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Every marriage requires compromise. There comes a point when you realize you and your partner don’t always fit perfectly. You married a separate person, with their own history and agenda. Choosing to stay—despite unmet needs, hurts, and those moments of wondering if things will ever change—can lead to a real, reliable love that goes beyond fairytale fantasies.
Long relationships inevitably experience a “reckoning.” This is that point where neither person is willing to compromise. Each person says, “My way.” So you are forced to choose: The highway? Or do you stay?
Stay in spite of the fact that your sweetheart isn’t gonna budge? You’re unwilling to change too?
Yikes!
Then what?
Today, my guest is Bonnie ComfortBonnie is a psychotherapist and author of Staying Married is the Hardest Part. Her story shows the complexity, contradiction, and loneliness that can exist in a loving marriage, alongside the joy and togetherness.
The reckoning in Bonnie's marriage was about their different sexual appetites. Her husband was raised in a conservative Christian environment where sex was forbidden. As a result, he developed sexual fetishes that allowed him to "cheat" and get a little action.
This conversation explores all the implications, all the compromises, and all the places where they wouldn't compromise for each other.
Bonnie Comfort fell in love with a man who made her laugh. She describes many difficult moments in her marriage. Really difficult. But she also describes all the ways her husband would make her laugh which made her fall in love with him all over again.
Marriage is both. The laughter and the hard. This is why there's a reckoning.
This week's habit for your happily ever after is to notice if you keep having the same fight over and over in your marriage. I wonder if there is a reckoning for you that you're not going to change your partner and your partner's not going to change you?
In Staying Married is the Hardest Part, Bonnie Comfort addresses how “It’s always easier to see how you’d be happier if the other person changes, but such a focus interferes with thinking about the only thing you can control: your own behavior.”
Consequently, she designed two questions for her clients that I invite you to use:
Connect with my guest
Visit Bonnie Comfort's website here.
Get Bonnie's book, Staying Married is the Hardest Part, here.
Connect on social media here.
Connect to Improve Your Relationship CommunicationVisit the show notes here.
Buy my book.
Listen to my book.
Please subscribe to my newsletter here. This unlocks personal invitations from me only available to my subscribers.
Follow me on Tik Tok.
Reach me at 970-210-4480
By Rebecca Mullen4.9
2626 ratings
Every marriage requires compromise. There comes a point when you realize you and your partner don’t always fit perfectly. You married a separate person, with their own history and agenda. Choosing to stay—despite unmet needs, hurts, and those moments of wondering if things will ever change—can lead to a real, reliable love that goes beyond fairytale fantasies.
Long relationships inevitably experience a “reckoning.” This is that point where neither person is willing to compromise. Each person says, “My way.” So you are forced to choose: The highway? Or do you stay?
Stay in spite of the fact that your sweetheart isn’t gonna budge? You’re unwilling to change too?
Yikes!
Then what?
Today, my guest is Bonnie ComfortBonnie is a psychotherapist and author of Staying Married is the Hardest Part. Her story shows the complexity, contradiction, and loneliness that can exist in a loving marriage, alongside the joy and togetherness.
The reckoning in Bonnie's marriage was about their different sexual appetites. Her husband was raised in a conservative Christian environment where sex was forbidden. As a result, he developed sexual fetishes that allowed him to "cheat" and get a little action.
This conversation explores all the implications, all the compromises, and all the places where they wouldn't compromise for each other.
Bonnie Comfort fell in love with a man who made her laugh. She describes many difficult moments in her marriage. Really difficult. But she also describes all the ways her husband would make her laugh which made her fall in love with him all over again.
Marriage is both. The laughter and the hard. This is why there's a reckoning.
This week's habit for your happily ever after is to notice if you keep having the same fight over and over in your marriage. I wonder if there is a reckoning for you that you're not going to change your partner and your partner's not going to change you?
In Staying Married is the Hardest Part, Bonnie Comfort addresses how “It’s always easier to see how you’d be happier if the other person changes, but such a focus interferes with thinking about the only thing you can control: your own behavior.”
Consequently, she designed two questions for her clients that I invite you to use:
Connect with my guest
Visit Bonnie Comfort's website here.
Get Bonnie's book, Staying Married is the Hardest Part, here.
Connect on social media here.
Connect to Improve Your Relationship CommunicationVisit the show notes here.
Buy my book.
Listen to my book.
Please subscribe to my newsletter here. This unlocks personal invitations from me only available to my subscribers.
Follow me on Tik Tok.
Reach me at 970-210-4480