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6 Steps for Women on How to Stop a Divorce

Divorce is like tooth decay: totally preventable for a woman with the right skills and habits.

Unfortunately most women didn’t have good relationship role-models.

We are largely the product of single parents, broken homes or marriages that we wouldn’t wish on our worst enemy — the equivalent of learning oral care from parents with false teeth.

We aren’t born with the skills to foster intimacy, passion and peace anymore than we’re born with a Sonicare and good flossing habits.

Fortunately, any woman can learn intimacy skills and use them to create trust, tenderness and connection.

Here are the six proven intimacy skills your mother never taught you that lead to satisfying, lifelong love:

1. Do at Least Three Things a Day for Your Own Pleasure

There’s a direct correlation between your self-care and your level of tolerance for your husband.

Self-care is a profound act for opening the door to intimacy.

Relationships require patience and compassion, but if you’re tired, frazzled or undernourished, you give yours little chance of thriving. Self-care — focusing on your own pleasure — takes the pressure off your husband to make you happy (he can’t anyway).

Your good mood also signals to him that he can succeed in delighting you, which inspires him to want to do just that.

By treating ourselves well, we also teach other people how to treat us.

Having fun every day is not only critical for a satisfying romance, it’s part of a life well-lived.

2. Relinquish Control of People You Can’t Control

“Helpful” in wife language is controlling in husband language. When you correct your man’s driving or what he wears or does at work, you’re saying he’s not competent.

That unwitting criticism is an attack and pushes intimacy away no matter how well-meaning your comment. Intimacy needs safety and encouragement to thrive, and vanishes with criticism.

Take a step back and trust him to run his own life without any help from you, and watch him take a step forward and start acting like the man you fell in love with.

3. Receive Gifts, Compliments and Help Graciously

Receiving is the opposite of rejecting.

When your husband gives you something that’s not what you had in mind, receive it anyway by saying, “You’re so thoughtful. Thank you.”Deflecting a gift or a compliment is rejecting the giver and the emotional connection you could have had.

When your husband offers to bathe the kids, accept his help graciously no matter how imperfectly he does it. Rejecting a gift, compliment or help greatly reduces the quality of your marriage and your life.

Receive graciously and watch as more gifts start coming your way almost immediately.

4. Respect The Man You Chose

Being respectful will resurrect the man you fell in love with.

You’re too smart to have married a dumb guy, so if he seems dumb now, it’s because you’re focused on his shortcomings.

It’s not that you made a mistake in marrying him, it’s that you’ve been focused on his mistakes since you married him.

A man who feels respected by the woman who knows him best also feels self-respect, which is far more attractive than cowering and hostility.

Lack of respect causes more divorces than cheating does because for men, respect is like oxygen. They need it more than sex.

Respect means that you don’t dismiss, criticize, contradict or try to teach him anything.

Of course he won’t do things the same way you do; for that, you could have just married yourself.

But with your respect, he will once again do the things that amazed and delighted you to begin with — so much so that you married him.

5. Express Gratitude Three Times Daily

Gratitude has magical powers. It turns an ordinary meal into a feast, an average relationship into a lifelong romance and an ordinary husband into your hero.

I used to be reluctant to thank my husband for anything because I thought that I was doing more anyway and it was unfair because he wasn’t thanking me.

I was also afraid he would stop doing the things I thanked him for and consider them optional, but I was wrong.

Today I thank him for washing dishes, replacing light bulbs and working hard at his business.

The more grateful I am for what he does, the more inspired he is to do things I appreciate, which makes me feel cherished and adored.

The same will happen for you when you practice expressing gratitude.

Another bonus: You can’t be grateful and resentful at the same time.

6. Strive to be Vulnerable

Intimacy and vulnerability are directly connected. If you want intimacy, then you’ll need to take the risk of admitting that you’re lonely, embarrassed or hurt.

This is not the same as weakness; it actually requires great strength.

When you’re vulnerable you don’t care about being right, you’re just open and trusting enough to say “I miss you” instead of “you never spend time with me.”

