...To Save Your Marriage
Married for 22 years, John and Terry have been struggling in their marriage for the last five. Very focused on trying to make his business successful, John works long hours and is often not home in the evening. As the kids grew up Terry felt like she wasn’t needed as much and John wasn’t there to give her support. Terry began to look for more in her life.
This is a
typical story that plays out in many marriages before divorce occurs. At the point of crisis, the decision to get
divorced, many couples make a final attempt to save the marriage by entering
into marital counseling or therapy. The success rates of these interventions
are low and in fact might even make things worse, according to Sam Margulies PhD, author of Divorce for Grownups
“Each
year, hundreds of thousands of couples go into counseling in an effort to save
their troubled relationships, but does it really work” asks another article posted by The Hypnosis Motivation Institute. It references
research indicating that 25 percent of couples are worse off two years after
they stop therapy, and 38 percent divorce after four years.
5 Reasons Counseling or Therapy is ineffective
1. Couples enter into counseling about 6 years
after they start having problems, which is too late. Often by the time they enter into counseling
or therapy one of the partners is already on the way out and is no longer
committed to making the relationship work.
When domestic violence is involved and the
offending partner does not take responsibility for their actions there is very
little the other partner can do other than look after themselves. Counseling
may be sought to find the strength to leave.
3 The intervention often involves gaining new
insights about the marriage and the other partner as well as learning new
skills to work through difficult situations. Couples usually quit practicing
the new skills learned and go back to treating each other the way they were
before counseling. Often underlying emotional insecurities in both
partners are not being resolved. Neither are sexual and intimacy issues resolved.
5 Types of Intervention
- Behavioral Marital Therapy teaches spouses to be kinder to each other.
- Insight-oriented Marital Therapy works on defense mechanisms and power struggles in a relationship.
- Integrative Behavioral Couples Therapy focuses on learning to accept and accommodate the needs of your spouse.
- Emotionally Focused Therapy emphasizes emotions and their impact on the marital relationship.
- Differentiation uses sexual and intimacy counseling to unveil a couple’s emotional insecurities that affect their relationship, intimacy and other areas of their lives.
It is no surprise that Emotionally
Focused Therapy and Differentiation are more successful methods of marriage
counseling. Both methods focus on
emotions, which when triggered are more powerful than thinking. The first three
methodologies are based on changing our thinking.
Could a new technique make counseling
and therapy even more effective? Yes
Imagine having a technique you could
use to let go of the underlying emotional energy which causes the majority of
your marital problems. Imagine being
able to let go of this energy by working with it while conflict it is
occurring!
It does not require a lot of talking,
if any. You don’t have to understand where the energy comes from or your
underlying family conditioning. All you have to do is learn how to feel it in a
particular way that brings it to resolution, and it takes less than 4
hours.
All the other methodologies have
value and their value can be substantially increased when we are able to let go
of our emotional insecurities and pain permanently. Emotional Hot Button Removal Techniques can
do this for you.
4 Recommendations
for Effective Counseling or Therapy
- Get support early on when you are having problems in your relationship, before your emotional connection dies.
- Decide if you are really committed to having a great marriage with your partner. If you are not committed counseling won’t save your marriage. Choose divorce counseling instead, and be clear on your motives.
- Learn the Emotional Hot Button Removal Techniques: they support and increase the effectiveness of other counseling methods..
- Find out what methodology your counselor or therapist uses in their sessions. Emotion- based counseling has the best success rate for marriages.
www.LivingInVision.com
Lynne@LivingInVision.com
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