Ten Secrets to a Successful Marriage Finally Exposed
Here are 10 principles of success I have learned from working with and observing hundreds of couples:
Happiness is not the most important thing. Everyone wants to be happy, but happiness will come and go. Successful couples learn to intentionally do things that will bring happiness back when life pulls it away.
Couples discover the value in just showing up.
When things get tough and couples don't know what to do, they need to
hang in there and be there for their spouse. Time has a way of helping
couples work things out by providing opportunities to reduce stress and
overcome challenges.
If you do what you always do, you will get same result.
Wise couples have learned that you have to approach problems
differently to get different results. Often, minor changes in approach,
attitude and actions make the biggest difference in marriage.
Your attitude does matter. Changing behavior is important, but so is changing attitudes. Bad attitudes often drive bad feelings and actions.
Change your mind, change your marriage.
How couples think and what they believe about their spouse affects how
they perceive the other. What they expect and how they treat their
spouse matters greatly.
The grass is greenest where you water it.
Successful couples have learned to resist the grass is greener myth —
i.e., someone else will make me happy. They have learned to put their
energy into making themselves and their marriage better.
You can change your marriage by changing yourself.
Veteran couples have learned that trying to change their spouse is like
trying to push a rope — almost impossible. Often, the only person we
can change in our marriage is ourselves.
Love is a verb, not just a feeling.
Everyday life wears away the "feel good side of marriage." Feelings,
like happiness, will fluctuate. But, real love is based on a couple's
vows of commitment: "For better or for worse" — when it feels good and
when it doesn't.
Marriage is often about fighting the battle between your ears.
Successful couples have learned to resist holding grudges and bringing
up the past. They remember that they married an imperfect person — and
so did their spouse.
A crisis doesn't mean the marriage is over.
Crises are like storms: loud, scary and dangerous. But to get through a
storm you have to keep driving. A crisis can be a new beginning. It's
out of pain that great people and marriages are produced.
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