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Marriage & Relationship
Advice
Universal Laws for
Relationships
The
Law of Forgiveness -
A successful relationship
requires forgiveness. The
act of forgiving can release
both of you from the pain of
the offense, and allow the
relationship to grow on from
there.
The
Law of Empathy -
Empathy does not mean that
you agree with how another
person views the world, nor
does it mean that you see
the world in the same way.
Empathy does mean the unique
skill of being able to see
the world through the eyes
of the other person.
The
Law of Automatic -
The late columnist Sydney
Harris said: "Almost no one
is foolish enough to imagine
that they automatically
deserve great success in any
field of activity; yet
almost everyone believes
they automatically deserve
success in marriage." I
remember thinking that since
I have this license that
says I'm a marriage and
family therapist, I knew how
to "do marriage." Boy, was I
wrong.
The
Law of Resources -
I've heard so many of my
older clients say some
version of this: "I wish we
had the same resource
available when we got
married that are available
now." So don't take
your current resources for
granted. Read a book, go to
a seminar, listen to a tape,
see a marriage therapist.
Use your resources.
The
Law of Coaching -
Great teams have great
coaches. Find a coach for
your relationship. A coach
can be a professional
marriage coach, a mentor
couple, or a couple you know
that has a relationship that
you admire.
The
Law of Conflict - As
I've said before, conflict
in marriage is inevitable.
It's how, and if, you handle
the conflict that makes the
difference.
The
Law of Resolution -
Successful conflict
resolution can be achieved
only when you put the
relationship over the
conflict and the need to be
right.
The
Law of Service - So
many times, we go into
marriage thinking about
what's in it for me. If you
really want a radically good
marriage, commit to serving
or outserving your partner.
The
Law of Differences -
You may have noticed by now
that your spouse looks
different than you. You also
may have noticed that they
think, feel, and perceive
the world differently than
you. The important thing is
to understand, appreciate,
and work with the
differences.
The
Law of Vision - There
is a proverb that says
"without a vision, the
people perish." The same can
be said about many couples.
Most people go into marriage
and just sort of make it up
as they go along. What kind
of relationship do you want?
What kind of couple do you
want to be? How do we want
to handle conflict, money,
planning for the future,
etc? Asking these questions,
and many others, will get
you started on your
"relationship vision."
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