Passionate Marriage: Keeping Love and Intimacy Alive in Committed Relationships
by David SchnarchSign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 225)
Read in January, 1998
recommends it for:
anyone willing to self-confront in service of become their best self.
I read this book at a time of painful difficulty - would the much-cherished marriage I'd been in many years actually come to an end (unthinkable) or would we, or I, or him, find a way to get to the bottom of what "went wrong" as we then thought, and from there, reinvent?
That was ten years ago. Schnarch wholly shifted my paradigm, not just on relationship but of everything. For starters, pain and difficulty don't mean something "went wrong" but, rather, went right in the ...more
That was ten years ago. Schnarch wholly shifted my paradigm, not just on relationship but of everything. For starters, pain and difficulty don't mean something "went wrong" but, rather, went right in the ...more
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recommends it for: My parents
Read in April, 2008
recommended to Kyria by:
Matthewrecommends it for: My parents
This book is for sad, stunted old people who can't have sex. However, I enjoyed chapters 1, 2, and 4, which explains why your parent's loveless, codependent relationship sucked.
Inexplicably, the writer sees hope in these awful marriages. Then again, of course he would, seeing as how his livelihood depends on people believing that their marriages can be saved and then paying him. I was tempted to jump through the covers of this book and tell "Bill and Joan" to just break up alread...more
Inexplicably, the writer sees hope in these awful marriages. Then again, of course he would, seeing as how his livelihood depends on people believing that their marriages can be saved and then paying him. I was tempted to jump through the covers of this book and tell "Bill and Joan" to just break up alread...more
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non-fiction
Early in his career, Passionate Marriage author David Snarch found it odd that sex therapy and marital therapy were two entirely separate disciplines. He spent the next several decades refining his theory that what happens in the bedroom can be an important window into the dynamics of the greater marriage itself.
Though ostensibly about sex, Passionate Marriage is really about the process of individuation. Learning how to be an individual and a partner at the same time is no easy task for m...more
Though ostensibly about sex, Passionate Marriage is really about the process of individuation. Learning how to be an individual and a partner at the same time is no easy task for m...more
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If you can briefly put on hold all of your important feelings about heteropatriarchy and the disgusting insidious institution of marriage and buy a book cover to hide the worst title in the world while your read this book on the subway, there is some good stuff in here. I especially like this one diagram that I am always drawing for friends in relationship crisis. Sometimes I fantasize about writing a radical trans/queer relationship self-help book that is a combination of this book, Against Lo...more
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Read in August, 2008
Differentiation, self-validation. I randomly picked up this book and B&N. Then flip through it. It talks frankly. I was shock to find the author's differentiations between sex, love making, and f*ing. This greatly impressed as most book of this nature doesn't talk honestly about the subject. At the same time, I also picked up 'Seven Levels of Intimacy'. After reading some of the Goodreads reviews, I'm convinced that I should read this book before any other self-help books on relations...more
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marriage-family
Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
married couples who want each other's intimacy
"Passionate Marriage: Keeping Love and Intimacy Alive in Committed Relationships" by David Schnarch is filled with stories of David Schnarch's marriage counseling couples. He had some great terms to learn (which I'll probably forget the terms but I hope the concepts stick with practice), such as "differentiation"- meaning , self-validating your convictions and desires and not being inhibited by presuppositions of your spouse's reactions or by waiting for your spouse to appro...more
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Read in January, 2005
recommends it for:
anyone in a relationship even with themselves
It maybe hard to take my opinion seriously coming from two last places in the marriage olympics, but I really can't say enough good things about Schnarch's academic, methodical and sympathetic take on intimacy, sexual and relationship issues.
I learned more about how to take care of myself and my own issues than any other self-help type book, and I am a very cynical yet sentimental individual. Schnarch goes into agonizing detail of emotionally bound and f'ed up relationship- agonizing because ...more
I learned more about how to take care of myself and my own issues than any other self-help type book, and I am a very cynical yet sentimental individual. Schnarch goes into agonizing detail of emotionally bound and f'ed up relationship- agonizing because ...more
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Read in January, 2004
recommends it for:
Couples--married or not
If you skip past the lame case studies and dialogues and get into the meat of this book, it has a lot of incredibly beneficial things to say about how to have a healthy relationship with anyone. I hate that the title is about marriage because I think it would be beneficial for all couples and for individuals to read before they get into an intimate relationship.
