I am not a reader of self help books, but this book came recommended to me as a text that is helpful in the areas of communication with a lover or a spouse and can have a drastic impact in many areas of my relationships beyond what the title suggests. What I find is very funny is that there are not many reviews of this book, likely because of the title and the American puritanical views of such things (or is it airing dirty laundry? or decorum?), but to my friends, family, employers, and anyone else that cares about not-their-relationship, I will be happy to share my colorful opinions about what you have to say about what books you think I should read or what you think I should write if you ever decide to bring it up to me in person.
Regardless, this review is not for them. This review is for the people that want to know if this book helps.
First, some technical details: this book is not nearly as exciting and engaging as the title might make it out to be - it is a workbook on working on your relationship. The book is organized in a relatively interesting way as it is meant to be a passive therapy session - there are chapters for the couple to read together, and some sections for just the partner that feels like everything is fine and some sections for the one that feels like there is a problem. There is a tremendous amount of anecdotal evidence, which is not really evidence, so while the stories are nice and add a human element to the book, they really just made me nod my head and wonder where later on in the book I learn how to fix the problem the person in the anecdote is complaining about. Most of the time it is like a newscast where the meteorologist just tells you to keep watching for an unspecified amount of time to get to the answer (and I don’t think they were all answered) or an advertisement for the book I was already holding.
What this book is mainly about is communication and to stop feeling resentful and do something about it. Communicate, in the present, in the right way. Make an effort. Don’t blame. Work. Once that baseline is achieved, the book explores the various ways that this can happen and what each person’s responsibility is in working through this.
What I found was most valuable and refreshing was this: there is no doubt that this is a major killer of relationships, and that a lack of intimacy can eat away at a relationship slowly, but is as much of a betrayal and as irreparable as infidelity. Furthermore, there are many passages in the book that feel like the anecdotal subject or the author is speaking directly to you, and it is really refreshing to hear it in a productive manner rather than a cynical narrative on the internet or the pestering inner monologue. Everyone has felt like this, so let’s do something about it.
This book needs to be read as a team, though, and everyone needs to be involved with wanting the problems of the relationship to be fixed. As a self-help book, it is definitely a cheaper alternative to going to couples’ sexual therapy, but at the same rate that doesn’t mean everyone needs to be involved. The author of this book clearly understands what she is talking about, and has worked with many couples throughout her career that have repaired or left their toxic relationships. In order for this to work, you need a supportive significant other who is willing to listen to you and work through it, and find a way to implement these strategies and solutions over the long term. Put goals down, set expiration dates, and get everyone on board and committed to making the communication changes, otherwise you’ll continue wandering through the same mire of negativity and missed connections.
The book was good and I look forward to being a better communicator. I am not sure that the way it was written was particularly engaging to me (that meteorologist comment earlier was the biggest pain for me - keep reading and you’ll learn, stay tuned, we can do this in the coming chapters, etc), but the strategies it presented are doable if everyone is on board. What is most surprising is that it is mostly communication and wanting to make a change, however, just like everything else in life.