Monday, May 5, 2008

Trading Places Blog Book tour

As promised, here is our post for participation in our first blog book tour. We posed 3 questions to Drs. Les and Leslie Parrott (Ok we were only supposed to pose one question, but I couldn't decide what to ask so I left it up to them) They very kindly answered all my questions below.

Drs. Les and Leslie Parrott are founders of www.RealRelationships.com and the Center for Relationship Development at Seattle Pacific University. Their bestselling books include Love Talk, Your Time Starved Marriage, and the award-winning Saving Your Marriage Before It Starts. Their work has been featured in the New York Times and USA Today and they have appeared on CNN, Good Morning America, and Oprah.

Q1. In your book Trading Places, you mention that one way to gain a greater empathy toward your partner is to learn more about their family of origin and understand better why they are who they are. Not all couples will have access to 3 days worth of home videos to go through (as did the lucky fellow discussed in your book!). In what other ways would you suggest a couple addresses each other’s upbringing as a way to develop a deeper level of mutual empathy?

A1. Sure. This is a process, rather than an event. It takes place through a variety of means. Leslie and I dated for seven years before we got married and we’ve been married 24 years (as of this June) – and we’re still learning about each other’s families and how they shaped who we are.
Here are some ideas on how you can explore your partner’s early years.

One of the most obvious ways is to simply ask about it. We’re always amazed when we are eating at a coffee shop of something and see a couple at another table sitting through their entire meal in silence. It’s almost as if they’ve run out of things to talk about. Don’t let this happen to you. When you have those moments of down time in the car or over a meal and you don’t know what to talk about, make it a point to ask your spouse about his or her childhood. For example, you can ask:

· What was the best gift you ever received as a child and why?

· What was your proudest moment during your gradeschool years?

· What was your favorite thing to do with your mom? Your dad?

· When did you feel most insecure as a child and why?

· What was a typical Saturday like for you when you were in the fourth grade?

· How do you think your birth order in your family shaped who you are today?

· If you could change one thing about your childhood what would it be and why?

· Did you ever feel really betrayed by someone as a kid growing up? What happened?

These are just a few of the kinds of question you can think of on your own to drill down on your spouse’s early years. In addition, take out some of his or her childhood photos. Look at them with your spouse and ask him or her to describe when it was taken and what was going on and how he or she felt at that time.

We’ve also known couples who have learned tons about each other by visiting the old homes and neighborhoods and schools where each of them grew up. In fact, we’ve done this ourselves and it was a real eye opener. You can’t help but to say things like, “Oh, I hadn’t remembered this until just now, but I was standing right here when …”

Still, the quickest and easiest way to explore each other’s family of origin – with an eye on Trading Places – is to simply ask each other creative questions about those early years.

Q2. What role do you see TV and other media playing in society’s current empathetic state (or lack thereof)? We are interested in your opinion regarding both what is on TV (and other media) and the preoccupation with watching TV.

You know, research actually shows that some people can’t help but empathize with the people they are watching in a TV or film, whether it be a fictional character or a real person. Others watch a program with more objectivity. Either way, we are all learning lessons about relationships from the news stories we see on TV, the sitcoms we watch, and the films we see – for better or worse.

The other night we were watching a portion of the fascinating historical series on John Adams. We loved seeing the relationship he had with his wife Abigail. We loved imagining what we would have been like if we’d been living during that time period, struggling with so many things we take for granted in this age. A program like this can be a great catalyst for empathy when you explore how your spouse would be in a similar setting or time period.

Of course, like most of the country, we are hooked on American Idol. We don’t see every episode, but we see enough to cringe when Simon can’t seem to bite his tongue and blurts out his critique. No matter how right he might be, he rarely says it with much empathy. Of course, Paula can barely utter a sentence without a heavy dose of sympathy, if not empathy – and that doesn’t make for nearly as good television, we must admit, as wondering what Simon will say next.

