Save My Marriage Today Review - Rekindle The Flame



No one said that marriage is going to be easy, it’s only normal to have problems and differences in your married life; all we need is a little effort. It sounds ideal to calmly sit down and talk about these differences, but the truth is, that never happens. Save my marriage today applies to both young and old couples, regardless of what the current situation of your marriage might be or for how long you have been married. There are tools and techniques available in this book which can help you to restore that broken relationship.

These days it has become too common to see divorce happening almost everywhere. It seems as though it has become some kind of trend, especially after seeing those celebrities who get divorced with a few months of marriage. But they are celebrities, when it comes to a normal couple it is quite a difficult situation to face for both husband and the wife. Usually we get married with an idea that our better half will be with us for entire lifetime. Even when they know that things are not working out, thinking of divorce is not a fun option to think about.

Andrew Rusbatch and Amy Waterman’s save my marriage today is a complete guide on how to revive your broken relationship or if your marriage is on the brink of divorce. Although their book might target people close to getting a divorce, it applies also to the people who are happily married. The book covers different challenges that are faced by married couples in their daily lives. Just to name a few of the challenges are like stress that comes after having a baby, problems raised due financial difficulties and what if someone has been unfaithful.

The author Amy Waterman is a professional writer specializing in relationship guidance and marriage counseling. She has great skills on advising couples on how to re-establish those broken bonds and start communicating in order to save their marriage. Along with author Andrew Rusbatch, they have come up with the excellent program called save my marriage today. It actually includes three guides to make sure you get quick results.

Rather than tackling it superficially this guide gets you to get to the core of the issues that cause such a situation. Extra-marital affairs are one of the top most reasons that are very common these days. This program has a four step formula that will help you tackle a cheating spouse and start building a stronger relationship. Save my marriage today also has a system that deals with two common emotions that you might be holding back because of which your spouse decided to go in somebody else’s arms.

There are many more issues that can be taken care of with help of this program. There is something for everybody to learn in this guide. The techniques that you will come across in this program are quite thought provoking and have been proven to have saved many couple from getting divorced in the past. In addition to save my marriage today you will be receiving other bonuses too. Just to mention a few of them are personal email consultation with one the members of save my marriage today team so that they can give you advice which is specific to your situation, “Stress: The silent killer – a comprehensive guide to wellness and inner peace”, “Seven ways to live life to the max”, “How to be happy”, “How to cheat-proof your relationship”

All of this comes with a money back guarantee. So if you seriously want to revive that broken relationship of yours, don’t wait until the divorce just go ahead and order save my marriage today.


How to save a marriage


Are you trying to find a way to rekindle your marriage? This article provide several tips on how to save your marriage. Please read on :)

Save The Marriage Rule 3: Love Follows Action

by Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

It is an old story, retold several times a year in Hollywood, many times in books. Two people meet, fall in love, and feel the pitter-patter of their heartbeats forever. They always have that love-sick look in their eyes, even when they are apart. That is proof that they are the right people for each other.

Or at least Hollywood --and novels-- would have us believe it!

And that one myth is more destructive than almost any other about love and marriage in our culture.

Myth. That doesn't mean false. Just that it does not represent fact.

The myth is that the feeling of love should always be there. If the relationship is right and true, we should always have those "mushy-gushy" feelings in our stomachs n-- according to this cultural myth. We should always be perpetually attracted to our spouse.

Here is the truth: the feeling of love, of being "in love" ebbs and flows through the course of a marriage lifetime. Sometimes, the feeling is overwhelming. Other times, it is, well, underwhelming. Sometimes it is entirely absent.

That does NOT mean the wrong two people got together. It does NOT mean the marriage is doomed for failure. It does NOT mean there is no future path.

Think about that term, "madly in love." "Madness" is the same as "crazy" -- "crazy in love" being another expression. And those endorphin/hormonal/emotional rushes that come at the beginning of any relationship really are just that: craziness. In fact, fMRI scans, showing the brain activity, would show the same overactiveness in the brain of an infatuated couple as is seen in those that are insane.

In fact, the same pleasure points in the brain that are hit by morphine and other drugs are also stimulated during this "in love" phase. Indeed, we are addicted to love -- until our drug gets taken from us!

But let's be honest. Thank goodness that state equilizes and normalizes! Otherwise, little would be done in this world by couples. The single-mindedness of that early stage preempts much useful from happening.

At some time, life does have to resume.

Which is point 1 -- that feeling of "crazy in love" is not sustainable. It is highly pleasurable, but not sustainable. It is wonderful when it is present, but not sustainable.

That stage is about infatuation. It may move to love, but is really infatuation.

But point 2 is that doesn't mean romance of a relationship is gone forever. Only that there is a shift underway which is widely misunderstood. And when something is misunderstood, we usually mess things up by taking wrong actions.

We naturally assume something is wrong, and set out to fix it. But sometimes, a change in feelings is not wrong. Just a change.

