I was a little surprised to read the comments people made:
You probably know everything in the book, blah blah
If you would read this book you are probably already conscientious...
Yes. I'm a contentious person, in a great relationship; but I had a lot of a-ha moments reading this. I also started to see how truly rude people are to their partners. I'm pretty sure some of the people taking it for granted that they are doing the stuff in this book are not.
Stop and think for a moment the last time you heard someone make a snide remark about their partner. Something as seemingly common as "Oh that Bob won't get up off the couch once the football season's started! What can you do?". How would I feel if someone said that about me in front of our mutual friends? Crappy. Wouldn't you?
I came from a brutally broken home where people didn't behave civilly. There was a lot of the proverbial "running with scissors". My knee jerk reaction is usually to reach for self help books when I don't know how to proceed. I have recently found these books tired and repetitive. They have, recently, seemed all about proving you are right as opposed to taking responsibility for your actions without drama and histrionics and moving forward (again, without drama) .
It was refreshing to see a marriage book written by a man who was neither Dr. Phil nor Deepak Chopra. I picked it up form the library and was so impressed that I got a copy for myself. I recently finished it.
There aren't any soul-searching conversations that make you want to shoot yourself. No journalling, no crafts, no feng-shui, no parental blaming, no dates with yourself, no finding yourself through volunteering and no throwing things out of the window.
There are simple ideas that you forget as time moves on. Those simple ideas bring immediate results. IMMEDIATE. Not only that, your partner (after the initial shock of *wtf?*) will go along in kind. Once they realize you mean it and there is no anterior motive (actions speak louder than words, after all), you will see profound changes. This isn't going to fix sleeping around, or abuse or anything. This is for those moments when you can't figure out how to proceed. Once you enter middle age and don't have the distraction of children, there aren't a lot of guideposts out there. True, a lot of the guideposts in the book do have a "Duh" factor; however, they are not things our society (and most of those self-help books) promote these days, and you certainly don't see many people practicing them.
I like the book and will keep it. I like the change I see in me for looking at things differently. It's not perfect, but it definitely helps you find a path.