The bottom line on TV and empathy is that it can be a terrific catalyst for conversation – if a couple takes the time to debrief and process what they’ve viewed together. Be it a good example on the screen or not, a follow up conversation that explores both spouse’s experience of the show is valuable; and can often be a portal to greater empathy for each other.

Q3. Since reading Trading Places, we have not only been consciously practicing more empathy in our marriage, but also practicing more empathy with our children. What are the benefits of overtly teaching empathy to children for their relationships and for society?

What a great benefit for the entire family! This is one of the most important qualities we can model for our kids. As parents of two young boys, ages 5 and 10, we are intentional about not only trying to empathize with them – being their parents – but we work hard to help them empathize with us and with each other. Empathy is at the heart of every healthy family and it doesn’t happen without great intentional efforts from mom and dad.

So we commend you! You have no idea how many ridiculous conflicts can be avoided by seeing the issue from your child’s point of view – and vice versa. In fact, while writing Trading Places, we wondered whether we should write another book called Trading Places With Your Kids. Imagine how this practice would smooth out so many of the wrinkles of adolescence! Maybe, as our kids get older, we just might write it.

We at CouplesQuestions hope you do! Thanks very much for answering our questions so well.

For a peek inside the book go to the Zondervan (the publisher) website. Look for our full book review in this space soon or check out our e-zine article.

The next stop on the blog book tour is A Marriage Therapist's Blog. For a full list of the blogs participating in this tour, follow the link.

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Sunday, May 4, 2008

Blog Book Tour

CouplesQuestions is participating in a something new (at least for us): a Blog Book Tour.

This two week blog book tour is for Dr. Les and Leslie Parrott's upcoming new book titled Trading Places: The Best Move You'll Ever Make In Your Marriage! Follow the link to read an overview of the book. We've read and enjoyed the book and will be posting our review in this space soon.

Tomorrow, we will be the first blog in the book tour to welcome the authors' responses to our questions about the subject matter of the book: practicing empathy in your marriage. Whether you are engaged, newly married or are a seasoned hand at marital bliss, you will benefit from this idea and this book.

The complete schedule for Les & Leslie Parrott’s blog tour for Trading Places can be found here.

Drs. Les and Leslie Parrott are founders of RealRelationships.com and the Center for Relationship Development at Seattle Pacific University. Their bestselling books include Love Talk, Your Time Starved Marriage, and the award-winning Saving Your Marriage Before It Starts.

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Thursday, November 15, 2007

Rules to improve your relationship

Every girl what has ever hung around a grocery store magazine rack, knows there is always a lot of good saucy, sexy stuff in any copy of Cosmopolitan Magazine. Because of that, I can only assume that this publication is sometimes dismissed as "fluff". Yet, this little post is a reminder that terrific information can be found in many and varied places - and this month's Cosmo is no exception to that fact.

In the November issue, there is an article that outlines some really good advice. The “22 best relationship tips ever" covers everything from communication to intimacy to sex...all the kinds of stuff couples planning to get married should be talking about. Six of these rules are outlined in an online article stemming from a discussion between Cosmo Editor in Chief, Kate White, and Dr. Dale Atkins, author of "Sanity Savers: Tips for Women to Lead a Balanced Life".

In brief, their tips for couples for couples to strengthen and improve their relationships include:
  1. Change it up - act out of character, avoid getting into ruts
  2. Talk it out - communicate, really listen and acknowledge each other's feelings
  3. Be tolerant - "everybody has their stuff and you do to", don't focus on the negative
  4. Make time for each other - like the ad says, "Just do it"
  5. Continue the courtship -do the things you used to do when you first met -- take walks, go for coffee, have dates, hold hands
  6. Steer clear - pay attention to what doesn't work and avoid doing it again. Remember your partner can't read your mind, so for this you have to go back to rule number 2.
All really good advice and definitely worth exploring in detail with your partner no matter what stage of your relationship you are in. Whether you are engaged to be married and looking to start your life together off right, or whether you've been hitched for years, every relationship is worth examining and giving attention to. Take the time to do it.

