Effective Marriage Counseling
102 pages
English

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102 pages
English

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Description

Dr. Willard F. Harley, Jr. has spent the past thirty-some years developing and fine-tuning a comprehensive marriage counseling program that has helped more than a million couples--through both his private counseling and his books. In this new resource, Dr. Harley walks pastors and counselors through that program, equipping them for the kind of marital coaching he's been doing for decades.Beginning with an introduction to core concepts such as the Love Bank, and progressing through specific counseling steps, Effective Marriage Counseling offers readers a comprehensive overview of the tools and techniques that have brought Dr. Harley counseling success--and prepares readers to achieve the same kind of success in their own counseling practice. Pastors and counselors will welcome this incredible collection of proven techniques.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 février 2010
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781441212535
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0576€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

EFFECTIVE MARRIAGE COUNSELING
Other books by Willard F. Harley, Jr.
His Needs, Her Needs
Love Busters
Five Steps to Romantic Love
Surviving an Affair
Fall in Love, Stay in Love
His Needs, Her Needs for Parents
E FFECTIVE M ARRIAGE C OUNSELING
The His Needs, Her Needs Guide to Helping Couples
WILLARD F. HARLEY, JR.
2010 by Willard F. Harley, Jr.
Published by Revell a division of Baker Publishing Group P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287 www.revellbooks.com
Printed in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Harley, Willard F. Effective marriage counseling : the his needs, her needs guide to helping couples / Willard F. Harley, Jr. p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ). ISBN 978-0-8007-1945-6 ( cloth) 1. Marriage counseling. 2. Pastoral counseling. I. Title.
BV4012.27.H37 2010 259 .14-dc22 2009036945
For individual use, forms may be copied without fee. For all other uses, all rights are reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means-for example, electronic, photocopy, recording-without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Contents
Part 1 Theory: The Harley Model for Marital Satisfaction
1. A Simple and Effective Model
2. The Basic Assumption: The Love Bank
3. What Does a Good Marriage Counselor Do?
4. What Is Marriage Coaching?
Part 2 Method: Building Love Bank Balances
5. Love Bank Deposits for Men
6. Love Bank Deposits for Women
7. The Policy of Undivided Attention
8. Control and Abuse
9. Dishonesty and Annoying Behavior
10. Independent Behavior and the Policy of Joint Agreement
Part 3 Application: A Case Study
11. Intake and Assessment
12. Treatment
13. Practice and Discharge
Appendix A: Love Bank Inventory
Appendix B: Memorandum of Agreement
Appendix C: Telephone Counseling
Notes
PART 1 THEORY The Harley Model for Marital Satisfaction
1 A Simple and Effective Model
T hroughout recorded history, scientists have tried to understand our universe-and everything in it-by creating models that predict future events. They assume that they understand the present correctly if they are able to accurately predict the future. Predictability is, and has always been, an essential ingredient of a good scientific model, and the model that best predicts the future is the model that s generally recognized as superior.
But there s a second rule scientists use in creating models: the simpler the better. If two models both predict the future accurately, but one requires fewer assumptions, the simpler one wins.
One of the most cited applications of this rule can be found in models of planetary motion. In the second century AD, Ptolemy created a model of planetary motion in which the Earth was the center of the solar system. Fifteen centuries later, Copernicus put forth a system where the sun was the center. Amazingly enough, both models accurately predicted planetary motion, but Ptolemy used more assumptions and much more complex mathematical formulas than those used by Copernicus.
Today we can observe the Earth rotating around the sun from satellites, but in the days of Copernicus, it was the simplicity of his model that convinced scientists that it was the best.
The Science of Marital Satisfaction
I ve spent most of my adult lifetime trying to understand marital satisfaction. What must a couple do to be happily married? And what are the fewest assumptions necessary to accurately predict that outcome? In other words, what is the simplest model I could find to successfully predict marital satisfaction?
I had a special advantage over most other scientists studying the same topic. I was experiencing marital satisfaction. My wife, Joyce, and I have been happily married for more than forty-seven years. Furthermore, my parents were also happily married, as were Joyce s parents. What had all of us done to make our marriages successful? And what was the simplest way to express it?
All scientists begin with assumptions based on observation and common sense, and that s where I started as well. I began with assumptions used by my father, who was also a psychologist and marriage counselor.
