Do I Have to Give Up Me to Be Loved by You? (Second Edition)
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Consumer Rating: 
By: Jordan Paul and Margaret Paul
Format: Paperback
From: Hazelden
Pub. Date: January 2002
Product Details:
Catalog: Book
Release Date: 2002-02-15
Media: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 254
Ean: 9781568387963
Isbn: 1568387962
ABOUT THE BOOK
Arguing with your spouse about the checkbook? The in-laws? Kids' schedules? Couples think they fight about money, family issues, and time. But what are these conflicts really about? Family therapists Jordan Paul and Margaret Paul reveal how couple discord is often rooted in self-protection. Here, in their best-selling book, they help couples work through fears and false beliefs that block expression of loving feelings. The result? A freer, more joyful, and profoundly intimate relationship.
"I often find that when I return to this book I uncover something that I've forgotten, and this allows me to open up and become softer with my parner.
this book is still relevant.
"
~ Written on 2008-09-15
"This book speaks to the co-dependants of the world beautifully. It is an easy read and it makes sense to anyone. I would highly recommend it. Also, if you like this subject check out Pea Meadly Book Facing Co-Dependancy."
~ Written on 2007-12-08
"Great book. I am still reading and learning! Quick delivery and arrived in great shape!"
~ Written on 2006-03-02
"There are three of you in a marriage. YOU, ME and US. All three need to be happy. This book can get you there. It saved our marriage."
~ Written on 2004-04-02
"For me this book is one of the most profound and important books I have ever read about relationships and communication. Although it is written as a book about marital relationships, it has implications for every kind of relationship, and not only intimate or dyadic ones. And, although it is written as a pop psychology book, I think it makes a real contribution to the social-scientific understanding of relationships and communication -- that is, it stands up well as a general model of communication and relationship. I think it is a great book and would be of great value not only to those trying to solve relationship problems but to those wanting to understand the ways in which self and relationship are intertwined in general. It illuminates all of the areas of one's life in which one communicates with others and, as another reader said, can be as valuable for understanding past relationships as for dealing with present ones."
~ Written on 2002-02-06