• Back To The Relationship Repair System
  • How to Rebuild a Broken Relationship – Tony Robbins Relationships
  • How To Solve Relationship Problems | Breakthrough w/ Tony Robbins #2
  • Relationship Advice: The 5 Stages Of Relationships
  • Repair Your Relationship When All Hope Seems Lost – Tony Robbins
  • Tony Robbins – Heal your relationship no matter what
  • Tony Robbins: Habits That Improve Your Relationship ( Tony Robbins Relationship )
  • Why Your Relationship Really Isn’t Working – Tony Robbins
  • Section 1: The 7 Habits of People Who Succeed In Saving Their Relationship
  • Section 2: The 3 Simple Things You Need to Do BEFORE You Attempt to Repair and Restore Your Damaged Relationship
  • Section 3: What To Do When They Want to Break Up…?
  • Section 4: When (and How) to Make Important Relationship Decisions?
  • Section 5: When Is It The Right Time To Break Up?
  • Section 6: The 5 Stages That EVERY Relationship Goes Through (Identify Which Relationship Stage You’re In And How to Fix It)
  • Section 7: How To Overcome The “Power Struggle” Stage In Your Relationship
  • Section 8: 2 “Magic” Words To Instantly Stop ANY Argument
  • Section 9: Three Simple Communication Skills That Instantly Stop Fighting
  • Section 10: The 5 Most Critical Ingredients of an Effective Apology (this is a must-learn!)
  • Section 11: Are You Leaving a Lover Due to Spiritual Laziness? – How to Avoid “Premature Evacuation”
  • Section 13: 10 Marriage Tips Every WIFE Needs to Hear
  • 3 Things I Wish I Knew Before We Got Married
  • Happy couples stay that way because they do these 3 things…. (The 3 Most Essential Relationship Skills You Need to Practice)
  • Section 15: The 4 Critical Listening Skills for Successful Relationships
  • Section 16: The #1 Mistake Most People Make in an Argument
  • Section 17: The 5 Simple Steps To Change Unhealthy Relationship Patterns
  • How To Have An Amazing Relationship
  • How to Recover from an Affair and “Cheat-Proof” Your Marriage
  • Module 18: Q&A: My Husband is Pulling Away… What Can I Do To Spice Up Our Relationship Before He Cheats or Asks for a Divorce?
  • Section 18: What to DEMAND in a Relationship… [The Relationship Bill of Rights]
  • 10 Crucial and Surprising Steps to Build Trust in a Relationship, Part 1
  • Section 20: 7 Keys to a Happy Wife
  • Section 21: 3 Reasons You Should Never Marry for Love
  • Module 22: Can You Use Facebook to Get Your Ex Back? – 7 Do’s and Don’ts for Handling Yourself on Facebook
  • Section 22: How To Apologize – Why “I’m Sorry” Isn’t Enough (And How To Make A Sincere Apology So That You’re Forgiven)
  • Module 23: How Tony Robbins Saves A Marriage (8 Minute Video)
  • How To Get In Touch With Your Feelings – Only 36% of people can do this. Can you?
  • How to Get Your Ex-Boyfriend Back After He’s Moved On . . . . ?
  • How To Rebuild The Trust in a Relationship – 10 Tips to Rebuild the Trust
  • My 10 Second Conflict Cure: How To Melt Your Lover’s Heart in 10 Seconds or Less
  • The True Love Test (for Men) – 10 Questions to Help You Figure Out If She’s REALLY In Love With You
  • The True Love Test (for Women) – 10 Questions to Help You Figure Out If He REALLY Loves You
  • “All We Do Is Fight!” – 3 BIG Mistakes YOU Make When Fighting
  • Section 30: How do you repair a relationship?
  • The Relationship Repair System
    Section 21: 3 Reasons You Should Never Marry for Love

    People who don’t marry for love in our culture are considered unlucky, suspect, manipulative, exploitative, and bad.

    From our perspective, they are either doing something wrong or there is something wrong with them.

    It makes us feel a range of emotions for them — everything from sympathy to contempt, because most of us were taught that love is the only “right” reason to tie the knot.

    But if you really think about it, love is a luxury.

    When you marry for love, it generally means you have all — or at least most — of your other needs met (like food, shelter, warmth, etc).

    That may explain why those with fewer financial resources also have lower marriage rates: If you’re worried about your survival or safety, you’re not going to be focusing on finding the man or woman of your dreams — unless of course this dream person is your ticket out of your terrible home life, dreary financial picture or scary “singledom.”

    Pro-creation has always been a reason to marry, but up until about two hundred years ago or so, people in the West married more for political or financial gain than for love.

    The Victorian Era and the Industrial Revolution (1800s) created two important changes in how people lived: Romance became all the rage and technological advances made life much easier. Prior to these developments, divorce was incredibly rare but when love entered the picture as the reason to marry, marital dissolutions became more commonplace.

    Critics point to Women’s Rights, No-Fault Divorce laws and the greater emphasis on the pursuit of personal happiness in the ’70s, for opening the door to more choice and, therefore, more divorce. Rates spiked up to 50% (up from 11% in the fifties) and have not changed much in the last 50 years.

    We’ve come a long way with technology and modern living but have we actually come too far in our conjugal love-centric culture?

    What experts like Andrew Cherlin (Marriage-Go-Round) and Stephanie Coontz (Marriage, A History) tell us is that, in our attempt to make marriage stronger by raising the bar to meet our higher needs, we have seriously weakened the institution now that marriage is based on love and romance — both highly changeable emotions.

    When love wanes, the marriage gets shaky. When the romance stops, the nuptials die.

    People whose primary reason to marry is other than love — such as to have children with someone they believed would be a good co-parent, to have financial security, or for companionship — generally have longer and perhaps better marriages because their choices were made with a purpose.

    Additionally, their expectations of marriage and their mate are less unrealistic.

    Their spouse wasn’t expected to be “The One.”

    They merely needed to be Mr. or Mrs. “Good Enough.”

    Some people call this settling, but we are seeing the wisdom of marriages like these more and more.

    I’m not saying love shouldn’t be on the list of things that need to be in your relationship, but it doesn’t need to be number one (and perhaps shouldn’t be).

    Here are the three reasons I think marrying primarily for love is not wise:

    1. Love is a changeable emotion.

    As quickly as you fall in love, you can fall out of love. Then what? Either the relationship ends or it becomes toxic. If love is your primary connection, the glue is gone. This is true for passionate, physical love as well as “soul-mate” love.

    2. Love does not make for a strong enough foundation.

    Yes, love is strong but, due to the fact that it can evaporate, it is not something that can stand alone as the basis for a long-term relationship (especially when kids are involved). Anything built on a foundation of love is subject to crumbling.

    3. Love is far from “all you need.”

    You need mutual respect, shared goals and compatibility way more than you need love to have a sustainable, lasting relationship. People “fall in love with love” just as Kim Kardashian showed us, because they think it will carry them the distance. We all want to be wanted and we love to love yet, if you had a recipe for a strong, healthy relationship, it might look like this: 3 Cups respect; 2 Cups shared goals; 2 Cups compatibility, 1 Tablespoon love, 1 teaspoon attraction (optional!). (Of course a relationship has many more ingredients than this but you get the idea).

    What do you think?

    Contributed by Susan Pease Gadoua

    PS: If you want to get my personal help with your unique situation, send us an email to see when my next available time is for a private one-on-one consultation.

    The best email to reach us is: help@thebreakupdoctor.com

    If you’re curious to learn more about how I work, and what it would look like to work with me in private, you can check out this page on my website to get some more information on how it works:

    www.TheBreakupDoctor.com/work-with-me/