Secrets of Strong Couples: Personal Stories and Couples Communication Skills for Long-Lasting Relationships (The Bulitts) (Relationship Expert, Couple Gift) - Softcover

Bulitt LCSW-C, Julie; Bulitt JD, David

 
9781684812202: Secrets of Strong Couples: Personal Stories and Couples Communication Skills for Long-Lasting Relationships (The Bulitts) (Relationship Expert, Couple Gift)

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Mango Media

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Über die Autorinnen und Autoren

Julie Bulitt is a licensed clinical social worker with more than 25 years of experience working with individuals, couples, and families. Her private practice focuses on family, couples and individual therapy, ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) and Executive Functioning coaching. She has served as a Clinical Supervisor and Early Childhood Mental Health Consultant for the Montgomery County (Maryland) Mental Health Association, an Adoption Therapist for the Center for Support and Education in suburban Washington DC. She currently is an in-house therapist for The Discovery Channel in Silver Spring, Maryland.



David Bulitt is a partner in the Washington DC Metro law firm of Joseph, Greenwald & Laake, PA. For more than a decade, he has been chosen as one of the Washington area’s top divorce lawyers by multiple publications, recognized as one of the “Best Lawyers in America” and a Washington DC Metro “Super Lawyer.” Praised as “the lawyer who epitomizes stability and old fashioned common sense” by Bethesda Magazine, David has a particular interest in families with special needs children as a result of personal experiences in his own family. He is a published author of two fiction novels, multiple articles in legal publications and has appeared as a special guest on several local television shows.



Karen Benjack Hardwick, M.Div., MSW, is a global leadership consultant, coach, and clinically-spiritually trained psychotherapist with master's degrees from both Princeton Theological Seminary and Rutgers. She works with Fortune 1,000 leaders, teams, and entrepreneurs around the world on how to become Connected Leaders.™

A pioneer in the field of Thera-Coaching and Thera-Consulting, Karen blends the science of Self-Discovery and Spirituality into a path that helps leaders awaken, heal, and courageously lead.

Karen is the author of The Connected Leader: 7 Strategies to Empower Your True Self and Inspire Others. She hosts the Saving You a Seat podcast and speaks to many audiences on how the power of connection transforms the leadership landscape and elevates our well-being, engagement, and empowerment.

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Every relationship, every couple has a story to tell.

In some iterations of poker, players get to toss out the cards that they don’t want and replace them with others from the deck. When people in relationships lay their cards on the table, they don’t get replacements. They can either lose―or find a way to win.

The couples who persevere through life’s most difficult trials find a way to play those cards they are dealt―together. They gather their chips and stay at the table and prepare themselves for the next hand.

In The Five Core Conversations for Couples, we took a broad look at the basics of successful relationships―how to identify, manage, and push through the primary quandaries that most couples face at one time or another. In these pages, the digging here is deeper. We tackle issues and mine holes that many couples cannot climb out of or solve and are unable to escape.

Have you ever thought about it? How do they do it? How is it that some relationships not only survive but even thrive after a crisis, while others wither and flame out because of a bad weekend or a seemingly benign disagreement? How did Mary and John’s marriage survive their son’s death? Sam had an affair, yet he and Jennifer seem happier now more than ever. Even though Janice is an alcoholic as well as addicted to pain medication and has been in and out of rehab for several years, she and Joe made it through and are still together. The Thompsons have a transgender teen; Annie was open and understanding, but Jack shut down, got angry, and wouldn’t talk about it. No problem. There they are―holding hands and taking nighttime walks together.

Most of us have heard the term “widow-maker” in reference to a deadly heart attack. A widow-maker can occur when the major descending artery that serves as a pipeline to the heart gets blocked and the heart stops beating. The way for cardiology patients to avoid a widow-maker is to have a bypass procedure to get the blood flowing around the blockage. Working through a traumatic injury to a relationship seems to require the same sense of urgency, the same need to find a way to bypass the issue, fix it, and move on.

The two of us thought a lot about these couples and their relationships. We wondered about all those questions and how it was that some people were able to avoid the relationship widow-maker and successfully navigate that bypass. Then we went out and did what we like to do: We talked to people. We were often saddened by the stories, but at the same time uplifted by their tenacity and courage. There also turned out to be an unexpected consequence of the many hours of conversations―they turned out to be a two-way street. Julie and I got much of what we were looking for―some insight into how these couples made it through, their relationships damaged and listing in some cases, but still afloat. And for those who shared their stories, it was often cathartic, a deep breath released. They felt better after opening up, letting it out, and telling their story.

There is pain in these pages, plenty of it. At the same time though, there is also resilience and determination. There is loyalty and courage. There is love. It is our hope that you will find comfort in these stories and experiences and the strength to push your relationship forward even in the toughest of times.

 
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We talk a lot about our ‘Three C’s to a Successful Relationship’: communication, connection, and consistency. When we did not communicate, our relationship faltered. When we went our own way and ignored what was going on with the other, our relationship was weakened. When we were inconsistent and not available to the other, when we ignored the other’s feelings and opinions, our marriage was in distress. But when we paid more attention, talked more, and connected consistently, we were able to repair some of the damage we had inflicted on ourselves, get closer again, and put ourselves in a better place to move our lives forward.

All of the couples in this book experienced trauma and discord, stretching and fraying of the ties that bind relationships. The similarities that each couple has shown are simple and direct. All of our couples found a way to communicate and connect. A great deal of that was drawn from their faith, their belief in a higher being and a divine plan. These couples ultimately found a middle ground, and...

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