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Getting the Love You Want

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Getting the Love You Want

A Guide for Couples

Owl Books,

15 min read
10 take-aways
Audio & text

What's inside?

Feeling loved? This guide will help you and your partner find support and fulfillment in the future by healing the past.

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Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Applicable

Recommendation

Before counselor Harville Hendrix, Ph.D. teaches you how to improve your relationship, he asks you to think about why you were attracted to your partner in the first place. The answer, he explains, is that you were looking for a mate who possesses the same basic qualities as your parents. Why? Because people subconsciously seek relationships with those who will exorcise their childhood pain. Unfortunately, most people tend to reopen – as opposed to healing – these wounds in their adult liaisons, leading to the “power struggle” that ensues in many relationships. Hendrix and his wife, Dr. Helen Lakelly Hunt, say that the way out of this destructive cycle is to practice the tenants of “Imago Relationship Therapy,” which they created. Their therapeutic approach includes making a true, lifelong commitment, treating each other in a loving manner, learning how to communicate constructively and eliminating negativity from your relationship. You may well find some benefits in the Imago approach even if you don’t fully buy Hendrix’s basic parent-seeking premise. The authors have trained some 2,000 therapists to use this approach, although Part III offers solid exercises you can do yourself. If you are seeking a relationship self-help book that discusses how to avoid getting hurt, how to deepen your communication and how to build a long-term connection, getAbstract recommends this bestseller.

Summary

Falling in Love

It’s the age-old question. Why do you fall in love with one person and not someone else? What is that magic something that attracts you just to that special someone? In theory, you could fall in love with multitudes of people, yet only a handful of people ignite that deep connection. It turns out that everyone seeks a particular set of positive and negative qualities in a mate.

To understand this more clearly, you need a rudimentary understanding of how the brain functions. The brain stem is responsible for “reproduction, self-preservation and vital functions such as the circulation of blood, breathing and sleeping.” The other section of the “old brain” is the limbic system, which generates emotions. The old brain does not grasp the concept of linear time; everything affects it in the here and now. The “new brain,” the cerebral cortex, allows you to reason, make decisions, organize information and plan for the future. Information flows continuously between the old and new brain. The old brain has six primary responses to another person: “nurture,” “be nurtured by,” “have sex with,” “run away from,” “submit to” and “attack.”

As you look for a mate...

About the Author

Bestselling author Harville Hendrix, Ph.D., co-created Imago Relationship Therapy with his wife, Helen Lakelly Hunt, Ph.D. Hendrix, a clinical pastoral counselor, also wrote Keeping the Love You Find: A Personal Guide. He and Hunt co-authored Giving the Love that Heals: A Guide for Parents.


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