou, was in his sixth-grade class. "We took dance lessons together." His first romantic experience was three years later, in the ninth grade.
Sam's first serious romantic relationship was in 1969, and it truly was serious -- "We thought enough of each other to start a family, and so we got married. I was 24 years old." At that time, the main attribute Sam was looking for in a potential partner was someone who enjoyed a physical relationship as much as he did. And his view of an ideal marriage then, he says, would have been based on the iconic Cleaver family from the popular TV show Leave it to Beaver .
But Sam's first divorce occurred just three years after the marriage because "I could not handle family life."
However, at no point did he ever tell himself he would never remarry again -- here's proof: Sam was married the first time at 24; the second time at 27; the third time at 29; the fourth time at 30; the fifth time at 31; the sixth time at 32; the seventh time at 34; and the eighth time at 44. His philosophy has always been, he says, "If at first you don't succeed, try, try again."
When he decided to take a chance on another relationship, he sometimes married the first person he met after a divorce. He remarks, though, that while he started dating "very soon" after each divorce, the old and new relationships never overlapped. Sam explains, "I never cheated on a wife or a girlfriend. I always had one relationship at a time." Interestingly, the time that elapsed between his divorces and remarriages varied wildly -- from mere hours to years!
After his second divorce, when his ex-wife was committed to an institution, Sam recalls that "I wound up getting married rather quickly to a dancer from Caesar's Palace. But we decided after just two weeks that neither of us really wanted to be married. So I got divorced for a third time. Then eventually I met my fourth wife, and the whole process started all over again."
At this point, much-married Sam observes amusedly, "The most long-term relationship I'm hoping to find now is a maid who will come in and clean my home regularly for over a year!"
Case Study #11 - Jennifer
Jennifer, who is 57, has been married and divorced three times, lives in Australia. "I consider that all my relationships have given me training and education. I truly have a double degree from the University of Life: A Bachelor's in What Not to Do, and a Ph.D. in Divorce," she says, laughing.
Presently involved in what she terms "a weekend relationship," Jennifer is a homeowner. She's self-employed, full-time, in the field of applied positive psychology. Her work is mainly aimed at helping people quit smoking cigarettes, deal with addictions, weight management and removing phobias. The tools she uses include NeuroLinguistic Programming, Hypnotherapy, Emotional Freedom Techniques, and Intuitive Counseling.
Her six children, three girls and three boys, live independently. Their ages range from 27 to 39, and their occupations range from environmental regeneration to personal training to IT adviser to communication systems to legal aid to retail homeware sales.
Jennifer was the youngest of five children brought up in a lower-middle-class home; the family mostly lived in small country towns or on farms, but the children had the stability of never having to change schools. Sometimes the calendar was filled with enjoyable family parties and happy family-oriented holidays, but there were also a lot of stressful and anxious times.
"My mother was passive-aggressive and my father was depressive; there was a lot of bullying and hitting within our family," Jennifer recalls. Her parents argued a lot and actually separated on several occasions. "Actually, there was a lot of anger from each of my parents toward their own parents, and toward their siblings, too. Stress seems to run in the family." After 49 years of marriage, all the strain between Jennifer's parents culminated in one final separation before her father died.
Her very first boyfriend came along when Jennifer was only 6 years old, and she had her first romantic experience when she was about 12. Three years later, when she was 15, Jennifer experienced her first serious romantic relationship, but the boy broke up with her a year later.
Starting when she was only 10 years old, Jennifer already had a picture of an ideal marriage in mind: "A trusting, caring, sharing relationship where the couple is both friends and lovers. Ideally, you are each other's strength, rather than each other's weakness, which is usually what happens later on, unfortunately."
Even as a teenager, Jennifer began looking for these attributes in a potential marriage partner: supportive, interested, financially secure, happy. She hoped eventually to be in a relationship where she and her mate could "laugh and travel together."
Jennifer was 17 at the time of her first marriage, 28 when she married for a second time, and 49 when she married a third time. In her first marriage, she had three children by the time she was 21; her first divorce occurred mainly because her husband "was violent toward my toddlers, and abusive toward me." At the beginning of her second marriage, three children were born within two years. Her new husband was only 21 when they married, and found himself with a total of six children (her three from her first marriage) within eighteen months. "Wonder why this one didn't work very well?" she laughs.
But Jennifer never ruled out marrying again. In fact, when she married for the third time, the couple invested in a home together, hoping that the marriage would last.
She started dating again between two weeks and two years after each divorce; the time that passed between her divorces and her remarriages was anywhere between three and fourteen years.
One of her most "useful" relationships happened between her second and third marriages. "I dated a real estate agent and farmer who had lost almost everything through a divorce. He introduced me to his wealthy family members, who owned very large farms and diverse businesses. From this I came to understand how hard so-called successful people work, and the risks they take, to become wealthy. And also how simply they lived on a daily basis."
"Even more importantly, this man taught me to observe life, and to understand a common-sense approach to problems. He opened up my mind and my eyes to the real ways of the world, the total reverse of my small-minded expectations."
Having thought long and hard about what goes into an ideal marriage, Jennifer says from the perspective of an older and wiser person, "We marry what we are subconsciously comfortable with, which reflects who our parents are. Such arelationship is good when it works, but not so good when it is the exact thing you are looking to escape from -- your parents' marriage! This self-perpetuates the cycle, and ends in creating our worst fear, and ultimately, divorce."
She reflects further, "I kept marrying versions of my father -- basically a spoiled, selfish man who wasn't interested in working toward my ideal relationship, which involves trusting, caring, and sharing."
"Now why did I do that?" she asks, then answers quickly, "Well, because such a man is a lot of fun to start out with. And he is usually successful in his career, so the financial stability is also there."
Jennifer hasn't taken a chance on a fourth marriage, but certainly hasn't ruled out that possibility. She believes that her ideal marriage, which she pictures as "brighter than ever," may yet be on the horizon.
Case Study #12 - Don
Don is a 70-ish, university-educated sculptor and writer who lives in the San Francisco Bay Area. He has been married and divorced five times.
He was raised in the Midwest, in a stable and loving family with one younger brother. His parents were married for 59 years, until his father's death.
Don experienced what he describes as "an ideal childhood, for which I am eternally grateful." His parents, who owned and operated a textbook store, were part of the "hard-working middle class." He grew up in a great town with opportunities for education and jobs, a beautiful landscape that included creeks and meadows, chances to participate in sports, and lots of potential girlfriends.
Don's first girlfriend, and first romantic experience, happened in junior high school. The high school years brought his first serious romantic relationship, but he didn't marry the girl because they were just too young to make the commitment. Also, he had no clue at that point what attributes he was looking for in a potential marriage partner, and just a vague idea of what marriage was about, from observing his mom and dad.
Don was married the first time at 21, the second time at 35, the third time at 45, the fourth time at 56, and the fifth time at 60 -- at which time he remarried his fourth wife.
When it became obvious that his first marriage was not working, Don initiated the divorce because attempting to live together had become such a rough experience. "We were great friends before we married, but could not seem to understand how to manage 'being married.' In fact, after our divorce, we remained great friends."
He admits, "I did not truly fall in love until after my first marriage was over. And until you do truly fall in love, you don't really know what it is...." Don says he loves being married, and so never vowed not to remarry after his earlier marriages fell apart.
His second marriage included a son, and a comfortable home. But his wife wanted to pursue a dancing career that was impossible to achieve, considering where they were living. "I was devastated by this divorce, although it did nothing to diminish my respect for marriage as an institution," he reflects.
Don would have been fine just living together with the woman who became his third wife. But she was much younger than Don, and being married was something she had dreamed of. So he was "talked into" marrying her.
After his third divorce, he fell very deeply in love, which led to his fourth (and fifth) marriages -- to the same woman.
Don started dating anywhere from three months to six months after each divorce, but he never married the first person he dated. There was a span of 14 years between his first divorce and second marriage, 5 years between his second divorce and third marriage, 6 years between his third divorce and fourth marriage, and 9 months between his fourth divorce and fifth marriage.
After all these experiences, does he now have a new picture of what an "ideal marriage" is? He says thoughtfully, "Each marriage must have its own dimension, created by each couple to fit their individual circumstances. Certainly, a spiritually based love is the magic ingredient. Also, sensual chemistry is one of the essentials, along with mutual respect, fun just being together, lifestyles that fit together easily, goals that are mutually understood and supported, and the ability to make each other smile easily and laugh together. You have to trust and believe in each other, for sure."
He adds, "You must share a relaxed yet responsible economic vision of the life you want. These are my ideals, along with the ability and willingness to change together, in a world that is spinning forward at the speed of light. Today is the day, this is the moment we live for. So be kind, compassionate, generous, and live in gratitude. Never take anything precious -- like love -- for granted."
Case Study #13 - Valerie
Valerie, a Minnesotan, is 67 and an author; she has also completed training as a Stephen Minister. She has been married three times -- first at the age of 16, then at 36, and then at 44.
Valerie is the oldest of three daughters. Her father was in the Navy for 20 years, so the family moved around frequently. "I have no high school graduating class reunions, and no childhood friends who knew me 'when,' but all that moving and going to different schools means that I have the ability to accept change and be flexible." She describes her family situation when she was growing up as lower-middle-class, but "we knew how to save, and so we were comfortable, even in Navy housing. "
Valerie remembers her childhood as being only moderately happy, because "My Dad was away so much in the Navy when I was a young child, we never bonded. And since my Mom always had my younger sisters in tow, I spent little time with her. In the past 25 years, my Dad and I have had a much better relationship, although I feel more like his younger sister than his daughter."
The theme of not being close to her family continues as Valerie observes, "Because I left home and married when I was 16, I've never had the close relationship with my siblings that I desired. Our life experiences have never coincided, nor have we lived in close proximity. At times, I feel that I am an only child, even though I have two sisters."
As for Valerie's parents, they have been married for an astonishing 68 years! However, when asked if they are happily married, she comments, "I think that for sure they have had their peaks and their valleys. For example, on the eve of their 65th anniversary, my dad unexpectedly said to my mother, 'You know, we really are incompatible.' And truly, they are as different in personality as two people can be. Yes, they love each other and are devoted to each other, but remember that they come from a generation that believed in hanging together, no matter what. Really, I do think that they each would have been happier with other partners."
In the seventh grade, Valerie had her first boyfriend. "He was very sweet and was the eldest child, like I was, so we always had younger siblings bothering us as we tried to talk." She had her first romantic experience at 14, when her Dad was stationed on Guam. "I met a young serviceman with a James Dean type of personality -- aloof, kind of a bad boy demeanor. Don't all women want the challenge of turning a bad boy into a good guy? He became husband number one when he was 20, and I was just 16 and a senior in high school. But I never felt that I had missed out on teen activities by marrying so young."
What attributes was she looking for then in a marriage partner? "Someone who thought I was really special -- unique. I know that need arose because I did not receive enough attention from my Dad. I also wanted a husband whom I could talk to about everything, and that wish came true."
That marriage lasted for 15 years -- "I have never loved anyone so totally as I did my first husband. But he traveled two-thirds of the year for business, and, eventually, I found out that he had become involved with a former go-go dancer, and was living with her part of the year, in California! He asked me for a divorce, but I was in college, planning to get a teaching degree, and mothering three young daughters. Although I tried hard to turn things around, after a year and a half, during which time he chose not to see his daughters, I realized that the situation was not going to change. So I filed for divorce."
She notes, "I was the token divorcée in my neighborhood! I was ahead of the pack in this realm, because nobody in my circle was divorced. For over a year, many of my neighbors did not even know that I was divorced. Certainly my daughters told no one."
Valerie liked being married, being part of a family unit and going to family gatherings. "I think desiring this type of lifestyle was a direct result of missing out when I was a child. We never lived near family, never enjoyed the extended family events. I really envied people that." So she was definitely open to the idea of marrying a second time.
After Valerie became a teacher, she met another teacher, who also had three children. "Six kids, all matching in age. It was like the Brady Bunch personified! Our friends and colleagues were delighted, ecstatic for our relationship. But the day we got married, I had a gut instinct that the marriage was a mistake." Sure enough, less than two years later, her new husband was caught kissing a young woman at school. He and Valerie then moved to an island where he had found a teaching job; but within a few months, he became involved with another teacher there. Enough was enough! Valerie took her children, returned to the States, and got divorced.
A few months later, feeling lonely, she decided to call a man she had dated briefly a few years ago. He had never married, and she just needed a friend. They went out and talked, but that was it. Seven months later, they met again, and "things just seemed to click. I was reluctant to marry, but he said he would only stay in our relationship if we married. He had become a wonderful friend, and I did not want to lose him. So I said yes." This third marriage, "while not perfect, has been a good relationship. We give each other leeway and we support each other in many ways."
"What I see as an ideal marriage now is a partner who helps me accomplish my goals, who lets me be independent and is comfortable with our spending time apart. It's more about friendship and companionship than it was in my younger years."