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!


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Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Nothing says lovin' like something from the oven

Ok , I realize that title makes me sound a bit like Paula Deen from the Food Network (not that that is at all a bad thing...and I mean that from my heart to yurs!), but it's true.

Sometimes having someone cook you a lovely meal can be just as wonderful as having them give you a gift...especially after a hard day, or if you have something to celebrate. And making a fabulous meal has gotten even easier with the rising popularity of a really neat little site called Rouxbe.com (pronounced "roo-bee"). You might want to check it out for inspiration.

It's an online video cooking instruction that is nicely shot and clearly presented. It seems like a great resource for Foodies and Wanna-bes that could be accessed from a laptop, right there in your kitchen on your own schedule. Cool!

For a bit of couple-time, why not to head into the kitchen together. If this is a new activity for you as a pair, my suggestion would be to decide who is head chef and who is sous chef BEFORE you being cooking. Trust me, it will work better that way!

Now, if you and your Sweetie are already a couple of fancy pants-es in the kitchen, you can post yourselves in action (keep it clean folks this is a family show) at imcooked.com. There you can share your recipes and your culinary talents with the rest of the world. AND, at imcooked.com you can even watch celebrities showing their stuff in the kitchen. Wanna see Paul McCartney making mashed potatoes? Who doesn't?

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Thursday, July 19, 2007

Life lessons from Harry Potter that apply to marriage

Many a muggle is experiencing the hoopla and the excitement around the new Harry Potter movie and the upcoming release of the final installment of the books. I know I personally can’t wait to get my hands on a copy of of the book and plan to take pleasure in every page.

Because of all the hype, we thought this piece (in part below) from marriage.about.com rather fitting. The only lesson that we would add to their list is preparedness. Just like in life (and when fighting Death Eaters and other evil forces) we believe in the critical importance of preparing for your marriage and setting this most important of relationships up for success. Think of preparing for your marriage (not just your wedding) as an investment in your future together.

Twenty-Two Tips for Your Marriage from Sheri & Bob Stritof,

Although Rowling has her critics, there are many folks who have read her Harry Potter books and judge her to be not only a good story teller, but also a philosopher and moral teacher as she writes about happiness, fear, and one’s journey through life. Here are some lessons the two of you, as a married couple, can learn from Harry Potter and his friends.

1. Truth. Call a spade a spade. Don’t dance around a topic. However, truth in your marriage can be a double edged sword. Truth can be both beautiful and terrible. Truth needs to be used with caution.

2. Choices. According to Dumbledore, the importance of your choices is that they can show who you truly are. Dumbledore often focuses on choices and how they can determine your character over the long term.

3. Unfairness. Life can be unfair. Think about the many times Harry and his friends were treated unfairly, unkindly or disrepectfully by the Dursleys, Snape, Malfoy, Umbridge and others. Don’t give up when tough times hit your marriage. In the face of unfair and faulty decisions, expect better from one another.

The article also goes on to describe what Harry Potter teaches us about…

4. Relationships.
5. Friendships.
6. Goals.

7. Protection.
8. Courage.
9. First Impressions.
10. Second Chances.

…and much more!! It’s a good little article and worth a read. For the rest of the twenty two life lessons check out the whole article at http://marriage.about.com/od/tips/qt/harrypotter.htm

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Friday, July 13, 2007

Wouldn't it be great if you could read each other's minds?

OK, well perhaps not ALL the time, but sometimes the ability to know what our significant other is REALLY thinking would be truly beneficial.

All couples find communication difficult at least some of the time. And at least some of the breakdown is in part because we don’t always say exactly what we mean. Now, there are very “good” reasons for this lack of clarity in a marriage - perhaps you don’t want to hurt the other person’s feelings, or you unclear/undecided on the issue yourself, or you have rushed what you meant to say for some external reason (job, kids, whatever) or maybe you are just covering your own ass. Regardless, we certainly understand that it DOES happen and every person involved in a significant relationship will have to spend a certain amount of time decoding messages taking into account the situation, how well we know the other person, probably other factors as well.

