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We are all going to fight in our relationships, but whether we fight fair is another story. Avoid these eight phrases and you'll be one step closer to a happier, healthier relationship.
- February 20th, 2008, 06:00 am
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The infamous..."I didn't know what I was doing when I was persuing you. Can't we just be friends?" Didn't know what you were doing? I think you knew exactly what you were doing. You were getting your needs met and I was getting used to meet those needs. I was being driven like a used car, blindsided because I believed you! It's happened so many times now, I just kinda expect it. It's really hard to believe someone in a relationship when you know this is coming. Or better yet, "I want to keep my options open." Well honey, I ain't nobody's option. I was your one and only until you decided you couldn't take the heat. Responsibilty in a relationship is what it's all about. Too many looking for a way out on their way in and not enough serious about really making it work.
- February 20th, 2008, 06:00 am
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The phrase that my boyfriend says that really bothers me is his response to my daily question when he returns from work, "How was your day sweetie", I say? To which he always replys, "loooooong". That's it that is all he says, long, no details, no interesting interactions, nothing. Surely something went on during his day that he could elaborate on. I come home and I have an overload of information to tell him and I never understand why he has nothing?
- February 20th, 2008, 09:50 am
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nicole5 wrote :
The phrase that my boyfriend says that really bothers me is his response to my daily question when he returns from work, "How was your day sweetie", I say? To which he always replys, "loooooong". That's it that is all he says, long, no details, no interesting interactions, nothing. Surely something went on during his day that he could elaborate on. I come home and I have an overload of information to tell him and I never understand why he has nothing?
Nicole5Maybe your boyfriend just needs a minute to get home and relax. Maybe he isn't always ready to quickly talk about his day yet just because you're asking. Men can be like sometimes. Also maybe he needs time to himself before he hears you overload information on him. When in a relationship, both people involved need to attuned in to how their partners act in the relationship. Maybe ifyou wait andlet him volunteer andtell you how his day went before asking, he may be more open to responding. Next time he comes home, try something different, prepare a nice soothing drink for him, coffee hot chocolate whatever, help him relax in other ways, massage his shoulders, then after you do him, sit and let him massage you. Let physical touches and deeds do the talking and you may find that you may get a different response.
- February 20th, 2008, 12:17 pm
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Sarah wrote :
nicole5 wrote :
The phrase that my boyfriend says that really bothers me is his response to my daily question when he returns from work, "How was your day sweetie", I say? To which he always replys, "loooooong". That's it that is all he says, long, no details, no interesting interactions, nothing. Surely something went on during his day that he could elaborate on. I come home and I have an overload of information to tell him and I never understand why he has nothing?
Nicole5Maybe your boyfriend just needs a minute to get home and relax. Maybe he isn't always ready to quickly talk about his day yet just because you're asking. Men can be like sometimes. Also maybe he needs time to himself before he hears you overload information on him. When in a relationship, both people involved need to attuned in to how their partners act in the relationship. Maybe if you wait and let him volunteer and tell you how his day went before asking, he may be more open to responding. Next time he comes home, try something different, prepare a nice soothing drink for him, coffee hot chocolate whatever, help him relax in other ways, massage his shoulders, then after you do him, sit and let him massage you. Let physical touches and deeds do the talking and you may find that you may get a different response.
Wow! I so agree with you Sarah. I'n not married or in any serious relationship with a guy but I do live with a guy. We are room mates. He always needs some time to wind down before he wants to do much talking. Me too for that matter. Mostly we just give each other a little space and before long he and I are non stop talking and laughing about our day. Yah, you are right. Evryone needs a bit of time and not everyone wants to tell all that happened in their day, either.
- February 20th, 2008, 05:26 pm
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I found the best way to deal with someone you really like but who's lacking in sexual ability is to say the following; You know I really enjoyed our last session (or something in particular they did), but I wondered if you've ever tried doing it this way (and describe something you're wanting). Hopefully they take the nudge. If so, make sure you tell them when they've done something you did like, and if they still need more tips try to continue with the same sentence every now and then (offering different suggestions of course), and hopefully in time you'll have the lover you always dreamed about and there won't be embarrassment or hurt feelings along the way. If they don't pick up on the clues and you're out of options, be straight with them in as loving a way as you can. Such as; I love you in so many ways and for so many reasons, but I'm having a problem with us and I hope we can work together to resolve it. I'm not able to reach the highest heights when we make love. I think I can suggest a few things so this won't be a problem, but I don't want you to feel you're a lousy lover because of this. It's hard for me to get to the golden gates with anyone, not just you... Yes you might be fudging a bit to say so, but since ego's can be so badly crushed when it comes to performance I think this is one area where it's okay to fudge a little. If you're partner has a healthy ego and it wouldn't crush them then by all means be straight,
- February 20th, 2008, 06:43 pm
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Another way to get your mate to try something new is to act along with adult movies. Whatever is happening on the screen is recreated live in the room. After a few nights of DVDs of regular stuff, slip one in with the crazy things that really turn you on. Don't be surprised if your mate starts picking ones to rent that are wilder than you thought they would.