Case Study #14 - Gloria
Gloria, an American who lives in New Zealand, has been married and divorced four times. She is 59, has three grown daughters, and is a homeowner. At present, she is a parole officer in the Department of Corrective Services.
Gloria was born in Illinois. The middle child in a "good, stable" family of four children -- one brother, two sisters -- she was born into a middle-upper-class home. Her parents appeared to be happily married, and are still married today. But, as Gloria recalls, "Dad was very involved in politics and big business, so in hindsight, that life was probably not so great for Mom." The family moved several times because of her Dad's business ventures.
Her childhood was happy "until I became pregnant at age 14 -- I was molested by a relative. Of course, this threw everyone's life into turmoil. The event was not properly dealt with in the early 1960s; no one knew quite what to do. I think I healed from the whole situation faster than the rest of the family; they carried it with them for quite some time. Going through the experience actually made me quite strong and independent. I learned to cope." Gloria's baby was put up for adoption; in later years, she met her daughter and is in contact with her.
Gloria remembers very well her very first boyfriend. "I had a crush on the neighborhood paper delivery boy when I was 13. He shared the crush, and it was sweet."
Her first romantic experience as a young person occurred when she was 18, after she had finished high school in Miami and moved to New York. "We were supposed to be married, but my father intervened and talked us into waiting. I was a flight attendant at the time, and he was at university. We became separated by distance; then my employment came between us. I got caught up in the stewardess lifestyle of the 1970s -- sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll." But, she adds..." I am still in contact with that guy."
Gloria married for the first time when she was 23, the second time at 24, the third time at 27, and the fourth time at 30. "Obviously, I didn't think about what attributes I was looking for in a marriage partner. And I did not have a picture of an 'ideal marriage' in mind."
In fact, Gloria married the first time "so my boyfriend could get free air travel. My second marriage was a 'green card' marriage to a Norwegian friend, my third marriage was based on sex and drugs. When I was a hippie stewardess in Miami and San Francisco in the late 1960s and 1970s, I just wanted to have fun and experience life."
But after each divorce, Gloria never vowed not to remarry. In fact, how long after each divorce did she start dating? "Not long -- probably by the time I reached the next layover city." Gloria describes her fourth marriage as "the closest I had to a 'proper' marriage. By then I had left the airlines, decided that I should stop doing drugs, and ought to settle down with a nice, normal man. We were married for nearly 20 years, and have three beautiful, nice, healthy daughters. My ex and I remain friends, although he has re-partnered with a woman who is much more suited to him."
Gloria's fourth husband's family owned a 2,000-acre sheep and wheat farm in the Hunter Valley of Australia, where the couple moved after marrying in the U.S. They arrived in the middle of a very bad drought. Her husband and his father asked Gloria to help them feed the sheep, since there was no grass in the paddocks.
"My picture of "feeding the sheep" was that we would be feeding lovely little lambs by hand. What a surprise!" Gloria recalls. "As we were throwing bales of hay from the jeep to the sheep, they were actually falling over dead because they were so sick. This was my introduction to farming life. Some years were better, some worse, but always interesting. The best part was that my daughters had over two thousand acres in which to run wild. And they did."
Does Gloria now have a new picture of what an "ideal marriage" is? She says thoughtfully, "Maybe, but I would not take the chance again. After my fourth divorce, I re-partnered, and was in that relationshipfor nearly six years. It was a lovely, caring and romantic relationship; however, he was younger than I and decided that he wanted to have children. He had to follow his heart." She describes her current life: "So now, I'm enjoying being with me -- for the first time in my life. No boyfriends. Part of this may be cynicism, part fierce independence, and part not being prepared to give my heart again."
Case Study #15 - Pam
Pam has been married and divorced four times. A resident of the San Francisco Bay Area, she is in her 50s and is a Director at a high-tech company in Silicon Valley. She has no children, is a homeowner, and has been in a committed relationship for seven years. Pam is also...the author of this book!
Pam was born to very happily married parents who met at University. She was the second oldest child, and had an older brother and a younger sister. Pam was five when her mother suddenly died at the age of 33 after heart valve surgery. Her father decided to move the family from their home in Indiana, back to Western North Carolina to live with her paternal grandparents "until Dad could re-establish himself. It was going back home for him again, which was not his choice and under very sad circumstances. He had always wanted to move beyond his small-town, Depression upbringing and had been successful in doing that. But now, he felt like he was coming around again full circle and starting over. Incidentally, my Father and Mother were totally in love, and Dad was devastated by Mom's death." He always claimed everything was coming up roses for them until the Fall of 1958.
Two years after he was widowed, her father remarried, to a woman from his hometown whom he had known in high school. They had two daughters right away, and Pam's much younger half-sisters "loved me and accepted me”. My closeness with my half-sisters brought me closer to my stepmother." (Pam's stepmother passed away at 59, so her father was widowed twice, "but had two good, but very different, marriages.")
Pam describes her childhood as moderately happy, because "Although my Dad and second mother worked hard to provide us with security, I still missed my 'Mommy' throughout my childhood. My happiest times were when I visited my real mother's parents, my aunt and uncle, and my two first cousins -- girls-- for three weeks every summer. It helped me feel close to my mother and I identified with her family."
As a child, Pam was a very good student and made lots of friends. She was even elected "Halloween Queen" of her first-grade class. She played sports, took up the clarinet and taught herself to play piano. "In my own room at home, I played in a sort of make-believe world. Although I hoped to be a missionary, schoolteacher or actress someday, I wanted to be a wife, first and foremost."
Her family experienced another extreme upheaval in 1968, when Pam was 15. Her Dad had a career opportunity in Manhattan, New York and moved the family from North Carolina to "an upper-middle-class suburb of Long Island, where , as a naïve Southern teenager in a new cultural world, I was definitely a fish out of water." Once again, as when her mother suddenly died, Pam was thrown into a traumatic situation where her future was unknown. Her parents "were too busy raising kids and trying to make it in the competitive New York area to give me the attention I was seeking, once we moved from North Carolina to New York."
Pam "always had a boyfriend or was on the search for one" -- perhaps to pay the attention to her she felt she was missing at times. "I remember that my first interest in boys surfaced when I was only five years old, in Indiana! I was aware of my femininity and my attraction to the opposite sex even then, and was forever on a mission to be coupled. My first established 'boyfriend' was Randy, in first grade, in North Carolina. Then, in junior high school, I had my first romantic experience, with two different boyfriends."
She recalls, "My first serious romantic relationship was as a sophomore in high school on Long Island. By the time I was 17, my boyfriend who was attending college away, had given me a 'pre-engagement' ring. We decided to get married the summer I graduated from High School; I was 18. Two hundred people came to our wedding!"
What attributes was Pam looking for in a marriage partner at that young age? "A father figure, a good provider, emotional security, and stability."
Her young husband was considerate and kind, but was a professional student. He was academically absorbed, and had interests that didn't interest Pam. She started focusing on ways to get attention outside the marriage through her part-time modeling career, socializing with friends and otherwise staying active outside the home. Confused and feeling disconnected to her husband and the marriage, she left him mostly out of boredom. "The failure of that marriage was mostly mine, but I have forgiven myself and moved on."
Four months after her divorce became final, 25-year-old Pam married for the second time, to a man who was finishing law school. She met him at the law firm where she was working. "He was a self-centered only child from older parents. His family was very well-connected and doted on him. The marriage from the beginning was imbalanced, as I was treated as "less important". After a tumultuous six years, I left what appeared to be a comfortable, high society lifestyle and started over in one-bedroom apartment with no furniture, no transportation and a $17,000 per year salary.
Nine months after she left her second husband, Pam found a job in Marin County, California, and moved there. One Friday afternoon a dashingly handsome typewriter repairman came into her office and within a few weeks, they had moved in together. Three years afterwards, they bought a house together and got married. Pam was 37. But five years into the marriage, as her husband's harmful behavior escalated, Pam planned her imminent departure. However, one day, within 45 minutes, Pam was forced to escape ill-prepared. She simply grabbed what personal belongings she could and left their home.
After her third divorce, she reconnected with a longtime family friend, a "gentle, soft-spoken, rock of Gibraltar-type gentleman who seemed like the right next suitor for me.” She literally talked him into marriage when she was 43, before she realized that we had some issues that were irreconcilable. When she divorced him, at age 47, she believes he was somewhat relieved in a way, as marriage was somewhat of a burden on him.
Pam says she has "managed to stay unmarried for 12 years, due to one reason: Two of the three men I have dated in that time have been 'unavailable.' The first guy swore he would never marry for a second time and the second was a playboy who casually talked marriage, but didn't mean a word of it. The third gentleman and Pam have been in a wonderful seven-year relationship and don't feel the strong need to get married...but may someday.
Pam's advice to readers who would like to break the destructive "marry-go-round" pattern is..."Date unavailable men...for a long time!" (Justkidding, of course).
After each of her four divorces, Pam started dating immediately (sometimes, even before the divorce was finalized). And she usually married the first person she dated after her divorce. "I wanted to be part of a union...the whole husband/wife thing. I always expected to be married. I liked the status and the 'false security' of marriage. And, I guess I decided I would keep doing it until I landed the right partner, or the right partner found me."
Pam's new picture of an ideal marriage involves "mutual respect, true equality, interest in each other's welfare, good mental and physical energy, intellectual connection, similar values, good listening skills, ability to be non-judgmental and supportive of each other's goals."
And Pam's answer to whether she would marry again? Not surprisingly, “I’m open to it, but it isn’t a necessity in order for me to feel fulfilled in life.”