Of course, clear and open communication (getting your message across in a kind way with love at the heart of it) is the ideal and that is what we advocate and strive for. But what about this mind reading thing? Wouldn’t it be great to get some insight with a super power?

We realize that members of each gender do not come from a cookie cutter and sweeping generalizations are not going to apply, however, for women (single, living together, married…) who want to know more about what is going on in the minds of men check out these pages from ivillage.com for responses from a variety of guys to many different questions. The little snippets found on this site will definitely provide an interesting look at what The Boys are really thinking. (Note: some of the questions on this site are related to single women and the topic of dating, but it is still illuminating…)

Now for the fellas (we KNOW you find women rather cryptic sometimes..OK, much of the time!) , I haven’t found a site that is as thorough in its variety of responses (the video on ivillage is cool) but for a quick and informative tutorial check out pleasebemine.com .

These sites won’t help you actually read your sweetie’s mind, but they may provide some insight. One idea might be to check out these sites WITH your partner and discuss them, that way you will get an even deeper understanding of who they are and where they are coming from.

Finally, if all else fails and you REALLY need you know what’s going on inside your your lover’s noggin, HAVE A CONVERSATION. Talk to them openly and approach them with love and understanding. It’s not always easy. In fact sometimes is really rather hard, but do it. You, your partner and your relationship are all worth it.

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Thursday, May 17, 2007

"Dan? Is that you?"...Hey, we're not so dorky after all!

Dan and I always do this thing when we are out in certain public places together. It’s something we think of as “our thing” even though we believe it to be more than a bit geeky. It is an activity we know will truly embarrass our children in the years to come.

Inevitably, when out at Home Depot or a farmer’s market or a museum, we get separated by whatever has peaked our individual interest. When we find each other again some time later, we always pretend that we have suddenly and unexpectedly come across a person we haven’t seen in a while. Sometimes it’s a long lost friend, sometimes it’s an old flame, but we always make a big show and say things like, “Dan? is that you? My God you look fantastic!” or “I knew you’d walk back into my life one day, Gorgeous!”. These greetings are always followed by big hugs and kisses and usually some silly small talk.

I’m not sure why or how we started doing this. It has simply become one of the dorky things we do as a couple. But now I am happy to report that this frivolous activity may be helping to keep romance alive in our relationship.

Psychologist Elizabeth Dunn is an assistant professor at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, BC. She has come up with a theory that my actually help long-term couples re-kindle their romance. According to a report by Stuart Hunter, for the CanWest News Service, Dunn’s theory might be called the “Benjamin Effect”.

Here’s how it all started: Dunn used to have a boyfriend, Benjamin, in whom she noticed a particular behaviour. Some days he would come home sad or grumpy and she would always show him the appropriate sympathy. But then, if they went out for a walk and bumped into an acquaintance, he would perk right up in the presence of the new person. She must have wondered, “Why the heck are you all sullen with me, your GIRLFRIEND, but perfectly happy and cheerful with this person you barely know?”

She took her questions and, along with some colleagues at the university, began her study of hundreds of participants to see if they, too, perked up when faced with someone they didn’t know too well. What did she conclude? According to Hunter’s summation, she concluded that “the best way for couples to rekindle romance is to pretend they are strangers and put their best face forward (called self-presentation process) as if on a first date.”

Dunn stated, “People in this condition ended up feeling happier, enjoying the conversation more than people in the control condition.” She goes on to say, “It’s like scientific evidence for the value of Valentine’s Day.”

The full study will be published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology in the June 4th edition in the impressive title “Misunderstanding the Affective Consequences of Everyday Social Interactions: The Hidden Benefits of Putting One’s Best Face Forward”.

