What is the missing element in many marriages and couple relationships? It’s giving love, not just getting it. Are you interested in learning a positive approach to loving that will benefit your partner, strengthen your relationship — and nourish you? Join Dr. David Sanford, couples therapist and hi…
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Do you have couple plans for the New Year? I don’t mean New Year’s Eve or New Year’s Day or even the bathroom remodeling that you’re going to do in 2010. This episode is going to explore New Year’s Resolutions and how you can go about this unique form of working together to create “Our Resolutions“ that are not made to be broken — but to be kept, because they are the result of honest, open dialogue between you and your partner and represent what you both want in your relationship.
Bring on the LightThe Winter Solstice marks the shortest day of the year. It also marks the return of progressively longer daylight. Christmas, Hanukkah, the Hindu Festival of Lights — these and similar holidays all celebrate light — external and internal light. What could it mean to have a “marriage lived in the light?“ When you call someone you love deeply “the light of my life,” what are you saying? With a nod toward the Solstice, this episode explores the meaning of inner as well as outer light.
How to Have a Good and Loving Holiday“How to get through the holidays“ is a common advice topic around this time of year — as if we were talking about a trip to the dentist. In this episode, we’ll reach for a more positive goal — “how to have a good and loving holiday.” For those who dread the holidays and for those who have an OK time at best, we have some tips for a much better experience this year. Join us, and share your ideas. We welcome your participation.
“‘How you can make your partner lovable‘ doesn’t make sense,” you say. “S/he is either lovable or s/he isn’t. I’ve got nothing to do with it.” Join us for this episode of Every Day Love, as we explore a different point of view. According to this point of view, how you experience your partner depends, among other things, on your selective attention and your tendency to label or not label. It’s an important issue: You can’t love someone whom you experience as unlovable. Want to love your partner? Take responsibility for your experience.
Many people grew up feeling that love was primarily an obligation. You’re supposed to love your parents. You’re supposed to love your brother, even though he torments you. “Love as obligation” people understandably have a tough time with commitment. Love as obligation seldom feel warm and generous either to the giver or to the recipient. This episode introduces an attractive alternative — love that is an expression of inner joy and abundance. Seriously.
What sort of people make a commitment to behave more lovingly to their partner? Who cares about learning how to love with warmth and generosity. Some people do; otherwise, many more marriages would fail than already do. In our self-centered culture, the people who actively love their partner stand out. This episode of Every Day Love takes a look at who those people might be and what may have motivated them to make loving a priority in their lives. We welcome your participation in this — and every — episode
Whether we were well-loved or poorly-loved, we all learned about love when we were children. In childhood, we all learned about conditional and unconditional love, acceptance and rejection, affection and coldness, being seen and overlooked — by parents, relatives and others with whom we came in regular contact. On the basis of what we learned, we made decisions about giving and receiving love, pursuing love and staying away from it. Join us, as we talk about our early teachers about love.
What are the different feelings that can go with loving your spouse or partner? In Episode No. 9, Dr. Sanford and his wife, Joyce Wilson-Sanford explore some of the loving-partner feelings that they have experienced. Join us. Share the feelings of love that you have experienced.
You could say, “I love everybody.” But when it comes to loving specific individuals, like your spouse, or your father-in-law, isn’t it true that you have to know someone to love her or him? In this episode, we explore the relationship between love and knowing. In what ways can you love your partner, and how can knowing your partner more deeply (or more broadly) actually help you love that person better?