My father counseled couples directly from the Bible, using various texts to encourage them to love each other sacrificially and unconditionally. He thought that his sacrificial and unconditional love for my mother is what made their marriage successful, and that assumption was one of the foundations of his counseling model.
Commitment in marriage was another basic ingredient for a successful marriage, according to my father. Once married, a couple was forever married from God s perspective. If a couple was committed to each other for life, my father believed, their marriage would be more successful.
My father s approach to marriage counseling might have helped some couples to improve their marriages in the 40s and 50s. But it was 1960 when I had my first marriage counseling experience. I was only nineteen and not yet married, but a friend in college wanted my advice. He had been married for only a few months, and it was not going well. So just as my father had done with so many couples, I stressed commitment, unconditional love, and personal sacrifice as the basic elements of a successful marriage.
By the end of the year, my friend was divorced.
Changing Times
I was about to witness a change in our culture that would threaten the nuclear family for decades to come. The value of selflessness was being replaced by selfishness. The Me Generation had been born.
My efforts to convince couples that they should learn selflessness and be committed to each other for life didn t work. In almost every couple I counseled, there was at least one spouse who felt that selflessness and commitment made no sense at all. That spouse wanted out. And in most cases, the other spouse wasn t in the mood to be selfless or committed after being the victim of neglect, abuse, infidelity, and other indignities. Even the pastor of my church, whose wife had an affair with the choir director, wouldn t follow my advice to return evil with good. He heaped abuse on his wife until she finally divorced him.
But couples lack of motivation to be selfless wasn t the only problem. In the course of my counseling, I was able to come across a few people who really did try to be selfless and committed to their marriage, and even then it didn t always work. The unconditional love of a neglected wife usually left her permanently neglected. The forgiving husband of an unfaithful wife was often the victim of yet another affair. And abused spouses experienced increased danger of abuse when they tried to respond with selfless love.
I was baffled. I couldn t motivate most couples to do the right thing, but even those I did motivate didn t have an improved relationship. Since I concluded I was not cut out for the job, I stopped offering marital advice for a while.
After I had earned a PhD in psychology in 1967 and become a college professor, couples kept asking me to help them with their marriages. I wanted to but I knew my skills and assumptions were inadequate. So I decided to become formally trained in the most successful method of marital therapy I could find.
The model I used was very popular at the time and still is. It was based on the assumption that marital satisfaction grew from effective conflict resolution. If a couple would learn to resolve their conflicts the right way, their marriages would be successful.
So I was trained to teach couples communication skills. They would learn to listen to each other and to respect each other s opinions. Eventually their discussions would lead to common ground and their conflicts would be resolved. This model fit the perspective of a selfish generation, because it focused attention on learning how to get what you want in marriage.
And some couples were helped by this technique. But even as I became increasingly successful in helping couples communicate effectively, I also witnessed incontrovertible evidence that good communication in marriage was not the magic bullet. Some of the couples I counseled learned to communicate better than Joyce and I ever would, but they still ended up divorced. In fact the clinic director, who created the program and taught me how to counsel this way, was divorced by his wife shortly after I completed my internship.
By this time, Joyce and I had been happily married for thirteen years. During those years I had completed a PhD program, we had two children, we had moved ten times, and Joyce s father had died unexpectedly. Yet through it all, we were still in love. What kept our marriage successful when others were failing at an unprecedented rate in 1975?
Changing the Model
There were several assumptions I could have made regarding the reasons for my marital success. We were committed to each other for life, we loved each other unconditionally, and we were willing to sacrifice our happiness for each other. We also communicated well. But my counseling experience had taught me that these conditions didn t necessarily guarantee success. So what else might it be? And how could I use this information to save marriages?
I went right to the source of the problem-couples who were in trouble-and I asked them questions. Why were they divorcing? And what would it take to turn their marriages around?
I was looking for something beyond their lack of commitment, their lack of willingness to sacrifice, and their poor communication skills. And eventually I found it. Time and time again they told me that the reason they were divorcing was they had lost their feeling of love for each other. Couple after couple said they were unwilling to remain in a loveless marriage. I would ask, If you were in love again, would you

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