The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work

The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work by John Gottman and Nan Silver is one of the best selling books on how you can make your marriage work.
It has received a 5 out of 5 star rating at Amazon and is also one of the favourite books out readers recommend.
Gottman, the director of the Gottman Institute, has found out through studying several hundreds of couples in his so called "love lab" that it only takes around five minutes to predict - with a well over 90% accuracy which couples will eventually divorce. He shares the four not-so-obvious signs of a troubled relationship that he looks for, using sometimes amusing passages from his sessions with married couples. (One standout is Rory, the pediatrician who didn't know the name of the family dog because he spent so much time at work.)
If you want to make your marriage work consider the '7 principles to make marriage work'.
Click here to see the full description at Amazon.
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"Packed with questionnaires and exercises whose effectiveness has been proven in Dr. Gottman's workshops, The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work is the definitive guide for anyone who wants their relationship to attain its highest potential."
See some of the comments:
..."A very reasonable as well as scientific approach to marriage. Many marriage-oriented books offer logical short-term band-aids (e.g., focusing on perceived Mars/Venus gender differences, communicating better, smoothing over conflicts) that make for a provocative read and/or admirable goals, but by and large fail in the long-run to resuscitate shaky marriages. Gottman creates a path for marital success via theories and exercises with an established track record for success.".....
..."The book also gave me a good sense of the problems that are encountered in happy marriages. For example, about 60% of the conflicts that happily married couples have are unresolvable (perpetual). This fact alone would have helped my first marriage a lot considering all the good will that we burned up trying to solve problems that were not solvable."...
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