Eight therapists share lessons they find themselves repeating again and again. Credit...Oyow Supported by By Catherine Pearson Every relationship is unique — a delicate ecosystem influenced by ...
My wife and I recently celebrated our seventh wedding anniversary. In honor of the occasion, I asked couples who had been married 40, 50, or even 60 years a simple question: What relationship advice ...
Ah, relationships. Every one has its quirks, foibles, and rough patches. Keeping things on the rails takes compromise, communication, and, sometimes, a bit of help from someone who’s been through it ...
The couples that clean together, stay together. A relationship counselor believes that the trick to maintaining a happy romantic relationship is doing mundane, daily chores with your significant other ...
Finding out that the person you love is only pretending to be happy with you can be devastating. Everyone wants to live happily ever after, especially when they have poured their heart into a ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about relationships, personality, and everyday psychology. New research reveals how relationship satisfaction is closely ...
Most of the relationship advice we get these days, online and offline, coalesces around two main relationship skills: visibility and vocabulary. So, we decode our attachment styles, learn to label our ...