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The biggest problems in relationships often start small: a sharp reply, an impulse text, a habit we refuse to name, a trigger we keep feeding. Dr. Beatrice Hyppolite and Pastor Brevil talk about self-control as a real-life skill, not a slogan and how mastering your mind can lead to inner peace, better decisions, and healthier communication.
We unpack a simple practice with outsized impact: pausing for five to ten seconds before you react. That tiny gap is where emotional regulation happens, where anger can soften into clarity, and where respect can replace blame. From there we move into marriage advice that’s blunt and useful: you can’t control your partner, but you can control your emotions and actions. We talk compromise, adjustment, and communication, plus how sexual self-control and honest conversations about intimacy can protect the relationship instead of quietly damaging it.
The conversation also goes into addiction and habit change using everyday examples like coffee, and then widens to discipline, leadership, and parenting. We explore practical alternatives that keep young people grounded through structured activities, and we wrestle with one of the hardest questions: when trust breaks through secrecy or infidelity, can it truly be rebuilt? If you care about self-mastery, addiction recovery, rebuilding trust, and faith-driven growth, you’ll find plenty to reflect on here. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.
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By Beatrice HyppoliteThe biggest problems in relationships often start small: a sharp reply, an impulse text, a habit we refuse to name, a trigger we keep feeding. Dr. Beatrice Hyppolite and Pastor Brevil talk about self-control as a real-life skill, not a slogan and how mastering your mind can lead to inner peace, better decisions, and healthier communication.
We unpack a simple practice with outsized impact: pausing for five to ten seconds before you react. That tiny gap is where emotional regulation happens, where anger can soften into clarity, and where respect can replace blame. From there we move into marriage advice that’s blunt and useful: you can’t control your partner, but you can control your emotions and actions. We talk compromise, adjustment, and communication, plus how sexual self-control and honest conversations about intimacy can protect the relationship instead of quietly damaging it.
The conversation also goes into addiction and habit change using everyday examples like coffee, and then widens to discipline, leadership, and parenting. We explore practical alternatives that keep young people grounded through structured activities, and we wrestle with one of the hardest questions: when trust breaks through secrecy or infidelity, can it truly be rebuilt? If you care about self-mastery, addiction recovery, rebuilding trust, and faith-driven growth, you’ll find plenty to reflect on here. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.
Support the show