The following is a sponsored post.
Does your spouse feel more like a roommate or friend than a lover? Do you want to feel more connected with your spouse? Do you want to bring back that feeling you had when you were first dating, when you just couldn’t get enough of each other? Well, in just a few short minutes, you can learn the ONE BIG SECRET to a fulfilling, exciting marriage. I recently connected with Dr. Dana Fillmore and Amy Barnhart, co-Founders of StrongMarriageNow.com, a site dedicated to enriching and inspiring couples to have strong, happy healthy marriages. They shared with me one of their videos that I wanted to share with you… It’s called The Most Important Lesson, and it will teach you:
• how to fall more deeply in love
• the first steps to revitalizing your marriage
• how to solidify the connection between you and your spouse
To gain more fulfillment from your marriage, and experience more passion and love in your relationship click here for 3 more Marriage Success Secret videos.
In less than 4 minutes (that’s less time than it takes to brush your teeth!) you can transform your marriage into the blissful relationship you’ve always wanted it to be. First, watch this video, then sign upfor more!
Wishing you a lifetime of love and happiness!
great advice! although we’re newlyweds (and of course, we love spending time together) we are making it a habit VERY early on in our marriage to commit to spending TIME together, having fun, reading God’s word, and just being a married couple. I know it won’t always be that easy, but our hope is that the more we make it a priority NOW early on in our marriage, the easier it will be later.
This is awesome! Definitely tweeting, FB-ing and pinning this. SO important. I do think 8 hours is pushing it for parents of small kids, BUT it could include such small things as watching a fave TV show together or working out together…just squeezing in that alone time. The best tip for alone time when you have small kids? Put them to bed early! Then they get enough sleep and YOU get some privacy! Yeah!
I’ve been trying to implement your suggestion of taking an evening walk with my husband. Of course, the baby and the two year old have to come too (not too happily, i might add!) But it is amazing… he talks so much more when we are doing this, telling me things I wonder if I would ever have heard if we had not gone for that walk. I definitely “get it” about menpreferring to converse “side by side”. Its probably been less than a week that we have done this but wI am already much happier. Plus, as a couple with young children, there arent many opportunities to really talk when the kids are aroumd. Walking really helps. Thanks 🙂
Oh, Alison, you’re so welcome! And I’m so glad that it’s working for you. I really find that when we try to have “time to talk” it always feels fake. But if we go for a walk, or just do something together, it’s natural to talk.
I think that everyone who gets married or even lives together suffers a little if they dont take control of things and just let time pass. I think that there is no shame in exploring a product like this when you need to relight the fire a little guidance is a great thing!
I am new to your site and I love it and can’t wait to get your new book, however, I’m disappointed with your endorsement of StrongMarriageNow.com. From a Christian viewpoint there are some conflicting mindsets, such as her statement that we are not made for monogamy, as well as her referring to something to the effect of the old solution of “hoping and praying” not working. I hope you will thoroughly review the videos and reconsider your position. On a positive note, I am so thankful that you are so real about sex in a Christian marriage. This information is so desperately needed. Thank you for speaking out.
Thank you for that, Lyn. I hadn’t caught that, and I will definitely reconsider in the future. When I talked to them about it, and listened to the videos and looked at the materials, it seemed as if they were mostly advocating spending more time together, building intimacy, and shared experiences, which is what I talk about, too. And I took the “hoping and praying” not working thing not as an indictment against prayer, but rather an indictment against just sitting there and hoping that things will change without actually doing anything constructive about it. However, I do see that it could be problematic, and I agree that the idea of not being made for monogamy is also wrong.
How do I get a copy of your book?