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Resolving Conflict in Marriage–A Case Study

In a previous article , I introduced a four-phase process for resolving conflict in marriage and other relationships. Here is a quick review of those phases. The first phase is preparation in which you put yourself in the mental state to step up to conflict in a helpful way. Phase two is invitation in which you lay the ground work and make it safe for another person to enter into dialogue with you. The third phase is exploration in which you build a pool of shared understanding by getting all points of view out on the table before you attempt to resolve your differences. And finally is collaboration in which you work together to come up with solutions which all of us can support.
Learning how to resolve conflict in marriage is a critical skill to achieve a happy and stable relationship. My purpose in this article is to give you an example of a couple using this process to work through a conflict.
The Situation
George is tired and irritable when he comes home from work on a Friday evening. His wife, Ellen, works retail on weekends and some evenings and has been home with the children for most of the day. She is hoping to talk to her husband about her frustration with demanding young children, when he pronounces in a disgusted voice, “Some mother! You can’t even control your six-year-old kid,” and stomps out of the room.
Ellen has a number of choices. She can trail him out of the room blaring sarcasm and criticism at his disappearing back. She can personalize his message and get down on herself for not being a better mother. Or, she can retreat into tears and give him the silent treatment for the rest of the evening. Another option would be for her to ignore the comment, pretending he didn’t mean it, yet feel a nagging disappointment and increasing distance in their relationship. Whatever Ellen does is likely to be part of an ongoing dance, familiar to her and George.
Instead, Ellen recognizes the consequences of their habitual patterns of acting and reacting and she decides to address this key moment in a more helpful way.
Phase I- Preparing to Resolve a Conflict in Marriage
Ellen takes some time, later in the evening and once the kids are in bed, to identify her feelings, thoughts, and usual actions when George shouts at her. (See article and process Stop-Look-Listen-Choose . )
She allows herself some space to be present with her feelings rather than ignore or run from them. Slowly, they begin to dissipate in intensity. She considers her needs underneath her feelings—to feel confident as a mother and feel the respect and support of her husband.
She identifies some of her thoughts and challenges them. “He thinks I’m a horrible mother,” becomes “He knows I love our children but that I go through good times and bad times, like anyone else.” Her thought, “He never supports me,” becomes, “He really does care about me but is exhausted after a hard day.” Her thought that “He’s mean and uncaring,” becomes, “He feels pretty frustrated and powerless when he walks into a house with a screaming child. He’s honestly not sure what to do. He may feel at a loss as to how to help me.”
She thinks about what she wants in the long run—a good relationship with George. This is more important than the payoffs she’s been getting out of feeling sorry for herself. She clarifies her desire to build more trust and goodwill with her husband and commits to talking to him in a respectful and clear way.
Phase II–Invitation to Resolve a Conflict
After doing some personal preparation, Ellen approaches George and makes a leveling statement. “Hey George, I’m wondering if we could take a few minutes to talk about our spat when you came home tonight. It must have been pretty stressful for you to walk into a house with a frustrated wife and screaming kids and I want to understand your point of view. I don’t want what happened to create distance between us and wonder if we can talk about it so we both feel better.”
George: “Look, it’s late and I don’t want to get into an argument. Can’t we just forget it?”
Ellen: “We could forget it. But it seems like that’s what we’ve been doing and it’s not getting better. Understand that my intent isn’t to blame you or start an argument. I know I have a big part in what’s happening. I simply want to help make our evenings more pleasant.”
George may be ready to talk and jump right into explaining his point of view. In that case, they’re moving into the exploration phase and Ellen will start by listening.
On the other hand, maybe George is not ready to talk tonight. He may need a little more emotional space. Ellen may say, “I understand if tonight isn’t good timing. It’s been stressful already. Could you be thinking about it and let’s find some time to talk in the next day or two?”
Notice how Ellen is using a few of the invitation skills to not only open up a conversation but make it safe for her husband to join her. And notice how her work during the preparation phase gives her the emotional strength to persist in pressing for a conversation while trying to make it a win for her husband as well.
Phase III– Exploring the Conflict
Ellen approaches George, after a few days, to continue their conversation and work out their marital conflict. “Hey, can we get back to talking about what it’s like when you come home from work? I’d still like to figure out how we can make this a better transition. I really want to hear what it’s like for you.”
(Ellen made a modified leveling statement by inviting George back into the conversation. She’s also transitioning to exploration by inviting him to talk about his experience.)
George opens up. “Sometimes, coming home is really hard. I’ve been working all day, had a lot of stress at work. In fact, I learned on Friday that I’d lost a big client I’d been counting on and I was really disappointed. And then I walked into a house which seemed like a disaster zone with messes everywhere and the kids whining and crying. It really got to me.”
(How easy for Ellen to react to George’s accusation. But she is clear that she wants to facilitate a productive discussion.)
“I wasn’t aware that you’d lost a big client. Do you need to talk about that?” asks Ellen.
George pauses, “Yeah I do. But not right now. Let’s figure this homecoming out.”
Ellen shows empathy. “So, between the disappointment of work and chaos of the house, last Friday night was really hard for you.”
“Yes,” says George. “I was really stressed and couldn’t handle it. I just needed space.”
“Okay,” replies Ellen. “It was pretty chaotic about the time you got home.”
George: “That’s right. It seems like it shouldn’t be so hard to have the house picked up and kids a little more pleasant since you were at home all day.”
(Again, it would be easy for Ellen to hear George’s comment as an accusation and either retreat or throw a counterpunch. But her goal is to have an honest conversation. Although his last statement didn’t feel good, she recognized it as an honest perception on his part.)
Ellen pauses, briefly, and then continues, “And I want to make your homecoming and our evenings better, less frustrating for both of us.” She goes on. “Can I share what it’s like for me about the time you come home?”
“Okay.” (George is softening. Ellen has been willing to listen and not provoke him to battle.)
“Late afternoon is the hardest time of the day for me and the kids. We’ve been together all day and I’m feeling pretty worn out and the kids are getting hungry and on edge. Sometimes when you walk in the door, I want to throw my hands up and say, ‘Your turn. I need a break.’”
“I get that. Have you thought of structuring your day so you aren’t so tired by the time I come home?”
(It’s common for someone to jump to solutions or offer “quick fixes” during exploration. They usually come too soon, before we have all the data in the pool of shared understanding before moving to this phase. This is a judgment call by Ellen, since she is guiding the conversation.)
“You know, I’m sure there are some things I could do differently and I want to explore that. But, first, I need to get something else in the open. Can I share with you the hardest part of Friday night for me?”
“You made some kind of comment like, ‘I’m not a good enough mother because I can’t control my kids.’ I felt really hurt and unappreciated. I wanted to shut down and not talk to you the rest of the night. It was hard for me to be around you.”
“Oh yeah. I forgot I said something. Sorry. I guess it was my frustration speaking.”
“Well, it hurt. I don’t want to hold onto it, but need you to know that it really bothered me.”
The dialogue may continue as Ellen and George build a pool of shared understanding by gaining insights into one another’s perspectives and feelings. Such conversations may take lots of twists and turns depending on the history, depth of feelings, and perceptions of both parties. On the other hand, they may be ready to enter into collaboration, the final phase of conflict resolution.
Phase IV—Collaborating to Reach a Resolution to a Conflict in Marriage
George and Ellen have a much better understanding of one another’s point of view and are now ready to search for actions that can help make their evenings, particularly transition home for George, go more smoothly.
George identifies his needs: knowledge of evening schedule; some quiet time before interacting with family; orderly house; fun, not stress, with kids; More structure with kids during evenings and dinner.
Ellen identifies her needs: Compassion, not judgment; a warm greeting; help with kids; time for us to connect and talk; time away from family, excluding work.
They then brainstorm various options to meet these needs:
- Talk at beginning of day about schedule and plan for evening
- Have a consistent dinner time
- Both help with dinner
- Who doesn’t help get dinner, if not both, does cleanup
- 10-minutes to clean up clutter before George comes home
- Spouse not getting dinner will interact with kids
- Ellen to get some time away one night a week
- 15 minutes of quiet time after arriving home
- 15 minutes of quiet time after dinner
- Connection time later in evening
- Speak respectfully even when frustrated
- Get more training in parenting to create a more peaceful home
Finally, Ellen and George review their list of options and select those that they can both support:
- Talk at beginning of day (or preceding night) about schedule and plan for evening
- Have a consistent dinner time—6:30 pm most days
- Spouse who doesn’t get dinner does cleanup
- George gets 15 minutes of quiet time after arriving home
- Ellen gets some time away one night a week
- Ten minutes of talk-time later in evening
- Read book on parenting together and agree on structure/expectations during dinner
Once they had listened to one another and built a pool of shared understanding, George and Ellen were ready to decide on actions to resolve their conflict. They did so by making what was important to each of them explicit, brainstorming options, and coming up with actions they could both support. Certainly, their final plan was different than either would have come up with on their own; different but also better since they made the plan together. The final part of collaboration is to talk about how it’s going periodically, and make adjustments as necessary.
A Final Word about Conflict in Marriage
Of course, resolving conflict in marriage happens much more easily when each partner shows goodwill and a desire to work together. Problems arise when you attempt to impose your solutions on others. But when you take time to listen and allow everyone to talk about their needs or what is most important to them, the unity in a relationship and buy-in to solutions is very high.
Stepping up to conflict in marriage is not easy. So many people opt to avoid it altogether or to treat the other party as an enemy that must be defeated. In truth it takes humility, responsibility, courage, goodwill, and emotional maturity to work through conflicts to a productive end. May you be willing to face and work through the conflicts of your life.

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Couple Counselling case studies
Below you’ll find case studies of real clients that have attended couple’s counselling at All in the Family Counselling with our professional trained marriage expat counsellor. These cases do not represent all cases seen at our centre but rather are intended to give you insight into what makes for successful outcomes and the time and effort the clients choose to put in to make their relationship change. Each couple’s relationship is unique and has its own history which our therapist will attend to. But we hope you will find it helpful to see what successful clients choose to do and their outcomes.

