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Feeling Good Together: The Secret to Making Troubled Relationships Work PDF

251 Pages·2008·2.89 MB·English
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Also by David D. Burns, MD: Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy Intimate Connections The Feeling Good Handbook Ten Days to Self-Esteem Ten Days to Self-Esteem: The Leader's Manual When Panic Attacks The ideas and techniques in this book are not intended as a substitute for consultation or treatment with a qualified mental health professional. The names and identities of the people in this book have been disguised extensively, and any resemblance to any person, living or dead, is purely coincidental. Acknowledgments Introduction Part One: Why Can't We All Just Get Along? Chapter 1 What the Experts Say Chapter 2 The Dark Side of Human Nature Chapter 3 Why We Secretly Love to Hate Chapter 4 Three Ideas That Can Change Your Life Part Two: Diagnosing Your Relationship Chapter 5 How Good Is Your Relationship? The Relationship Satisfaction Test Chapter 6 What Do You REALLY Want? Chapter 7 The Price of Intimacy Chapter 8 The Relationship Journal Chapter 9 Good Communication vs. Bad Communication Chapter 10 How We Control Other People Chapter 11 Three Troubled Couples Part Three: How to Develop Loving Relationships with the People You Care About Chapter 12 The Five Secrets of Effective Communication Chapter 13 The Disarming Technique Chapter 14 Thought and Feeling Empathy Chapter 15 Inquiry: “Did I Get That Right?” Chapter 16 “I Feel” Statements Chapter 17 Stroking: “I— It” vs. “I—Thou” Relationships Chapter 18 Putting It All Together: Solutions to Common Relationship Problems Part Four: Making the Five Secrets Work for You Chapter 19 Mastering the Five Secrets Chapter 20 Using the Five Secrets in Real Time: The Intimacy Exercise Chapter 21 Intimacy Training for Couples: The One-Minute Drill Part Five: Common Traps—and How to Avoid Them Chapter 22 “Help! The Five Secrets Didn't Work!” Chapter 23 Helping and Problem Solving Chapter 24 Hiding Your Head in the Sand: Conflict Phobia and Anger Phobia Chapter 25 Apologizing: “Can't I Just Say, ‘I'm Sorry’?” Chapter 26 Submissiveness: “I Must Please You” Chapter 27 Resistance Revisited: “Why Should I Have to Do All the Work?” Part Six: Advanced Techniques Chapter 28 Changing the Focus: Is There an Elephant in the Room? Chapter 29 Positive Reframing: Opening the Door to Intimacy— and Success Chapter 30 Multiple-Choice Empathy: How to Talk to Someone Who Refuses to Talk to You Appendix: Your Intimacy Toolkit I would like to thank my daughter, Signe Burns, who was my editor in chief for this book. Signe's contributions were brilliant and extensive. Working with my daughter on this project has been absolutely wonderful! Several other editors have also helped me tremendously along the way, including Amy Hertz, Marc Haeringer, and Sarah Manges. I am deeply indebted to all of them. Finally, I would like to thank my editor at Broadway Books, Rebecca Cole. Wow! Your contributions were awesome! Troubled relationships hurt. Most of us base our feelings of self-worth, at least in part, on our relationships with other people. It's no fun to argue or fight with someone you care about. Even a feud with someone you don't care about can eat away at you and rob you of energy and joy. If you're not getting along with someone, I've got some good news for you: I can show you how to develop a far more rewarding relationship with that person. It makes no difference whether the person you've been battling is your spouse, sibling, parent, neighbor, or friend, or even a complete stranger. No matter who it is, I can show you how to transform feelings of frustration and resentment into warmth and trust, and it can happen much faster than you think. In fact, sometimes it only takes a few minutes. However, it will require some hard work on your part, and you may have to look at some things about yourself that you didn't want to see. The path to intimacy is nearly always painful. If you can muster up some courage and humility, and you're willing to roll up your sleeves and do the work, I can show you something truly amazing— something that will change your life. David D. Burns, MD Adjunct Clinical Professor Emeritus, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.