I was lucky enough to read this soon after I got married and it gave me an excellent framework for viewing this relationship and its...more
I was lucky enough to read this soon after I got married and it gave me an excellent framework for viewing this relationship and its...more
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Read in January, 2004
Although this book is almost as weighty as a textbook, I HIGHLY recommend it! It is the first NEW point of view on marriage and relationships that I'd read for a very long time. It is not really about sex--at least not for its own sake--but looks at sex as the "crucible" in which a lot of emotional issues are worked out.
It is a book that I think everyone, if they were willing to read it, would get a lot of insight from. It's interesting to me that so few of the people I've given...more
It is a book that I think everyone, if they were willing to read it, would get a lot of insight from. It's interesting to me that so few of the people I've given...more
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recommended to P2p by:
Everyone!
recommends it for: married or committed partners and those who want to be so
recommends it for: married or committed partners and those who want to be so
Fascinating insights. Dr Snarch is marital and sex therapist - elegantly combinging those disciplines to show the connection between what happens in and out of the bedroom.
Part of his philosophical bent is that 1: No one is ready to get married until they've been married for a while - and 2: The purpose of marriage is to shake up our inner hurts and insecurities so we can face them and grow. Shadow work on a grand scale.
I love the concepts. I find his jargon a bit difficult to follow - ...more
Part of his philosophical bent is that 1: No one is ready to get married until they've been married for a while - and 2: The purpose of marriage is to shake up our inner hurts and insecurities so we can face them and grow. Shadow work on a grand scale.
I love the concepts. I find his jargon a bit difficult to follow - ...more
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informative,
self-help
Read in July, 1997
I read this years and years ago. I was part of a book club that read self-help type books and discussed them. I believe this book should be read before other self-help books on relationships as it just is such a clear concise book on intimate committed relationships. There are great terms such as differentiation. It talks about self-validating your desires and not being inhibited by seeking approval from your spouse or "guessing" your spouse's reactions. It is a book I would like to...more
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One of David's academic coursework books. It's explicit, but written academically, straightforwardly, and professionally. If you can get past some of the shock value, it's a stupendous book with amazing insights, teaching points, and value. It's a slow read...I have to put it down and stop to process it every few pages. But I can feel my mind twisting around new concepts...I love the feeling of new understanding. The book makes me want to be more whole, and also lets me feel that I have the powe...more
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Read in January, 2006
recommends it for:
those in long-term relationships who's sex life is flagging (or has in the past)
This book was kinda hard to read because, well, that kinda stuff is *private* in my world, eh? However Schnartch delves into sex and the negotiation it's really about - as well as his great concept of differentiation - that really impressed me. It was a great book, despite a small handful of the Dr.'s own sexist references and outdated concepts.
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Read in June, 2008
Instant classic.
For me, this book brings to light what has lay under the patterns of my intimate partnerships. I'm only a few chapters into the book and I'm already greatly benefiting from the teaching and perspective. Besides being good information, it is really well written. I don't consider many books to be pageturners, but this one is for me.
For me, this book brings to light what has lay under the patterns of my intimate partnerships. I'm only a few chapters into the book and I'm already greatly benefiting from the teaching and perspective. Besides being good information, it is really well written. I don't consider many books to be pageturners, but this one is for me.
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Read in July, 2007
This book offers some useful insight into a number of really negative dynamics that commonly develop in marriages. I found that it helped me to understand myself and some of the counterproductive ways I have gone about trying to get certain things out of my marriage. This idea of seeking differentiation is a really useful framework.
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psychotherapy
Read in September, 2007
recommended to Becky by:
Chico West
I wouldn't attempt this if I were single. And don't let the clinical aspect of this book wear you out. An excellent read for the professional working with married couples and for the married couple whose marriage is growing tired. Bonus: the sex parts on sex will keep you interested - prudes will be nervous!
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Read in January, 2007
recommends it for:
all married folk.
Written by a clinical psychologist and sex therapist, this guy has some insight into what it takes to hang on to yourself in relationship while also meeting your partner where they are. Kevin and I are working through this one together, slowly. It's good on sex, it's better on coming to know yourself.
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Read in January, 2007
This is genious. Has had a huge influence on me. I refer back to this book often. What it says about marriage can be translated into any relationship, with family members, friends, coworkers. It's about taking the care of yourself to be the most effective you can be in relationships.
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Probably the best thing I've read so far on sex and marriage. Schnarch argues that you can best understand how couples are doing by how they relate sexually. Challenges common idea that we should focus on "other-validated intimacy" and encourages learning "self-validated intimacy".
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This is the best book on marriage I have read, and because of my schooling I have had to read way too many. The idea of differentiation is life changing and very challenging for me, and it puts most relationships in perspective based off of this one issue.
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