- February 20th, 2008, 07:54 pm
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nicole5 wrote :
The phrase that my boyfriend says that really bothers me is his response to my daily question when he returns from work, "How was your day sweetie", I say? To which he always replys, "loooooong". That's it that is all he says, long, no details, no interesting interactions, nothing. Surely something went on during his day that he could elaborate on. I come home and I have an overload of information to tell him and I never understand why he has nothing?
Dear Nicole5 (and the now welcomly familiar voices of Beloved, MystikChik, Sarah), you've got my synapses firing on what happens to be one of my favorite topics -- period -- and certainly within the realm of pychology, sociology, linguistics, women's studies, and relationship studies. If I may be forgiven for dragging over and climbing onto my soapbox, you have come to the right Counselor, as I have my Doctorate in Pop-Psychology. OK, my doctorate is in a similar subject but, as understanding means of relating IS within my field, I finally feel like I have something worthwhile to contribute to these postings. [I'm afraid my health right now is the limiting factor, but, as the first survivor of this level of this disorder (most women kill themselves from the pain at the halfway point), I've learned that my "less than 50% chance of survival" (determined in the 1st year following surgery) is almost wholly dependent on a support group of friends. No desire to dwell on my current illness motivates me; rather, it is people like Beloved, Sarah, and Mystikchik who keep me grounded these days, and I find myself doing much better when I offer the same generosity of time and spirit to help someone who has posted on an eHarmony Discussion Board.

My primary point is that everyone on this site would do well to read, at a minimum, the following books, books that changed mine and others' lives by ramping up our communication skills and levels of understanding, applicable to our relationships in all facets of our lives -- from our significant others to our families to our bosses, colleagues, staff, and clients. Beware, though, of the life-altering ramifications of being fabulous in understanding others and, with the occasional exception, of being an adept communicator: It can be very lonely and frustrating when the person with whom you are attempting to communicate is liks the hypothetical mate of the article, i.e., a person who stubbornly stagnates or who is too busy pulling sword & shield and your past misdemeanors from Pandora's Box to listen and RESPOND (per the article) in a manner that is PROactive (not REACTIVE) and does so with the warmth and respect supposedly inherent in your relationship. [Please forgive the run-on sentences, or clauses, more like it, as I'm writing from my iPhone and can only see the line that I'm tapping out at the time. Perhaps, in many ways, my experience right now is a metaphor for the struggles I've witnessed among and between people who aren't keeping focused on the goal (resolving a speedbump or conflict with a loved one), and, instead of turning their energies and time into proactively resolving the issue (It may be as simple as lowering your ego to hear that your signigicant other is simply asking you to lower the speed at which you are driving) is busy digging his foxhole, throwing grenades, spraying cover fire, and, finally, when cornered, ensuring that any conversation takes on the tone and conversational nature of a hostile deposition. Here are the books that will change your life in greater steps than eHarmony Discussion Boards, enlightening and humanistic as they are.

(1). Title: We Can Work It Out: Making Sense of Marital Conflict.
Authors: Notarius and Markman
Gist: The authors ran a marital clinic in DC and ran a study for ten years tracking couples from engagement through divorce or a happy, long-lasting marriage. The book contains excellent "talking point" suggestions (that my friends and I have used with great success, including the best way I've ever heard of coming out looking mature and the better person with "the never-call-back or disappearing guy"). Although the book is out-of-print, you can get it online. Its exercises are useful for dealing with friends and mates, and the clinicians state that the study allows them to predict with 97 or 99% accuracy whether a couple will suceed, based on the couple's communication patterns alone.
2. Title: You Just Don't Understand: Men and Women in Conversation
Author: Deborah Tannen, Ph.D., Professor of Lingustics at Georgetown Univ.
