Through meaningful examples, Betty Carter's Love Honor and Negotiate demonstrates how to tailor marriages to fit the pressures of the real world.
Family therapist Betty Carter's cutting-edge, common-sense approach to helping marriages flourish is based on the premise that couples today want to be equals, but the realities of the workplace force them into traditional roles, especially after they have children.
I read a lot of self help books, but I haven't read a lot of self help books on how to make one's marriage work. The authors are Betty Carter, who has been a therapist for decades, and Joan Peters, who made it readable.
One of the points driven home by this book is that people get their blueprint as to what kind of a husband or wife to be based on their parents. This seems obvious, but when you really get your head around the idea, it's revelatory. Men find themselves emulating their fathers, whether their fathers wanted to or not, and women decide (or are told) what kind of a wife to be based on how their mothers reacted.
The book is fifteen years old, and it does feel a bit dated at parts. Carter bases a lot of her idea on normal couples on boomer couples, and compares them to her own marriage. She has stories from her clinical practice of couples who came to her for counselling, and the men, to me, feel like old men. They act like old men. Is it because men have changed more in the past ten or twenty years than women have? Women are still trying to be supermoms, but I think younger men aren't as threatened by the idea of being co-parents as the example men in this book are. It's odd to me to have her speculate as to what kind of parents the Gen Xers are going to be, when so many Millenials are procreating already.
Carter has a distinctively feminist slant. One gets the impression, after reading this book, that the only couplings that aren't doomed to a non-stop struggle and likely failure are lesbian couples. A position she states and reiterates firmly and repeatedly is that women absolutely must retain autonomy in a marriage, and that whoever has the gold makes the rules. That is, a woman who lets herself become financially dependent on a man is setting herself and her marriage up for failure. I'm not sure about that. It would be wonderful if everyone got flex time and part time and Swedish-style family planning, but the fact is that "traditional" marriage is traditional because, for all the flaws, they work at some level.
It's an interesting book because it talks a lot about important issues that we tend to ignore, like power and dominance and the detrimental effect they have on what should be a democratic relationship. It's a depressing book because while it delves into the myriad problems that mixed-gender couples have, it doesn't discuss how great it can all be when everything works. Also, while it started out swiftly, in the end she lapsed into a lecture on her ideas for how society must change, which I didn't enjoy.
It's a useful book for any married person or single person who might get married, but because of its slants, it shouldn't be the only book you read.
Excellent, though a bit theoretical at times for my needs right now. (I was hoping for more "These tactics are what I've seen work; try them!). Nonetheless, very insightful; I recommend it to anyone contemplating marriage, separation, divorce, or remarriage.
A book about negotiating and renegotiating your marriage contract - how things change over time, how you can change with the changing times, and traps to avoid.