It means you simply say, “ouch!” when he’s insensitive instead of retaliating.

That vulnerability completely changes the way he responds to you.

Vulnerability is not only attractive, it’s the only way to get to that incredible feeling of being loved just the way you are by someone who knows you well.

There’s nothing like the joy of intimacy that results from vulnerability.

It really is worth dropping the burden of being an efficient, overscheduled superwoman to have it.

If your mother didn’t teach you these six skills, maybe she didn’t know them, but that doesn’t mean you’re doomed to have the same outcome in your relationship.

An intimate, passionate, peaceful relationship is not a matter of luck-it’s a matter of skill and good habits, just like maintaining those pearly whites.

By Laura Doyle

Hi! I'm Laura.

New York Times Bestselling Author

I was the perfect wife--until I actually got married. When I tried to tell my husband how to be more romantic, more ambitious, and tidier, he avoided me. I dragged him to marriage counseling and nearly divorced him. I then started talking to women who had what I wanted in their marriages and that’s when I got my miracle. The man who wooed me returned.

I wrote a few books about what I learned and accidentally started a worldwide movement of women who practice The Six Intimacy Skills™ that lead to having amazing, vibrant relationships. The thing I’m most proud of is my playful, passionate relationship with my hilarious husband John–who has been dressing himself since before I was born.

10 replies on “6 Steps for Women on How to Stop a Divorce”

I have been practising the skills sometimes I forget, haventseen much difference, a little which got up my hopes. Then he started talking about the solicitors and who gets what etc, I said I loved him and didn’t want this after 32 years . I told him I miss him and hurt. I apologised for being disrespectful. Still no change. I’m finding the anxiety so hard to cope with. Especially now time is running out. I feel like I’m just waiting for my execution!

Laura, practising the skills, but husband resolved in his mind that the relationship more than likely does not have future as husband and wife. Interestingly, he dropped by and discussed where we were at. He clearly is confused. We had some tears, but ended up chatting away, had some laughs, he stayed for over 2 hours. Used 6 skills.
I felt that he would have stayed longer but was committed to being elsewhere.
What I wanted to ask: Does a man’s response to wife practising 6 skills sneak up on them on a subconscious level? And as I find things very difficult at the moment, what is an average time period for things to turn for the better in a not living together scenario?

Heather, you’re doing great! I’d love to see you get some support. Did you have that discovery call yet? If it’s feeling difficult that’s because it is difficult to keep the faith by yourself. But let’s get you a cheering section and get your marriage back and better than ever! That’s what we’re really good at around here.

Laura, thanks for the comment. Have been concentrating big-time on self care and it really makes a difference in how I feel. I’ve downloaded 60 or so books to my kindle, written a summary of all my books read, bought myself a grown-ups colouring in book, bought some new lipsticks, played some computer games. Feel so much better within myself, even if hubby is having his timeout.
Now just waiting for opportunity to connect with hubby.

Hubby and I are going through rough patch. He is taking a week with at his fathers home, break from work, relationship etc.
How do I practice some of the skills when he’s not around?

Heather, Self-care for sure! I’d say making yourself ridiculously happy is key. If you’re the Girl of Fun and Light, he’s going to be drawn to that even from a distance.

You can also still be respectful, and even vulnerable by letting him know that you miss him, or asking him to advise you on a challenge you’re facing.

Keep the faith–you can draw him back to you. I know it’s scary and painful right now, but now that you have the right information, it will make a BIG difference.

These are fantastic steps to use every day. I can really see the “ouch” as a very effective reply for my husband, way much more then a ranting argument that I am known to do…and accepting compliments/help/gifts graciously – that has always been a struggle for me, especially if its not the idea of perfection I have in mind! Skills number 2 and 6 are the ones I am focusing on first.

You’ll love the results, Danielle. He doesn’t mean to hurt you anyway, and if you respond with vulnerability you really call on him to be tender. Keep me posted! I look forward to hearing your wins.

AMAZING! I have been practicing these skills and I see a difference not only in myself but my marriage as well! Laura Doyle you are wonderful.

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