Gist: Released in paperback in approximately 1990, this book launched her successful series on the differing communication styles, and thereby relating styles, of men and women, based upon information derived from her socio-linguistic studies of conversational devices used by men and women as based and reinforced culturally by our socialization. Rife with anecdotes, the slim volume is an easy and fascinating read, is the perfect companion to any book on the Myers Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), and, most importantly, it does not require that you don a loincloth and accept behavior associated with cavemen.

3. Title: The Dance of Intimacy (or any of the Dance of ...books)
Author: Harriet Goldher-Lerner, Ph.D., reknowned therapist in counseling couples, families, and individuals. Borders Books held events at their bookstores nationwide last year in honor of the 25th Anniversary of her first book, "The Dance of Anger," 25 years from its 1st printing and over 25 million copies sold. Her seminal book,The Dance of Anger, urges readers to take a close look at the sources of their anger, not to channel anger into the more socially accepted form of depression (for women, that is), and to use anger as a guidepoint like other emotions to erect or repair boundaries in your life.

These all hold the answer you seek Nicole, but I'll tap out the straight-forward version later. My fingertips give up!
- February 21st, 2008, 01:10 am
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"Do you think you could do something about your breath?" seems to be another relationship-killer. For some reason there are a lot of people who are not in the habit of flossing their teeth regularly. And it's true...you can't change a man. If a person in their 40s is not in the habit of taking care of their teeth, they probably never WILL be. I've had potential relationships "SOUR" because of this more than once.
- February 21st, 2008, 02:57 pm
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Sydney wrote :
(and the now welcomly familiar voices of Beloved, MystikChik, Sarah), you've got my synapses firing on what happens to be one of my favorite topics -- I finally feel like I have something worthwhile to contribute to these postings. [I'm afraid my health right now is the limiting factor, but, as the first survivor of this level of this disorder (most women kill themselves from the pain at the halfway point), I've learned that my "less than 50% chance of survival" Here are the books that will change your life in greater steps than eHarmony Discussion Boards, enlightening and humanistic as they are. (1). Title: We Can Work It Out: Making Sense of Marital Conflict. Authors: Notarius and Markman Gist: The authors ran a marital clinic in DC and ran a study for ten years tracking couples from engagement through divorce or a happy, long-lasting marriage. The book contains excellent "talking point" suggestions (that my friends and I have used with great success, including the best way I've ever heard of coming out looking mature and the better person with "the never-call-back or disappearing guy"). Although the book is out-of-print, you can get it online. Its exercises are useful for dealing with friends and mates, and the clinicians state that the study allows them to predict with 97 or 99% accuracy whether a couple will suceed, based on the couple's communication patterns alone. 2. Title: You Just Don't Understand: Men and Women in Conversation Author: Deborah Tannen, Ph.D., Professor of Lingustics at Georgetown Univ. Gist: Released in paperback in approximately 1990, this book launched her successful series on the differing communication styles, and thereby relating styles, of men and women, based upon information derived from her socio-linguistic studies of conversational devices used by men and women as based and reinforced culturally by our socialization. Rife with anecdotes, the slim volume is an easy and fascinating read, is the perfect companion to any book on the Myers Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), and, most importantly, it does not require that you don a loincloth and accept behavior associated with cavemen. 3. Title: The Dance of Intimacy (or any of the Dance of ...books) Author: Harriet Goldher-Lerner, Ph.D., reknowned therapist in counseling couples, families, and individuals. Borders Books held events at their bookstores nationwide last year in honor of the 25th Anniversary of her first book, "The Dance of Anger," 25 years from its 1st printing and over 25 million copies sold. Her seminal book,The Dance of Anger, urges readers to take a close look at the sources of their anger, not to channel anger into the more socially accepted form of depression (for women, that is), and to use anger as a guidepoint like other emotions to erect or repair boundaries in your life. These all hold the answer you seek Nicole, but I'll tap out the straight-forward version later. My fingertips give up!
Dear Sydney,Thank you for your warm words and I'm sorry to hear of your illness. I hope that in some small way I can be of some support to you as you go through your illness please email me through this site and I will respond. Thank you for the book recommendations. I like reading books of this nature and I find them valuable resources. I think it is amazing that a lot of people will go through life, through relationships and never read a "how to book" on an aspect of their life that will affect them so deeply. These same people will thoroughly read training manuals or any other manual for professional growth and development but fail to think about reading for their own personal growth and development. We aren't born automatically knowing how to "relate" it is something that is taught and sadly for many, taught by people who haven't really learned how to do it themselves. I'm all for readiing books on parenting and other books for self improvement and thanks again for sharing.
- February 21st, 2008, 03:50 pm
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