I love it when science makes it OK for my husband and I to be goof-balls.

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Friday, March 23, 2007

Spousal Abuse: a (near) equal opportunity problem

Not a happy topic to be sure, but it IS an important one.

Not surprisingly, abuse in a relationship is a key cause of discord, break up and divorce. In fact, merely having a history of abuse in your family of origin (that is, the family you grew up in) is a key predictor of whether you will eventually divorce (especially for men).

The common wisdom has always been that boys who grow up in abusive families tend to become abusers themselves, while girls who grow up in such families tend to end up abused as adults. It is a sad fact that people normally keep to familiar situations and patterns, even if they are uncomfortable or downright harmful.

That prevailing wisdom may be changing somewhat, though not necessarily for the better. More and more research is showing that women are often the abusers, rather than men. There is a good (if somewhat political) roundup of these findings on the men’s interests blog of the 451 network.

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Thursday, March 8, 2007

Romance on the radio

There were two great little news reports of a romantic (or perhaps quasi-romantic) nature on the CBC Radio’s ‘The Current’ yesterday morning that are really worth checking out in the CBC Radio archives.

(go to http://www.cbc.ca/thecurrent/2007/200703/20070307.html and click on the little listening icon for PART 3…or download it to your ipod thingy)

The first is an interview with Dave Rose who is the Personal Classifieds Editor of the London Review of Books. That personal ad space has become what ‘The Current’ host Anna Maria Tremonti calls a “much-celebrated forum for the forlorn and a compendium of clever come-ons” - even if some of them are totally over the top! Rose’s job is to read through every single (clever, witty, strange, unique, bizarre, erudite) personal ad that eventually finds its way into that publication. He’s put together a book of the best of them entitled They call me Naughty Lola. It is a very entertaining piece and fun to listen to with your sweetie. Anyone who has ever tried online dating, or contemplated a personal ad will relate…and laugh!

The second piece has more of a cultural anthropological bent…but don’t let that turn you off!! It was really interesting! Interviewed was Chris McCollum of Pennsyvania, USA. He wrote his PhD dissertation on how people tell their love stories and what that says about how we understand romance and relationships. Surprising findings! This story may just give you something new to think about the way you tell YOUR love story.

Happy listening, and…

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Monday, February 26, 2007

The Wedding does not lay the groundwork for a lifelong relationship

Tying the knot this year? You might consider reading “One Perfect Day: The Selling of the American Wedding” (Penguin Press) by Rebecca Mead when it comes out in May before you go too crazy-loco with the wedding plans. It is a work that takes a close look at some of “the absurdities inherent in our own behavior” as we plan, orchestrate and execute the North American Wedding.

Be warned though, read this book and you will want to elope, or so says columnist Holly Brubach of the New York Times in her article published yesterday.

Among other interesting points and (rather unflattering) observations, Brubach writes:

“Unmoored from tradition and religion, the wedding has become a vehicle for the couple’s solipsistic fascination with their own image, their urge to mythologize the story of their love.”

And she wonders:

“What prompts couples — women, in particular, since they’re the ones on whom the burden of reply cards and chair covers and seating charts ordinarily falls — to sign up for what several brides characterize as a steady diet of stress? Mead ascribes this willingness, even eagerness, to play along with the most arcane aspects of staging a celebration to couples (again, one imagines, brides in particular) hedging their bets, hoping that a lavish wedding will provide the solid start of a lasting marriage.”

It used to be believed that the longer the brides dress, the greater the chance the couple had at success in their life together. At least that’s what the Bridal magazines in the 50s and 60s told us. Though ridiculous (faulty logic can easily be found by citing numerous examples), it seems much simpler and sweeter somehow than some of the chaos that goes on nowadays. In Mead’s book, the images are even less flattering.