Case Study 1
Profile : Professional couple married for 6 years but known each other for 10 years. The couple is in their early 30s.
Reason for Counselling : Couple came into counselling because of husband’s excessive use of pornography, a reduced sexual life and overall lower intimacy in the relationship. Wife was prepared to file for divorce if things didn’t improve rapidly. Wife had loss of trust due to pornography use.
Number of Sessions: Couple had a total of 4 sessions with husband attending to 2 individual sessions. At the client’s initial session everyone agreed to the problem and what a positive marriage would look like for them. They were taught basic relationship skills and given homework to practice. At their 2 nd session, which was 10 days later, we reviewed their homework and both individuals had great revelations about themselves, each other and the relationship. They were taught additional relationship skills and given more homework to practice for 14 days. The 3 rd session we reviewed homework and refined skills and integrated new relationship concepts into the relationship including negotiating win-win for the relationship and managing perceptions in communication. Final session was 30 days later in which we reviewed their homework, revised some of their skills and gave them a framework to help identify and remedy problems if they were heading back into old relationship habits.
Success Factors: This is an unusual case for a couple in crises to come to counselling and so dramatically turn their relationship around. The reason the couple experienced such dramatic success was that they had come into counselling early once the issue of intimacy and pornography were discovered. This couple was also highly motived to make counselling work and they energetically completed their homework in between sessions. The couple also had a lot of positive regard for each other and good personal insight into themselves and each other. The husband also attended a couple of individual sessions to work on stress management.
Case Study 2
Profile : Couple married for over 10 years in their mid 30s. Both have a college education and are professionally employed. Couple has no children.
Reason for Counselling : Counselling was initiated by the wife who had found out only 4 days prior to contacting our agency that her husband had an affair and both of them wanted to repair and improve the relationship.
Number of Sessions: Couple had a total of 6 sessions over 3 months. The first session was getting agreement that both couples wanted to repair and improve the relationship. Both parties agreed to not introduce punishment into the relationship as a result of the affair. The couples were given some new basic relationship skills and given homework to complete in between session including not discussing the affair. Session 2 was 10 days later and the focus was on building a unified goal for the relationship. Four goals for the relationship were mutually identified and agreed to. Couples were given more relationship skills and homework to practice. The next 3 sessions were spread out over 2 months and focused on relationship skills that targeted communications, perceptions and internal control all with the couple doing homework in between sessions. The final session the clients evaluated how they did meeting their goals and they felt they got about 70–85% of each of their goals which was satisfactory for them. They felt confident with their new relationship skills. Trust had been restored, forgiveness was given and communication dramatically improved and the couple was established in their new and improved relationship behaviours.
Success Factors: Couple came in quickly after finding out about the relationship. Both individuals in the relationship agreed to not introduce punishment into the relationship. This couple was focused on the present and building the future relationship. The incident and issues of the past were only used as guidelines to help us know what worked and did not work. The couple was highly motivated to repair and improve their relationship and would complete their homework and came prepared to fully engage during the counselling sessions.
Case Study 3
Profile : Professional couple married for 7 years. The couple is in their late 30s. Had a history of infertility and infertility treatments that resulted in 2 children in last 3 years prior to treatment.
Reason for Counselling : Couple came into counselling because of dramatically reduced intimacy, increased fighting, difficulty communicating and negative perceptions of each other’s behaviours.
Number of Sessions: Couple had a total of 12 sessions with each client engaging in 2 individual sessions within 5 months. The first session focused on stabilizing the relationship and providing them with basic relationship skills. The homework started to focus the couple on building positive regard towards each other. Then next 2 sessions were focused on developing a new relationship base from which to make all decisions-shifting it away from the children as the base and back to the couple. The next 4 sessions included reviewing the homework the clients were completing in between sessions, the lessons and observations they were learning as well as modifying and enhancing basic communication skills that included perception taking, learning to negotiate a win–win for the relationship and continuing to build positive regard. The individual sessions were focused on personal issues that were affecting the relationship. Individual sessions addressed some of the loss and trauma related to infertility treatments and stress and anxiety management.
Complicating & Success Factors: This couple had a more complex prolonged history of infertility, stress and trauma that went on for a couple of years prior to entering counselling resulting in a more negative view of each other that reduced trust and positive regard for each other. This increased the number of sessions for the couple and individuals session were recommended.
However, the couple still had enough positive regard for each other and was committed to the counselling process because they really valued what they had earlier in their relationship. While the couple experienced some setbacks initially and was slower to implement their new relationship skills than the previous couples, they managed to keep coming to counselling and do most of the work. As they start the client was successful because they gave counselling enough time to work and practice their new skills and continue to get feedback and guidance while working both on their relationship issues and individual issues. This couple needed more sessions because there were complicating factors and the issues had been developing for a longer period before coming for help.
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- Relationship Problems
- A Marriage Counseling Success Story
Dana Vince, M.A., LPC, MHSP, maintains a website at www.healingheartscounseling.org I am a licensed Professional Counselor practicing in the Knoxville area of ...Read More
This is the first in a series I am starting. The series is going to involve couples stories. Some of them will be success stories, and some of them not. But each of them will give you a glimpse into what other couples struggle with. I think you’ll find that you are not alone in your own struggles. I hope that from reading these stories, you find insight into your own marriage and how to make improvements. These stories come from my experiences in counseling couples. In my 4 years of practice, I have treated over four hundred couples. To protect the confidentiality of those involved, names are not used. I will also leave out certain details or edit parts of the story so that the couple cannot be identified and confidentiality is maintained.
