Showing posts with label relationships. Show all posts
Showing posts with label relationships. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Why Mars and Venus Collide – John Gray, Ph.D.

Today we’re talking about one of John Gray’s works (he of “Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus” fame).  It’s not bad.  Not outstanding, but definitely not the worst relationship book I’ve read. 
Hover and Click - you remember the drill
(Oh no!  Not the drill!)
Like everybody else and their mother, I’m in the process of writing a book.  In order to create the best possible product I’ve been reading a lot of self-help relationship books, and it’s ridiculous how boring some of them are.  I mean, they should be really really interesting; you’re trying to fix your relationship – you deserve an interesting book!  However, the majority that I’ve read say what they want to say in the first couple of chapters and then repeat it over and over, with the author using plenty of stories from their time as a therapist/psychiatrist/psychologist/what have you.  The best part is, the reader has no way of knowing if those stories are true.  The author could just be making them up entirely; I have yet to find the interviews listed in the sources.  Dr. Gray does not commit the sin of potentially made-up stories to prove points, but a large portion of this book IS repetition.

I could probably sum up the entire book right now.  Ready?
Men: Your woman needs to be seen, heard and supported.  Don’t interrupt and try to fix her problems when she’s talking, just make “supportive noises” (no, seriously, that’s what it says).
Women: Your man needs time to de-stress after work.  Also, if you want him to do something, tell him in clear and specific terms – men love projects.
Both: Keep yourself happy and fulfilled.  It is your job to make sure you’re happy; it is your partner’s job to make sure you’re happier.  When arguing, make sure you validate what they’re saying and clarify so you don’t misinterpret what they’re saying.

Aaaand…that’s it.  He also promotes his other books/website/diet a lot.  Haha…his diet…It’s all about “oxygenating your cells” and “de-toxifying your cells so they can allow more good hormones in.”  Psuedo Science at its worst.  Want some diet advice?  Eat more veggies, especially the leafy greens.  Eat more fruit.  Eat more whole grains.  Drink more water.  Those four things should make up the majority of your diet.  Done.

In all honesty though, his message is a good one.  From the research I’ve done I’d say his advice is pretty darn sound, and he’s not annoying/pompous/boring, so his book is an easy read.  You’ll even get a few laughs out of the process!  I mean, not on purpose, but still.

See, somewhere in the middle of the book is where he got me laughing.  For one, he is convinced that ALL women have a running point system in their heads, and that women always give themselves points for every tiny thing they do for their husband, and their husbands earn points only for the big things they do.  It’s ridiculous.

Another source of entertainment is what he believes all women want to be happy.  Now, I understand that this is a book about gender differences, but his views are a little antiquated.  My favorite example is from his list “One Hundred Ways a Man Can Raise a Woman’s Oxytocin Levels:” Get a small TV or radio for the kitchen.  His “One Hundred Ways for a Woman to Create Oxytocin on Her Own” is pretty good too, with suggestions such as: cook a meal with a friend and clean up together, ask someone to carry something, participate in a PTA meeting, and learn and practice a new diet plan or cleansing program for better health (oh, you so sneaky Dr. Gray!).  There’s another suggestion in the book (I’m struggling to find what list it’s in) that men should buy their wives fancy guest soaps to make them happy.  Because that’s what would really excite me – The Man coming home with a new guest soap.

So if you’re looking for a relationship-help book with mostly sound advice and a few snigger-worthy moments, this is a good one to read.  It’s definitely not the worst you can do.



Sunday, July 14, 2013

The Pros and Cons of Marriage (from the eyes of a newlywed)

So, sometime last year I ran across a blog giving advice on how to make your marriage as good as possible.  It had some things I agreed with and some things that made me smirk (bring home flowers to your wife weekly?  Please, I’m lucky to get biannually), and then I saw why: the author had been married four months.  Now, I don’t mean to diss on four-month marriages, but…No, I mean to diss.  Baby, you ain’t seen nothin’ yet.

This post is going to be a lot like that for people that have been married longer than I have, but maybe you’ll find it humorous that I’m so naïve about the life I have ahead of me.  The Man and I just passed the two-year mark, so we’ve been married long enough to realize that marriage is work, but we’re still in the newlywed stage.  The following is a list of some of the Pros and Cons of marriage that I’ve discovered (this list also applies just as much to people in long-term committed relationships).

Pro: You’re no longer single! 
You don’t have to worry if someone likes you or not, you don’t have to go on awkward first dates, and you nabbed one of the most attractive people in the world.

Con: You’re no longer single. 
You will start to miss that angsty feeling of not knowing if someone likes you or not.  You’re going to miss awkward first dates, because you were meeting new people all the time.  The most attractive person in the world will start farting in front of you and blaming it on “barking spiders.”

Pro: You’ve got someone helping you pay your bills. 
No longer is it all on your shoulders (or, if you’re a moocher like me, partially on your shoulders and heavily on the shoulders of your parents).  Sure, the cost of living goes up, but when two people are pitching in it just feels easier.

Con: You seem to have more bills than ever, and you sometimes have to pay for someone else’s stuff.  When The Man and I first got married, I had almost $20k saved up.  With school, living in separate states for a while, and the rising price of gas, it was gone in less than a year.  It felt kind of unfair, because if I hadn’t have gotten married I would be sitting pretty right now on a sizeable savings account. 

Pro: You have an awesome and ridiculously handsome/beautiful cheering section rooting for you. 
Life is really hard, and when you live on your own it feels doubly so.  Sure, you can call your mum every day and have her tell you that you’re great, but she birthed you; she better feel that way!  When you’re married you have the opportunity to go home every day to someone who thinks you’re so incredible that they decided to spend the rest of their life with you.  That can be a pretty awesome feeling.  I’m not saying they’re always super excited and happy to see you all the time and you’re so wonderful and everything you do is perfect and oh gosh oh gosh they’re the luckiest person on Earth; I’m saying that when you’re really struggling, they’re there for you.

Con: They know the real you.
I don’t know about you guys, but I have boogers.  And I poop.  And sometimes I lay around all day doing nothing because I am one of the laziest people out there.  Also, I hate washing dishes, and we don’t have a dishwasher.  And The Man sees all of that.  He knows the worst sides of me more than anyone (I mean, he’s seen me without make-up on at least…2 occasions!).  And I get on his nerves sometimes, because living with someone like me is not a cakewalk. 

There are tons of other pros and cons, but due to modern technology people have extremely short attention spans now (myself included) and I don’t want to bore you.

See marriage, like anything else in life, is always going to have good and bad.  It may even have equal amounts of good things and bad things.  The trick is to look qualitatively, not quantitatively.  I have a best friend who has promised to stick with me through hard times and easy times, through wrinkles and fat rolls, through snorting laughs and annoying eating noises.  My future children will have a father who loves them, sets an example for them, and makes sure their needs are provided for.  I have someone who is always pushing me to be a better person, to look at things from a different perspective, to serve more, to love more, and to be more.  And on top of that, he loves to clean!

Sure, maybe I have to be less selfish and of course there will be other people I have chemistry with, but it’s not worth it to me.  Losing what I have and the joy it brings me isn’t worth a year of passion, a nicer apartment, or any of the other things leaving The Man might bring me.


I think we lose track of that in day-to-day life.  We get preoccupied with how monotonous or boring our lives seem, and we forget that it’s really stability and happiness.  In five years when we hit the infamous “seven-year lull,” I hope The Man and I can remember why we’re together, and I hope we fight for this relationship, because it’s a darn good one.