Did you know that for the average (average, mind you!) North American wedding requires 43 vendors? 43! Did you know that the cost of such a wedding is now, on average, well over $27,000? And when did it become all about the bride? When did we become such egomaniacs? Why is it that people are willing to go in to huge debt for their weddings?

Check out Brubach’s article if you haven’t already. And I will definitely be reading Rebecca Mead’s book. I am hoping it will remind people that it is not the wedding that makes the couple, it’s the MARRIAGE that makes the couple!

And the couple that makes the marriage!
Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Sunday, February 18, 2007

Here's a great new blog

The Blog of Love is about a week old. Jade’s focus is “love, romance, fate, destiny and soulmates”.

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Friday, February 2, 2007

SuperBowl Day of Dread

About Marriage has done a good article debunking the link between the Super Bowl and violence against women in America.

To recap, a study — based on anecdotal evidence — showed a slight increase in domestic violence on key dates such as Christmas, Thanksgiving, and the Super Bowl. Hardly surprising that there would be a small increase around what can be stressful, non-routine times.

What the author found interesting was that there seemed to be a correlation between a team winning and its fans being more violent. Not a clear link, but one worth looking at because normally you would think it would be the losing fans who were more likely to get angry and take it out on those around them.

In any case, a news release was issued calling Super Bowl a “day of dread”, media all piled in on the story only to retract it days later, and the damage was done. The myth lives on, muddying the waters around what is a very serious issue in relationships and in society at large.

Now, that is not to say that the Super Bowl is not a “day of dread” for many who just don’t care about football. If you are one of those, Tango Mag has a list of things you can do instead.

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Valentine's dates under $20

Valentines Day is sneaking up on us. So what are you doing for your love?

Our suggestion is a kissing night. Total cost: one bottle of juice or wine. Full details are on John Ince’s article on kissing in our premarital library.

The Bargain Queen has a longer list of Valentines dates under $20. Be sure to check out both posts.

We are not really big fans of the barrage of advertisements that precedes Valentines (or just about any major holiday, for that matter). But we do play a game that works for us.

Heather rates how great/awful the various pieces of jewelry in each ad are. Dan gets an idea of what might work for future presents. It works because there is no pressure to actually ever buy. But the day after we win the lottery…

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Sunday, January 14, 2007

What do men want from women?

It’s provocatively titled, and we’re pleased to have it as our latest addition to the premarital library.

Our contributor this time is Bob Grant, LPC, “The Relationship Doctor”. He has been counseling and coaching clients — mostly women — for sixteen years. He’s also written a book for women based on that experience.

The article is What do Men want from Women, but it could just as well have been entitled What do Women want from Men. Guys, it is about trust and how you earn it.

Bob’s book, by the way, is available for purchase and download at www.relationshipheadquarters.com. We don’t make any money off the sale of the book; it is simply a resource that some of our readers will find helpful.

More on Bob, his blog, and his book in a later post…

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Friday, December 8, 2006

Top Wedding Toast Tips

A few posts ago, we raved about Tom Haibeck’s “The Wedding MC”. Afterwards we got to thinking about what else he might be able to share some advice on.

So we sent him a note and the result is the second article in our budding library: Tom’s Top Ten Toasting Tips.

Both of us have done our share of public speaking in our time and we can tell you, these are good. (We still think it is worthwhile buying his bundle of books though! And, no, we still don’t get paid for promoting them.)

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Tuesday, December 5, 2006

Financial goals for couples

Probably the best path to financial stability and health is the pay-yourself-first strategy.

If you are not familiar with it, here's the short version:

  • Every pay day, you put aside a certain amount for savings before you pay any bills or buy anything whether a necessity or a luxury.
  • The aim is usually to be putting 10% away all the time.

There are two books we'd recommend that spell it out in greater detail and both are easy reads that are well worth the time. The Wealthy Barber is absolutely excellent; The Richest Man in Babylon is justifiably a classic.

But what if you can barely save anything, let alone 10%? How to get started?

