Connect2 Marriage Counseling

Category: Power

  • Today is Yesterday’s Tomorrow

    Aside from being questionably deeply philosophical, there are practical considerations for couples in this statement. “I’ll work on our marriage tomorrow.” Unfortunately for many couples, they wait six years – yes, six years – before getting help. That is definitely enough time for rose-colored glasses to become clear and then brown (you do know what…

  • “If You Don’t Know, You Know: No”

    I read this quote recently (and don’t remember where; sorry, author), and it hit a nerve with me. How hard is it to say “No”? Pretty difficult for some of us, especially in certain situations. Overly easy for others. It also may be difficult to have “No” be a complete sentence. We may feel we…

  • “The Pure and Simple Truth is Rarely Pure and Never Simple.” Oscar Wilde

    What’s the truth of a couple? It is never simple. And there are always multiple truths. That’s why the movie, “He Said, She Said” is so funny to us. We grow up in our own family, with our family’s truths; then we develop our personal truths. Next, we try to blend these with our mate,…

  • Beware Difficult Topic: Death of a Child

    For some reason, a lot of the books I’ve recently been picking to read on my Kindle end up being about or including the death of a child. Go ahead, and click away now if you want – it is every parent’s worst nightmare. It also is an important part of my work where couples…

  • You Change!

    “This relationship is a mess, and I want you to change.” Now look in the mirror and repeat the above statement. Ouch! No matter how much we wish we had control over her behaviors, actions, and feelings, we don’t. We can not change him. It’s really annoying, isn’t it? Because if s/he would just do…

  • “What Are You Doing that is Keeping Love at Bay?”

    I read this question by Marianne Williamson (she’s the one who wrote the quote often attributed to Nelson Mandela about letting our light shine in the world), and she means it in a kind and growth-oriented way (not in a self-blaming way). She says she knows you know the answer. And people say to her,…

  • Fidelity, Infidelity, Loyalty, Luck

    I just read “Vow,” by Wendy Plump, in which she writes about her own and her x-husband’s infidelity; the benefits and the costs she found. To have a marriage of fidelity, we have to employ loyalty, to stay out of potentially dangerous situations, to keep putting more into our marriage, to keep the windows and…

  • Zip It!

    If you are divorced, never say anything bad about your children’s other parent. In fact, don’t even refer to him or her as “Your father” or “Your mother.” You are the ones that chose to have children with each other. Mom referred to my dad as “S**t-head” most of my childhood. How can that possibly…

  • Our Own Quirks

    My teenager said recently that he wants a girlfriend who is smart, funny, and okay with her own quirks. How many of us are okay with our quirks? At what age did this happen? Has it happened yet? Our quirks are part of what make us unique and lovable. We all have genetic dispositions, but…

  • Walter Mitty: Secret Life

    Despite the mixed reviews, Walter Mitty gives us a view of self that is trying to win the woman, change his own life, and consider his self-image. Whether or not we jump off a helicopter or go to Iceland will not be the determining factor in gaining a romantic relationship. How we feel about ourselves…