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 Location:  Home » Books » Marriage » The Marriage Benefit: The Surprising Rewards of Staying TogetherOctober 12, 2008  
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The Marriage Benefit: The Surprising Rewards of Staying Together
The Marriage Benefit: The Surprising Rewards of Staying Together
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List Price: $23.99
Buy New: $12.25
You Save: $11.74 (49%)
Buy New/Used from $11.45

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars(based on 3 reviews)
Sales Rank: 90624
Category: Book

Author: Mark O'connell
Publisher: Springboard Press
Studio: Springboard Press
Manufacturer: Springboard Press
Label: Springboard Press
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 224
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.5 x 1

ISBN: 0446581119
Dewey Decimal Number: 646.78
EAN: 9780446581110
ASIN: 0446581119

Publication Date: July 21, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Baby boomers' expectations for their marriages are often unrealistic. When their relationship comes up short on romance and sex, but seems long on disagreements and strife, many boomers choose to leave.

THE MARRIAGE BENEFIT is less a book about how to make our relationships better than it is about how our relationships can make us better if we just work on our expectations and improve communications. Harvard Medical School clinical instructor and psychotherapist O'Connell offers a peek behind the door of a marriage therapist, where readers can see that their problems are not unique.

Through wonderfully revealing anecdotes of couples with problems many of us face: long-held bitterness, diminished sexuality, the scars of infidelity, and the search for authentic meaning, O'Connell shows how by respecting each other's individuality, looking for "real" sex, and learning how to play with each other again, we can reap the benefits of the long-term emotional investment we've made.



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A New Take on an old Institution   September 25, 2008
  2 out of 3 found this review helpful

At a time when divorce seems to be a popular option to solving marriage difficulties, along comes this crazy shrink with the audacious notion that people might consider investing in their marriage, that significant personal growth can be accomplished through long lasting and committed relationships, and, well, you get the idea. You know what they say. Shrinks are the craziest of all.

Ok. I have to be honest. I was prepared to be preached to...and I was expecting to dislike this book. Instead, I loved it.

First, I respect and share the author's point view that "We live in a culture that promises us Teflon-smooth lives lived with a minimum of hardship and a maximum of gratification." Of course things never go this way and when the inevitable happens who do we blame? "Everyone is a possible target, but perhaps the closest and easiest bull's-eye can be found stitched onto the backs of our intimate partners." And all this, of course, creates a major obstacle to both personal and relationship growth. So the author provides us with some cogent insight on coping with this pervasive characteristic of our somewhat decadent culture.

Second, he has provided his insight not by preaching or lecturing but by artfully allowing the reader to experience (eavesdrop on?) the challenges and traumas of his (fictional) patients. He used a similar approach in his other book, The Good Father, but I felt the technique was even more effective this time around. The "characters," fictional couples that I presume are an amalgamation of his own experience, are all grappling with some form of marital challenge that is directly related to the point of that chapter. The characters are arresting and vivid. I particularly liked the couple he uses to set up his chapter entitled "Have Real Sex," who complain that, "there's a big party going on out there, and we didn't get invited," as they try to justify the seemingly new sexual landscape (is it any different than the "free love" 70's?) with their respect for marital fidelity. He includes a broad array of vignettes, and most readers are sure to find some of themselves in many of them.

Third, I like his central message-that our relationships can and will change us for the better if we're willing to take the risk, and that he provides a concise roadmap to help us get there.

Finally, I like his tone of voice. It is real, direct, even blunt and effective in delivering the message that this work is not easy. "Change and growth demand that we let go of our most reliable solutions(which often means giving up our habits and addictions), and that we tolerate the very fears, feelings and injuries that we most want to avoid."
And there is the hope of this book that if we do so, "if we agree not to retreat into our familiar safety zones, we can, together, reverse our natural tendency to get smaller as we get older."

The words are well chosen. They have that deep resonance that comes when someone is telling you the hard truth.

This book is not for everybody...just those who are married or in a relationship.





5 out of 5 stars clinical excellence and compelling   August 4, 2008
  2 out of 3 found this review helpful

this is a fine book and a good read. the author is clinically savvy and writes beautifully. Not only does he make a compelling case for the ripening of a relationship and the accompanying relational and erotic unfolding, but he also introduces reality into that most complex of phenomena--marriage


5 out of 5 stars A must-read for marrieds   July 22, 2008
  24 out of 24 found this review helpful

I loved this book. One of my favorite pieces of advice is "celebrate your differences." To me, this was a real mind opener: you don't have to turn him/her into a clone of yourself; differences are okay and even enriching; improving a bad pattern is more a matter of modeling something better than trying to change your partner. Another great recommendation is "have real sex"--messy, funny, human sex that's a piece of the conversation rather than some specialized performance or ritual. O'Connell's stories of people's most intimate moments are a great antidote to the airbrushed images we see all the time, where everybody's young and a sexual athlete. The idea that we can grow older and still be on an adventure, still play and learn and discover new things, all inside our long-term marriages, is happy news for baby boomers. And we get great stories of real people in their 40s, 50s, 60s, involved in real struggles, who find real solutions and joy while staying together. This book is a must-read for anyone working on the most important relationship they will ever have.


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