This story is about a couple that has been married 12 years. They have 2 children ages 7 and 10. They started out like any ordinary couple, fell in love, got married and had kids. She immersed herself in the role of mother and wife. He worked full-time and saw his role as provider. He was involved in his kids lives, but not to the full extent that his wife was. She became a stay-at-home mom and was devoted to the kids. During the 10 years of parenthood, these two didn’t take a whole lot of time to be alone with one another. Everything they did was with or for the kids. Being a full-time mom, she rarely took time for herself and when she did she felt guilty. She wanted more help from her husband but never asked for this because 1. she shouldn’t need help, she should be able to manage on her own like a good mother should and 2. he should know he needs to help out more, she shouldn’t have to tell him. Slowly over the years, resentment built up inside of her that she never communicated to her husband. Well, she would communicate subtly, but not in any way that he was able to register and respond to. After 10 years of this, she hit burnout. She began going out and disregarding how her actions impacted her family. She went into an emotional crisis and began acting opposite of her normal self and began taking time for herself, away from her family in large doses. She then met a man that showed interest in her and she engaged in an emotional affair. (It was caught before it got physical). Upon her husband’s discovery, they entered into counseling.
She was seething with bitterness toward her husband for his lack of help around the house all these years. He was confused. He worked and felt he did his part and had no idea that she was so angry with him. He was hurt and upset by her emotional affair, no longer had trust and became insecure in the relationship. As they began to dig into their marriage to understand why the affair happened, she was able to stop blaming her husband and take a harder look at herself. She began to uncover the faulty thinking that was behind her own behaviors. She realized the affair was an escape from dealing with the realities of her marriage. She avoided conflict which was part of how things got this far. She had a negative relationship with her own mother and was giving herself the message that she had to be perfect in order to be good enough. She expected her husband to step up even though she never communicated her needs to him. So her husband was oblivious to his wife’s unhappiness and completely taken off guard by the affair and her admission that she was carrying so much resentment toward him. He also avoided conflict. He realized over the years he may have read the signs of her discontent, but he turned away from it to avoid causing conflict and their disconnection grew slowly over time.
At the time they came into counseling, they were on the brink of divorce. With two children, they didn’t want to go this road, but they were both in so much pain, they didn’t know how they were going to make it work. They engaged in counseling on a weekly basis for 6 months and then did monthly check-ins for 6 months after that and they not only succeeded in taking their marriage off the ledge, but they feel happier and healthier and are experiencing a new relationship with one another.
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How did they do it? She worked at understanding her own faulty thinking. She realized she doesn’t have to spend every minute with her children to be a loving mother. She realized that she is allowed to take time for herself and doesn’t have to feel guilty about it. She worked on communicating her needs to her husband, and he listened and was responsive. He realized he needs to do more than just provide financially and is taking a much more active role in parenting the kids and helping around the house. She was able to acknowledge the pain she caused with her emotional affair and together they worked to understand why it happened, how to prevent it and together they found forgiveness. She became transparent so he could begin to regain a sense of trust. And when anything went awry, they talked about it together openly, honestly and with love and kindness. So overall, through their experience and the counseling process, they were able to learn to communicate with one another, expressing their needs and becoming responsive to one another, they were able to forgive and rebuild trust, they learned a great deal about themselves and each other and in the end created a marriage that they both feel good to be a part of.
Remember to like my facebook page, follow me on Twitter or Linkedin, or subscribe to my rss feed so that you can keep up with the series.
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- Introduction
- What Makes For A Happy Marriage?
- More Factors
- How Marriages Get Intro Trouble
- Predictable Breakdown Patterns
- Ambivalence
- Negative Interactions
- Marital Therapy Concepts
- More On Therapy
- The Process Of Couples Therapy
- Communication Approaches
- Soothing Approaches
- Relationship Strengthening
- Marriage Skills Training
- Allan Schwartz BBC Interview On Significance Of Eye Contact
- Building & Strengthening Your Relationship
- Does Marriage Counseling Work?
- Emotional IQ
- Finding Time
- Great Relationships: Five Things I've Learned From Couples In My Practice
- How To Ask For What You Want: A Fable & A Story
- Improve Your Relationship Tonight
- Infidelity, To Divorce Or Not?
- Is It Love Or Codependency?
- How Stories Shape Relationships
- Making Peace With Guilt
- I, You, We And, What's In A Pronoun?
- The Silent Treatment
- Former Lovers & Trust
- Communicating Into Another's Listening
- Stigmatized
- The Chemistry Of Love
- The Courage To Commit
- The Transformative Power Of Listening
- The Great Equalizers Of Life
- Eyes, Meaning & Human Interaction
- The Relationship Dance
- Calming The Hurricane
- Time-Starved Relationships
- How To Keep The Flame Alive
- Unintentional Words & Meanings
- Personality Disorder Or Just A Horrible Person
- Husband Sexting With A Mutual Friend
- Am I Controlling ?
- Commitment Issues
- Found Out My Therapist Had A Disciplinary Action In The Past
- Trust Issue
- Classify My Mental Disorder
- Prolonged Unemployment Of Husband
- Long Distance College Relationship
- Does My Boyfriend Have Feelings For His Ex Wife?
- Married To A Psychopath
- Breaking Up
- Trust Issues
- How To Overcome Depression Caused When Boyfriend Ditched Me?
- New Boyfriend Lying About Belongings That Are His Ex Girlfriend's
- Should I Stay Or Should I Go?
- How Can I Help My Fianc??
- Husband Continually Annoyed/Angry With Me
- Recent Loss Of My Mother Is Causing Problems...
- Lost In Limbo
- Need Help In Building The Bridges
- Lack Of Affection And Intimacy
- Is He Seeing Someone?
- Marriage Question
- Resentment-Controlling Wife/Passive-Agressive Husband
- How To Get Over It?
- Am I Going Crazy?
- Can My Marriage Be Saved?
- Why Is He Doing This To Me?
- Am I Commitment-Phobic?
- Change Of Heart After Parent's Death
- Does He Love Me?
- The Breakup.
- Should I Stay With A Lying Husband?
- What Happened?
- On And Off Relationship For Almost 10yrs
- Jealous Girlfriend
- Will My Husband Ever Quit Abusing Narcotics?
- I Am Tired Of Marriage
- Not Able To Be Happy With My Husband
- Do You Think We Can Work This Out?
- Is It Me Or Him?
- Personality Disorder Symptoms??
- Morbid Jealousy?
- How Much Is TOO Much Therapy?
- How To Handle An Employee Who Tells Obvious Lies
- Affection Deficit
- Delusional Jealousy
- My Boyfriend Still Has His Ex-Girlfriend's Photos
- Emotional Manipulator, Personality Disorder Or Both?
- In Love With A Man Who Does Not Love Me
- Boyfriend's Daughter's Strange Behavior
- I Have Been Rejected.
- Second Marriage
- New Job New Chance
- Crazy Mother In Law Ruining Our Mental Health And Relationship
- I Am A Newlywed And Need Help
- Why Is He So Jealous, Even Of My Own Brothers??
- Why My Emotional Relationships With Men Don't Last?
- What Do You Do When Your Partner Just Won't Understand Or Change?
- The Marriage Corner: How Do We Get Through This?
- Preventing Unwarranted Conflict
- Should I Be Worried?
- Should I Stay With My Girlfriend Of 4 Years?
- My Boyfriend Saved A Picture Of A Girl He Slept With In Case We Split Up?
- Bipolar Girlfriend 55 Years Old
- Is He Changed???
- Lust Or Love?
- Why Can't I Get Over It?
- My BoyfriendLlied To Me About His Ex.
- Missing My Ex-Boyfriend Terribly
- We Broke Up Because Of His Mother.. I Had An Abortion. Having Suicidal Thoughts
- Am I A Sociopath?
- Insecure Danger
- Trying To Reconnect With My Ex
- What Is Intimacy, Exactly?
- Is She Ill?
- Why Does My Wife's Old Boyfriend Bother Me?
- Insanely Jealous Husband
- How Do We Get Her To Accept Us As Part Of The Family?
- Will My Boyfriend Eventually Hit Me?
- I'm Cheated By My Girlfriend..... I Just Want To Die.....
