A Relationship for a Lifetime
Everything You Need to Know to Create a Love That Lasts
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
A Relationship for a Lifetime is not just another meaningless self-help book that you’ll read once and never open again. This is a book you’ll refer to over and over—because this material is based on timeless and universal relationship themes (such as power, honesty, trust, anger, love, communication, and selflessness) that you can’t afford not to know!
Join Dr. Kelly Johnson as he helps you face the Ten Relationship Realities. These include:
· Acknowledging that your relationship is a valuable possession that you own
· Knowing that change will only occur if you do something
· Telling your partner your needs (no one can read your mind!)
The bottom line is this: Successful people have taken the time to understand themselves so that they don’t continue to make the same relationship mistakes over and over. Dr. Johnson will help you work through the missteps of your past in order to enjoy the formula for relationship success: Right person + right timing = right relationship.
You can create the lasting relationship of your dreams—and identify the relationships that could destroy your life—if you do the work to become your own relationship expert. Reading this book is like doing the therapy without having to go to the therapist’s office. Read this book and take the relationship challenge—your life may never be the same.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This first book from relationship expert Johnson, who hosts a radio talk show and appears frequently on such shows as Montel Williams and Jenny Jones, coaches readers on how to understand themselves in order to avoid repeating mistakes. Belying his sound-bite media persona, Johnson grounds his philosophy in reality, urging readers to dispel their self-delusions of injury, oppression, etc. and scrutinize the reasons they make harmful relationship choices. Johnson contends that readers must first ask themselves, " 'Why?:... Why are you embarking on this path?'" Like most good therapists, he suggests focusing on oneself instead of constantly blaming others for difficulties.