EFT helps couples stop fights and
end emotional distance by helping each partner express their important feelings and needs that remain under the surface.
Not exact matches
Dayton and Faris handle their burgeoning relationship, including a sex scene, free of exploitation or voyeurism, instead focusing on their growing
emotional intimacy, an intimacy Jack — the odd man out who's treated with sensitivity and empathy — watches from a
distance, acknowledging their relationship initially as «just a phase,» before painfully accepting that Billie's ultimate happiness means an
end to their marriage.
This
distancing effect, rather like looking at something through the wrong
end of a telescope, intensifies a work's
emotional charge, whether it's of wonder, political or social edification, or of fear, revulsion, entropy, or dystopia.