- Can This Ever Change??
- Need Advice
- I Think I Have Sexual Issue's
- I Feel So Lost.
- Extreme Jealousy
- Scared And Lonely
- What Does He Have To Pay? And What Not?
- Why Do You Think My Boyfriend Left Our Relationship In This Manner?
- I Feel Like He Won't Ever Love Me Like He Loves Her
- Help With A Histrionic Friend
- I Am An 18 Year Old Mom Diagnosed With Severe Depression And Anxiety
- Boyfriend Still Acting Like A Bachelor
- Middle-Aged Female Never In Love
- She Doesn't Behave Like My Love Completes Her.
- Should I Be Hopeful That He Will Change His Mind About Divorce?
- Silent Treatment
- I Want To Die!
- I Really Need Some Advice...
- How Can I Cope With My Husband?s Depression And Its Sexual Consequences?
- Am I Over Thinking This, Or Am I Right?
- How Do I Handle This?
- My Husband Is Too Affectionate
- What Should I Do?
- Is It Really A Problem?
- Am I Not Normal!?
- Husband Abandoned Me
- Breaking Up With Bipolar
- He's Distant. Is He Leaving Me?
- My Boyfriend Saved Pictures Of His Ex-Girlfriend On His Computer.
- Depression In College Seniors
- My Boyfriend And His Adult Daughter
- Guys Think I Am Too Much For Them To Handle
- Why Do Men Not Find Me Attractive?
- Relationship
- Never Been In A Serious Relationship
- Am I Being Used?
- Sudden Separation After Loss Of Father
- Am I In Danger?
- Does Being Drunk Bring Out The True Personality?
- Husband's Weight Problem
- What To Do?
- I Love Her, But I Want That Spark Back
- Why Do I Reject My Boyfriend's Son?
- Walking Home
- Is She Mentally Ill?
- How Can I Trust Again??
- My Boyfriend Is A Sociopath
- Will I Ever Feel Normal?
- Relationship Anxiety
- No Romance After Baby!
- Save My Marriage!
- Sexual Issues With Husband
- My Husband Has Left Me For Another Woman. How Do I Let Go?
- Help My Son With His Morbid Jealous Girlfriend, Get Him Out.
- Anti Social With Accepting Girlfriend
- Transference
- Do You Really Ever 'Just Know' ?
- Anxiety In A Relationship
- How Can I Forgive My Husband To Save Our Marriage?
- How To Deal With A Pot Smoker Who Uses It To Cover Mental Problem - - Oct 23rd 2008
- How To Ask If The Pics Are Her?
- My Husband Has Admitted He Is An Alcoholic...how Do We Heal
- How Much Guilt Is Normal?
- Unhappy Marriage
- Torn Between Two Lovers, And Scared Of What I'll Do
- Terminating Therapy After 17 Years
- Help With My Husband
- Nervous About Nudity
- Is He Crazy Or Am I?
- Boyfriend With APD - Frustrated - Nelly - Jul 21st 2008
- Why Does My Boyfriend's Ex-girlfriend Have To Be So Involved In His Life?
- Should I Try To Salvage This Relationship?
- Dating A Psychologist And Feeling Inferior
- Is It Abuse? - Erin - Jun 24th, 2008
- Abuse Survivor
- I Never Feel Enough Affection From My Boyfriend. Am I Obsessing?
- I Think We Got Married For The Wrong Reasons.
- My Partner Of 6 Years Suddenly Left With No Explanation And Has Completely Shut Me And My Kids Out- Elise
- My Boyfriend Doesn't Seem To Have Gotten Over His Ex-girlfriend
- Insane Jealousy
- Boyfriend's Skeletons And Friends' Opinions
- Is It My Fault If My Family Falls Apart After He Cheats?
- Child Jealous Of Moms Relationship With Her New Husband
- Wife Wants To Seperate After 23 Yrs.
- Husband In Alcohol Rehab
- My Ex-husband Tells Me He Wants To Be With Me Again But Won't Move Out Of His Girlfriend's House
- Jealousy, Anger, Depression And Fear
- Dealing With Demanding Mother
- My Wife Is Depressed. Should I Help Her To Toughen Up Or Just Be There For Her?
- Engaged To Be Married But Fighting. The Wedding Date Has Been Canceled.
- Long Distance Relationship Trials
- He Cheats On Me. Is It My Fault?
- So Sick Of This Lying Crap He Puts On Me
- Was This A Contolling Relationship, And Why Would I Put Up With It?
- Does My Husband Love His Daughter More Than Me (his Wife)?
- Alcohlic Husband
- Feel Like I'm Trapped
- Dating And The Stigma Of Mental Health.
- What's The Matter?
- My Girlfriend Wants To Stop Being Critical But Doesn't Know How
- Finally Have A Stable Marriage, But Having Sex Problems
- A Fighting Couple
- It Seems Like I Have To Choose Between My Husband And My Son!
- Two Intelligent Adults Who Feel They Don't Have Friends
- Should I Get Involved?
- Hard Decision
- My OCPD Husband Can't Tolerate My 'flaws'
- My Fiancee Can't Get Over His Late Wife
- What Can I Do?
- Just Looking?
- Husband With Erratic Behavior
- After Verbal Abuse
- Loyalty Or Love?
- Should I Leave My Husband?
- Very Confusing Relationship
- Will My Husband Still Love Me After He Comes Out Of Major Depression?
- Confronting A Marriage Problem
- How Do I Forgive And Forget When My Husband Abandoned Me?
- Other Woman
- Who Is My Wife?
- How To Move On With Everything Against You?
- The Catch 22 Of Fear Of Abandonment
- Learning To Set Limits
- What Am I Afraid Of?
- How To Work Out Differences
- Abusive Relationship Ever Change?
- There Are No Guarantees When It Comes To Love
- I Compromised And Gave In
- Going Through His Things
- Advice For My Unhappily Married Friend
- He's Selfish, Disrespectful And Irresponsible
- I Have A Crush On My Husband's Friend
- I Cannot Continue To Live Without Affection
- Regret My Decision Every Single Day
- He Has Hit Me On A Few Occasions ...
- Lingering Feelings For My Old Affair Partner
- Obsessed With The Woman Who Is About To Marry My Ex
- Wife Of 21 Years Has A Boyfriend
- Having Trouble Letting Go Of Ex-sister-in-law
- I Suspect That My Husband Is Cheating
- Abusive Older Sister
- Explaining Divorce To Children
- Working Mother Wants To Stay Home
- Am I Just Deluding Myself?
- Attachment Issues
- Craving Attention
- Embarrassed And Ashamed Of My Weakness
- Should I Just Be Alone For Now?
- Is Recovery Possible?
- Withdrawn Wife
- Husband Wants A Divorce
- Helping My Husband
- Best Way To Deal With Verbal Abuse
- Scared To Death Now
- Duty Vs. Freedom
- Grieving All The Time
- Marital Problems?
- Living With PTSD
- Making Excuses
- Bosom Buddies
- What Abuse Looks Like
- Am I Wrong?
- Marital Stress
- Can You Help Me Save My Relationship?
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Case Study: Early marriage struggles and marital mediation
Mark and Jane got married eight years ago. They have two young children. Their initial love and attraction has turned into constant bickering and argument. They now realize how different they are from each other. Every interchange seems to be a battle and is affecting every aspect of their lives. They wonder what happened to the love and affection they felt towards each other at the beginning of their relationship.
They have been arguing about money, and how to spend it. Mark thinks his hard work is not appreciated. Jane feels overburdened with taking care of the children, her part-time work and taking care of the most of household duties. They each feel the other is not contributing enough.
They do not want to give up on their marriage, and have heard that mediation can be effective in working through the practical problems they face. They hope by learning to appreciate each other’s efforts their love for each other will start to grow again. They have tried individual therapy, marital counseling, and group therapy, without results.
The first few years of a marriage are a very intense period of adjustment. It’s very common for the couple to learn differences about each other and encounter extreme bouts of negativity that they never imagined possible. A newly married couple (and any married couple, for that matter) should try anything at their disposal. Sometimes marriage counseling does not work. It does not mean that the marriage is over or that the counseling was insufficient or even that marriage counseling may not work at a future time. Couples need to try different things at different times in order to break the log jam of disillusionment.
Marital Mediation or other professional support may help break the impasse. The mediator will explain to Mark and Jane that, just like a new hobby, learning how to be married is a learnable skill. The mediator will teach them conflict resolution skills that they can begin to practice at home. Things can improve at home, and Mark and Jane can continue to work on (and enjoy) their marriage. They might even try counseling again (perhaps with a different therapist), and may find that they are ready to gain insight from it.
This case study is fictional and does not represent any real person.

