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Save The Marriage Scam

“Why Should I Even Try?” – When Discouragement Hits… Hard
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

It can be so hard to save a marriage.  Discouraging and frustrating.  Why should you even keep trying?  You don't have to.  But don't quit, just because you feel like it.  You want to make a decision, based on a choice.  One that is clear of emotions.  And one that is consistent with your own personal beliefs and stance.Several people have asked me the same thing:  “What if I am not even sure I want to save my marriage?  I am so frustrated and discouraged, I feel like quitting… not even trying.”

It is a great question!

(By the way, if you want to submit a question for me to consider answering on a future podcast, email to [email protected])

Let’s be honest:  it can be a frustrating and discouraging process.  Sometimes, people think I say the process is easy.  But in my book, How To Save Your Marriage In 3 Simple Steps, I use the word, “Simple.”  That is not the same as easy.  Just direct.  Simple.  (Only 3 steps.)

Many people, in a fit of frustration, a moment of anger, give up and walk away… only to regret it just a little further down the road.

Which is why I suggest you think about your decision a bit differently.  I suggest you assess your reasons as part of your plan, and as a touch-point when things are difficult (and they will be).  Because many times, the difficulty comes when people are close to success… they just didn’t know it.

If you are discouraged (or want to avoid being discouraged), listen in on this episode of the podcast, as I explore “Why Even Try???”

RELATED RESOURCES
You Need A Plan
Emotions and Choices
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Grab The Save The Marriage System

“My Therapist Says Divorce!” – Listener Question
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

The therapist announced that the marriage was over and there was no hope. She told the client that she needed to accept it. What happened? Why did it happen? What now?“In our very first session, our therapist told me that we were divorcing and I need to accept it,” Claire wrote.

I invited people to submit questions. And Claire did. (You can, too, by EMAILING HERE.)

Here is what happened:  Claire wanted to save her marriage.  Her husband thought it was over.  Claire convinced him to go to therapy.  But then, near the end of the first session (and as it turns out, the only session), the therapist turned to Claire and announced that the marriage was over and she needed to accept it.

Claire was shocked.  No efforts to work on the relationship. No discussion on what might be possible.  Just a declaration that the marriage was over… not from her husband, but from the therapist!

I only wish this was the first time to have heard pretty much the same story… but I have heard it over and over.  Does a therapist have a right to announce that divorce is inevitable? Should a therapist work on the relationship first?

Let’s talk about 3 dangers that come up for therapy… and what to do about them.

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Can Therapy Help?
The Dangers of Marital Therapy
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CLICK TO EMAIL A QUESTION

 

Don’t Get Pulled Under
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

Don't get pulled under by the marriage crisis.  How to stay afloat and safe when your marriage is in crisis and your spouse is flailing around.Every marriage crisis starts as a crisis of an individual.  As it expands into the marriage, the question is whether you, the spouse, will get pulled under by the crisis.

Have you ever tried to save a drowning person?

This can be kind of like that.  Get too close, and they will drag you under with them.  Their desperation will overcome any sensible decision.  Running purely on terror, they will flail, grab, and pull at anything that is nearby… and anyone.

And when someone is in crisis, it can certainly feel like drowning… even with no water (other than tears).  The desperation is there.  The flailing is there.  And if you aren’t careful, you can get pulled under.

One person in crisis is enough.  Two people multiples the complications and difficulties in recovering the relationship.

Don’t allow yourself to get pulled under.

In this episode of the Save The Marriage Podcast, I discuss 4 rules to keep from getting pulled under.

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Your Spouse Is Not The Enemy
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My Method and Why It Works
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

My method of saving your marriage.  What it is and why it works.When a marriage is in trouble, the first place many people turn to is the internet.  Where most people discover quite a plethora of information.

But what to trust?  What to do?

Remember that even Google says they are a “search engine, not a truth engine.”  In other words, they just give you search results.  Not an evaluation of the results.

So, some people just dive right in, grabbing information on top of information, believing that if it has to do with “saving a marriage,” it must all fit together.

This is patently false.  And it leads to trouble.

Some advice is very manipulative.  Some is simply misguided.  Lots is based on anecdotal evidence — the author somehow saved his or her marriage and thinks it applies across the board (it rarely does).

How do you pick through the advice and information?

I do my best to be transparent on what I teach.  I rely on 3 decades of experience as a coach and therapist, 30 years in my own marriage, and lots of research.

And I will tell you exactly what I teach… along with why I teach it.  Then, you can make your own decision on what path to follow.

Listen to this week’s podcast episode for what I suggest and why I suggest it.

RELATED RESOURCES:
“I Saved My Marriage”
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Surviving Mistakes and Backslides
150 150 Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

How to survive mistakes and backslides in your efforts to save your marriage.It happens.  You are trying to save your marriage and. . . you make a mistake.  You violate your own plan.

And things take a slide backwards.

Maybe you aren’t even sure if it is possible to get back on-track.

Most of the time, the answer is “absolutely.”

This week, I cover how to recover from a mistake, how to stop the backsliding, and how to start moving forward again.

If you violated one of my 5 Things To Avoid Doing, maybe even before you knew about them (and even after you learned about them), you can still recover and start moving forward.

If you decided to eat better. . . then you hit the dessert buffet, what do you do?  Toss in your plan? Or get going on your plan?  Same here.

But let’s talk about how to not just survive the mistakes, but get going again.  Listen below.

Survive Series:
Surviving Separation
Surviving Conflict
Surviving the Golden Hour

RELATED RESOURCES:
You Need A Plan
Reverse Psychology
No Contact
Save The Marriage System