As a therapist, I read this book with a great deal of interest. On behalf of the many women I see who ask exactly that question! I wanted to see what the book might offer them, and discovered that it offers a tremendous amount.
It is based upon extensive research the authors carried out. It is a self-help book, but not in the usual sense. That is, it does not offer pat answers to this terribly important question.
Rather, as the authors themselves say, “We will share our findings here for what they may contribute to self-awareness and personal growth.”
Through numerous case descriptions and checklists, it provides the readers with what I consider to be an outstanding outline for how to think about the situation they find themselves in. How come they to be in a situation they call love, and yet find themselves so unhappy, hurting so badly? By defining the possibilities so very clearly, the person is then in an outstanding position to understand, and grow beyond the situation. To find a love that FEELS like love. That does not hurt, but rather feels warm and caring and happy.
The aim is for the reader to “stop handicapping [oneself] in these ways, self-understanding and pattern-breaking experiences (which offer different rewards) are required”. Therapy is certainly suggested. But the book alone already offers so very much. Identifying the childhood origins of insecure love, complemented by “case histories case histories of self-discovery and personal growth”, the two together being extremely helpful to people who find themselves in this situation. The book is just so rich with these kinds of case studies.