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In a time when I felt like I was losing everything and drowning, LionHeart saved me. I have been thrown a life raft and I am so thankful. LionHeart has given me lifetime skills on how to connect with my husband and how to build trust.

For the first time in years, I actually feel positive about the future of my marriage, and about my life. Given the results of coaching over the past few months, I have raised the expectations of what’s possible. And it’s all thanks to LionHeart.

I was about to lose the man I loved and I didn't know what to do. Then I discovered LionHeart. I am thrilled to state that, after just three weeks of coaching, my husband and I are back together and absolutely devoted to making our marriage work. I'm glad to say that divorce process finally has been halted. I couldn't believe that it was possible!

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Client Case Studies
Tom's story
After two months of sessions with John, I noticed that I wasn't as helpless as I previously thought. In fact, I wasn't helpless at all. I had rapidly gained mastery over my life and marriage, much more than I thought I was capable of. As our sessions continued, communication with my wife restored, and John helped me to realize that we had more potential than I believed. While being indoctrinated with a fixed mindset, I was quickly surpassing all false beliefs and boundaries I thought were impossible to break. That let me create a completely different marriage I've never thought we could have. I am excited to see how much more I can grow with our sessions, how fulfilling my marriage can become, and can't recommend enough John's expertise and deep insight and am grateful to be working with him.

St. Louis, Missouri
Scott's Story
I married my wife 11 years ago. The First 5 years went happily, I can’t say it was perfect in any way but it was a good time. After those 5 years, everything turned for the worse. My wife started accusing me of things that she had never accused me of before. It went as much as her saying that I wasn’t masculine enough to be the head of the family and she felt in charge all the time. I bore all those things but one day I just couldn’t. I started searching for help and I saw LionHeart. I liked LionHeart because I could attend sessions on my own, I didn’t need my wife to be there. At first, it was difficult, I was trying to open up but something was stopping me. That’s where my coach finally got into me and we talked about my personal challenges, not just marriage. The coach literally opened my eyes, that to heal my marriage, I needed to heal myself. After a few sessions about my issues, I finally was able to concentrate on my marriage. I learned techniques for communicating and understanding Jill’s point of view. I never thought that it was possible to have such a great marriage as I do now. I still know that's far from perfect but it’s already perfect to me. Thank you coach Linda and the LionHeart team for the help.

Oregon, Bend
Carolina’s story
A marriage vow is that we should stay together for bad and good times. I felt that was a bad time, but divorce was not an option for me. We've been together for 18 years, and we have 2 kids. After our second child's birth, my husband stopped going to church with us. He said he needed to work more to make sure he could take care of our family. So he started to spend less and less time at home. I was very busy taking care of two kids, and I didn't even notice what happened. Over time, we became less and less connected. WE HAD A BIG ARGUMENT when I found out about his affair, and he moved out… I lost my hope. I didn't know what to do. I didn't know what to say to my family or friends. I went to church and prayed for hours. Later that day, I decided to research if there were other people with the same problem on the internet. So this is how I found out about LionHeart. I hesitated, but then I thought, "maybe this is the help from God I was praying for." I didn't have to wait long for the first results. At first, my husband didn't want to talk with me. Then, my coach showed me how to reconnect. Finally, after three months, he moved back home, and we started to discuss how to save our marriage. I've learned from the coach how to overcome resentments and reconnect. It's been 4 months already since I finished the coaching program and I am still working on my marriage. But I feel that the quality of our relationship is even better than ever before.

