If you’re ready to eliminate nagging from your relationship, then this book is for you! Today only, get this incredibly useful guide for only $2.99. Regularly priced at $4.99. Read on your PC, Mac, smart phone, tablet or Kindle device.
How many times does your wife pester you in a day? Or, how often do you hear your husband telling you to “stop being such a nag”? Nagging is recognized as a form of interpersonal communication and considered a form of persistent persuasion. It is known to involve two people: the target and the persuader. The act of nagging has proven itself to be an ineffective method of communication in familial relationships. Acting as both a major cause of stress and a potential ender of marriages, nagging is a habit that women should throw out the window. Nagging pushes people away and creates resentment; it disrupts the natural flow of communication, making home life incredibly difficult. If you’re ready to stop nagging (or stop being nagged at), then let’s get started!
Here Is A Preview Of What You'll Learn...
To Those Who Nag
To the Spouse of a Nagger
Reasons for Nagging
When the Kids Are Involved
The Ways that Women Nag
Signs that You’ve Become a Nag
Effective Ways to Improve Communication
Much, much more!
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In the introduction this book says that household responsibilities should be 50/50 and that in most cases where there are issues in a relationship both parties typically share the blame. But in the body of the argument most of the blame is laid at the feet of the nagger going so far as to say that nagging leads your partner to ignore you, never acknowledging the fact that in many cases people nag because they were ignored from the beginning.
I'm not saying that nagging is always justified, but placing almost all the blame for nagging at the nagger feet is not going to help a couple solve the nagging problem. Some of the advice given in the book, like learning effective communication and listening techniques is good, but the emphasis is still placed on the nagger needing to make the bulk of the changes. It really isn't until the conclusion that the book briefly mentions that the nagged partner should do things differently as well.
This book does not really provide much useful information for ending a nagging habit.
This book talks about the way that nagging can hurt the relationship. Nagging puts a block up in the relationship and creates more of a parent-child dynamic. Nagging is a way for a person who feels ignored to exert power.
Most of the book talks about the harm nagging creates in a relationship. I think that there should have been several chapters with ways that the person being nagged could change their ways. This was omitted from the book.
I had to push through to keep reading this book because it reminded me of the kind of sage advice I would get from an inebriated lunk head at a bar who was perpetually single. Generalizations, condescending phrases..... and here and there some common sense good advice. You'd be better off talking to a neighbor/ colleague/ friend.