Start small. If you can't put away 10% of each pay check, then start putting away 2% or 3%. The amounts might be too small to justify a trip to the bank each time, so put it in a piggy bank or cookie tin. Go and deposit it in the bank when your stash gets big enough to make the effort worthwhile. That way you get to see progress and you get into the habit.

Then... increase the amount once you are used to living on a little less. One couple we met a few years ago had retired with a heck of a nest egg (and a paid off house). They started the simplest way imaginable: every time they got a raise or a bonus, they saved half of it and kept saving that amount. That way they got more to spend to live on each year, but the amount that they were saving went up and up and up over the years.

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Kissing for Couples

It is really rather fitting that the first article in our new library of marriage and premarital resources should be on kissing!

As author John Ince notes, kissing is one of the most intimate and important things a couple does. But the frequency and passion tends to decline as the relationship matures.

Find out how to reignite the passion in John’s article on kissing for couples. You can even take a class, if you happen to be in Vancouver!

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Friday, November 24, 2006

Best Wedding Book ever

"The Wedding MC" is all about how to run a great wedding reception. It would make an excellent gift for any best man who is going to be the Master of Ceremonies at the reception. And, of course, it would be the perfect primer for whoever is going to be your MC, if it isn't the best man.

NO, we don't get paid to recommend this book. We stumbled across it at a wedding show and loved it, is all. It is a gem of a book. (Come to think of it, we should accost author Tom Haibeck and get him to bundle the e-book as part of our CouplesQuestions premarital workbook package.)

Haibeck points out that fully half the cost of the average wedding is for the reception. Being a major event with an average of 186 attendees, it needs planning. But he doesn't lecture you. After his first three pages, he doesn't need to. If you don't find them screamingly funny, you've never been to a wedding. And they are funny because they are so true.

He goes on to give you all the tools, advice and encouragement you need to knock the socks off of all 186 guests and the bride and groom. If you are going to be an MC, or make a speech or make a toast at a wedding get this book!

Among our favourite tips:
  • Look for friendly eyeballs when giving a speech.
Don't know what that means? Go get the book. You won't regret it!

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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Thursday, August 3, 2006

Wedding Readings from Winnie the Pooh?

Why not? Whether you are having a civil or a religious ceremony, choose readings that work for you as a couple.

The following reading from "Now We Are Six" (not "The House at Pooh Corner", as we'd originally written in this blog) was read at our wedding by our dear friend Rosalind and it suited us rather well.

Us Two

Wherever I am, there's always Pooh,
There's always Pooh and Me.
Whatever I do, he wants to do,
"Where are you going to-day?" says Pooh:
"Well, that's very odd 'cos I was too.
Let's go together," says Pooh, says he.
"Let's go together," says Pooh.

"What's twice eleven?" I said to Pooh,
("Twice what?" said Pooh to Me.)
"I think it ought to be twenty-two."
"Just what I think myself says Pooh.
"It wasn't an easy sum to do,
But that's what it is," said Pooh, said he.
"That's what it is," said Pooh.

"Let's look for dragons," I said to Pooh.
"Yes, let's," said Pooh to Me
We crossed the river and found a few -
"Yes, those are dragons all right," said Pooh.
"As soon as I saw their beaks I knew.
That's what they are," said Pooh, said he.
"That's what they are," said Pooh.

"Let's frighten the dragons," I said to Pooh.
"That's right," said Pooh to Me.
"I'm not afraid," I said to Pooh,
And I held his paw and I shouted "Shoo!
Silly old dragons!" - and off they flew.
"I wasn't afraid," said Pooh, said he,
"I'm never afraid with you."

So wherever I am, there's always Pooh,
There's always Pooh and Me.
"What would I do?" I said to Pooh,
"If it wasn't for you," and Pooh said: "True,
It isn't much fun for One, but Two
Can stick together," says Pooh, says he.
"That's how it is," says Pooh.

Happy Couples, Happy Planet!

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