Carolina S.,
Boulder, Colorado
Jeremy’s story
I didn't believe it was going to work at the beginning. I knew I couldn't tell Kate that I was into coaching because she thinks it is a waste of money. From what I can say now it was the best money spent in my whole life. We have been married for 22 years, and we became roommates. Eventually it became a nightmare. Every time we spoke, it was a fight. We couldn't find a common language. I felt resentful, angry and disappointed. Just horrible. I was losing my hope we could make it through. I was too shy to talk about this with my friends and family. I think this convinced me to sign up with LionHeart. I could share my worries, troubles, and concerns without being judged and get help and actionable steps from professional coaches on how to bring my marriage back on track. In less than four months, we finally started talking again. We learned to hear and understand each other. It feels that we finally speak one language. Sometimes Kate even reads my mind. For example, when I work from home she brings me tea exactly at the moment when I’m thinking about it. Or we go to bed exactly at the same time without agreement although before she used to watch TV on the first floor till late night. And I can't even describe the relief I feel when things are back where they always should’ve been.

Chicago, Illinois
Robert’s story
When I first started coaching I blamed my wife for everything. I always felt pressure to be “a real man in the house”, but at the same time “a soft but not too soft husband”… It seemed that everybody had perfect marriages but not me and that was my fault. Finally, I just got into marriage coaching because I wanted everybody to see that I was ready to do anything to make this marriage work. The first two sessions I was just blaming my wife and didn’t talk about my marriage or myself at all. Just after the third session, something clicked in me, that I’m in these sessions for MY benefit. My coach Ray led me to that thinking. I opened up, and for the first time in years, I tried to look from my wife's perspective. I understood that I’m far away from a perfect husband. After a couple of months, I was not a victim of my marriage anymore. I was fighting for my marriage and for my wife's love. For the first time in years, she told me that she is grateful to God for our marriage and for me… There’s always a space for improvement but at this moment I have a marriage which I’ve always dreamed of. Thank you so much, coach Ray, that you punched that wall of egoism and ignorance from my vision. Forever grateful - Robert.

Wyoming, Jackson
Andrew’s story
Dear, LionHeart. I rarely believe anything I read on the internet, so I was skeptical when I came across you in a Google search for marital advice. Then I thought, "What have I got to lose?" So I registered... On a call I found out that this was a solo coaching, not a couples one. “How can i save it on my own, that doesn’t work this way, that’s a job for two!” - these were my words to a coach and I hung up. My wife and I went to couples therapy instead for 5 months. What can I say - wasted money, wasted time. Yes, we talked a lot, for hours actually, we spoke out all our resentments from all of the years, discussed childhood traumas that made us who we were and so much more. But guess what? We kept sleeping in different bedrooms and fought every other day. One day it became unbearable and so pointless in my mind. I moved out and was beginning to move on with my life, but something kept drawing me back to my “ex” (that’s how I thought about her at that moment) and our 15-years of marriage. And that’s when I received an email from LionHeart, it was about how coaching techniques can bring a spouse back even if they completely checked out. I considered it as a sign. So I gave it a chance. Where are we now? We reconciled over a year ago after both of us had left our marriage, and we have never been closer. Thank you very much for your support. You took things that should’ve been transparent to me but had been ignored along the road. I'm happy that I gave it a chance and that you gave me the confidence to keep working and believing in myself. Thank you once again!

Kentucky, Lexington
James’s story
Me and my wife have been together for 3 years, and the last year was rough. We had arguments every other day and she said she was ready for divorce. I couldn’t let that happen, I loved that woman dearly. I subscribed to every possible marriage youtube channel and read some books. I was trying all the advice I heard there, some of them really worked and I felt empowered. As you can imagine after all the subscriptions I saw a lot of ads on this subject everywhere. And one day I saw LionHeart offering a free call with a coach. Of course I wanted it. It was a great call and I felt so much support and understanding. But I wasn't ready to enroll into the program. I was acting on my own and I saw some progress so I decided why to pay more, I just need more time for all other marriage advice to work. That was my biggest mistake ever. Thas waiting almost killed my marriage. No matter what I did my wife became more distant and resentful. I came back to LionHeart and started the program. That's when I realized that all these youtube experts and their advice are like bandages on a cancer tumor - somehow feels better but doesn’t help at all. My coach said “Change needs time and consistency”. I needed to learn not just how to have a good marriage but how to keep it that way. After a couple of months, I was feeling that I did some fundamental work on myself and my relationship. After 6 months of coaching, we are happier than ever before. Thank you so much!

Oregon, Ashland
Albert’s story
I came to LionHeart after 5 years of marriage. 2 out of 5 years were almost sexless and I couldn’t understand why my wife doesn’t want to be intimate with me anymore. And when we were intimate it seemed forced. I didn’t know what to do, didn’t know how to revive that romance. It took two years to finally get help for this issue. My wife didn’t want to go to couples therapy. So, I started searching where I could get individual sessions. That’s how I found LionHeart. Coach Venus helped me to understand what kind of issues are in my marriage. She gave me advice and we even created an action plan on how to revive a marriage. And after just a couple of months, my wife became super positive in her non-verbal communication, we were holding hands, kissing like 5 years ago. I could say that it was an emotional change for me because I felt important to my wife once again. Thank you so much for this company and for my coach! You truly have the heart of the lion!

Kansas, Derby
Paul’s story
I always knew that I have trust issues because in my first marriage my wife cheated on me with my close friend. At that time I lost two important people in my life. I couldn’t recover for a long time. My current wife knew all about my past and why sometimes I was overprotective. But after three years of marriage, she said that she had enough and couldn’t handle constant fights. That was surprising to me because she knew my past, she knew that I have trust issues. She thought that I needed to get help if I wanted to continue this marriage. I was extremely mad about it. There was fight after fight until she decided to live with her parents for a while. I was left alone, it was the same feeling as before when my ex-wife cheated. Finally, after weeks of being alone, I started searching for help. I didn’t want to go to therapy and marriage counseling was not fittable in this situation. After some digging, I found LionHeart marriage coaching. LionHeart covered everything that I needed. I enrolled in coaching immediately. It helped tremendously, it helped with my trust issues and I was able to see that I have the most wonderful wife which was dealing with me for so long. I was happier and happier after every session with coach Linda. When my wife moved back, we had an emotional talk, it was an eye-opening experience. I still have some minor trust issues but I have the tools to handle them by not affecting my wife. Thank you so much LionHeart for helping me, without you, I would have lost the love of my life!

Tennesi, Franklin
Jennifer’s story
My husband would’ve been gone for a long time if I hadn't discovered LionHeart. My spouse was unhappy and left at the end of May 2021. He was convinced that he was gone for good and requested a divorce. He didn't love me anymore, and there was nothing I could do about it. I registered in coaching around two weeks after he moved out and started working right away. God used this coaching to bring my partner home! Let me tell you, doing the things I learned was not always simple, but if you get out of your own way and apply what you learned, you will have the marriage of your dreams!

Jennifer L.,
Iowa, Cheriton
Move from feeling alone & abandonment to close and connected. Be the next one.

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Sunil was working for MNC and earning reasonably good salary. Both the parties were convinced and agreed for the marriage. Hence they got married and Maya moved
Case Study #1: Michael & Amy. AdobeStock_61435545 ... They felt stressed and didn't feel as if their marriage was helping them deal with it.
Case Study G1 – Save my marriage. By Khalid Iqbal – Founder Rahmaa Institute. FORMAT. Read the case study with your group, discuss and identify all the
"My bride and I have grown together, and that's good, to be in a mutual growth process." As for his picture of an "ideal marriage" before he got married: "I
Learning how to resolve conflict in marriage is a critical skill to achieve a happy and stable relationship. My purpose in this article is to give you an
Success Factors: This is an unusual case for a couple in crises to come to counselling and so dramatically turn their relationship around. The reason the couple
Some of them will be success stories, and some of them not. ... they were able to learn to communicate with one another, expressing their needs and becoming
A Case Study in Southwestern Ontario (Canada) ... previous studies (e. g. the age at which marriage is undertaken) and this ... good husband.
They do not want to give up on their marriage, and have heard that mediation can be effective in working through the practical problems they
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