So, point 3 is that the feeling of being in love is not independent of acting in loving ways. In fact, that is part of what creates the feeling. Not the other way around. We do not act in loving ways because we are "in love." We are "in love" because we act in loving ways.

Think about it for a moment: isn't that what happened in the beginning? You feel some pull toward someone else. You are attracted to them, "infatuated," you might say. So, you do loving things. The other person is feeling the same way, and is acting in loving ways right back.

There is a back-and-forth interplay of receiving the love, and then acting lovingly. It snowballs.

As that builds, infatuation fuels the love from not only being attracted to someone but getting to know them. Then, as we are getting to know them, we fall in love. The combination of infatuation and deep connection.

Here is where the story can go in one of two ways.

First is the road that destroys a relationship. Life begins to creep in. Perhaps those little idiosyncracies begin to drive you a bit crazy. Perhaps the schedule doesn't prioritize the relationship (or should I say the couple does not prioritize the relationship).

At some point, one -- and then both people, stop acting in loving ways. They are wanting the love to be shown toward them, but don't take the time to show it back.

The built-up warm feelings begin to cool. The reserve of feelings is eventually tapped out.

Then, one or both begin to feel unloved.

Feel unloved, and without making a conscious decision to do otherwise, you will stop acting lovingly.

The exact process that led you to fall "in love" is mirrored in the process to feeling disconnection and then disdain. The road up is mirrored by the road down.

There is another path. Road two is a bit different. The couple realizes that to maintain a connection, they must prioritize around maintaining the connection. In order to feel loved, one must be loving.

And most important, there is a realization that the feeling of being "in love" is always (not sometimes, but ALWAYS) fueled by acting lovingly.

As has been said before, "love" is a verb. "I love someone" is really "I will act lovingly toward someone," at its best.

So why do approximately 50% of the married population follow road 1?

I have come to believe that much of the reason is lack of understanding. We have been raised on a constant diet of the romantic feeling of love. We have not taken in the "feel love as a by-product of acting in loving ways" approach.

When the feeling is missing, we make the natural assumption that something is wrong. We believe we must have either done something wrong or have found the wrong person.

Let me pause just for a moment and tell you that there are times when the wrong two people do get together. Sometimes, there are some very deep and clear moral divisions. For example, one believes that an open marriage is fine, while the other believes in monogamy. Or one person believes that criminal activity is acceptable, but the other believes in truth and honesty.

In other words, the "wrong people" are usually wrong for each other because of different moral codes and beliefs. Not because they don't share enough common interests/have different backgrounds/respond differently to events/etc.

But too often, two people with too much in common and lots of shared history, one day realize they do not feel "in love," and begin to believe that they have made the wrong decision.

And they take apart what could be a wonderful, loving marriage. Mostly because they simply misunderstand what it takes.

Back to our two paths. Let's assume that the couple on road 2 keeps on keeping their relationship as a priority. They treat each other with respect, and act lovingly. They can continue on that path for a lifetime together.

But more likely for you being on this site, you are not on road 2, but on the first road. This road is full of people stuck, people feeling hurt, rejected, and hopeless. Couples on this road follow a path to less helpful and more destructive patterns.

The more unloved we feel, the less loving we become, left to our own devices. Spin that through a couple of cycles, and the relationship can feel hopeless, the couple helpless to stop the process.

But here is the amazing thing: you can CHOOSE to act lovingly at any moment in time. You can make a conscious decision to stop acting in "less than loving," if not downright destructive ways, at any time.

In his book, Success Principles, Jack Canfield makes the observation that there is a great equation that can help us all: E + R = O

The equation says that Event + Response = Outcome. We often forget the "R," our response, is in our control.

Society often makes us feel that Event = Outcome. When something happens to us, it creates the outcome.

What Jack is telling us is this: we ALWAYS have a choice in how we will respond to any Event. Fact is, there is always a response. Sometimes we pretend that there is no other possible response. But there is.

And choosing to "not respond" is indeed, responding.

One of my favorite authors, Victor Frankl, states that "Everything can be taken from a man or a woman but one thing: the last of human freedoms to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own way." He continues that "Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom."

Powerful words from a man that survived the worst that a Nazi concentration camp could throw at him.

How much less to choose to act lovingly toward our spouse, regardless of what comes our way -- regardless of how our spouse chooses to treat us.

Remember, your spouse is acting in a way that reflects what he/she believes is true about YOUR actions. What if both of you are acting in "less-than-loving" ways, justifying it because of the lack of love on the part of the spouse? Always pointing the finger toward the other person allows us to miss our own place of response.

That feeling of love becomes strangled by the lack of acting lovingly.

So now it becomes a choice. You can ALWAYS choose to act lovingly. Make that choice, starting NOW! Your response is, well, how you choose to respond.
Ready to save your marriage? Visit us now at http://www.SaveTheMarriage.com
Article Source: EzineArticles.com

Hopefully this article can help you to save your marriage. Please do not give up on your marriage. Thanks