More research into this has found that the happiest, most stable marriages in the long run were those where the husband treated his wife with respect and did not
resist sharing power and decision making with her.
Gottman told Positive Psychology News, «the happiest marriages were those where partners were able to convey honor and respect for the other and did not
resist sharing power and decision making.»
Let Your Partner Influence You The happiest marriages were those where the husband was able to convey honor and respect for their wife and did not
resist sharing power and decision making.
Not exact matches
But while I value their sociopolitical analyses and
share their anger at the complex forces that make sane mothering almost impossible these days, I find little in their books to give me strength and hope for the journey — the strength and hope that are exactly what mothers need to
resist the
powers the authors describe.
All the same, I've been following Dreena's blog, Plant -
Powered Kitchen, where she's been
sharing recipes from her book «Let Them Eat Vegan», and reading write - ups elsewhere, and knew I couldn't
resist.
Crucially, the type of conservatism preached by Glasman, Rutherford, Cruddas and co. is a «radical conservatism», which seeks to
resist the disrupting and commodifying tendencies of markets: ``... conservative in valuing relationships, work, family and community... radical in defending the labour interest, and
sharing out
power, resources and opportunities between members of society.»
Cuomo has
resisted granting Schneiderman additional
powers available under the Executive Law during their
shared time in office.
In that art establishment, an odd description for an artist like Lygia Pape (1927 - 2004), whose work was conceived to
resist and mock established
power, Pape has the distinction that no Brazilian artist
shares with her.
Let your partner influence you: The happiest, most stable marriages are those in which the husband treats his wife with respect and does not
resist power sharing....
As briefly mentioned above, in a series of studies Dr. Gottman found that, «the happiest, most stable marriages in the long run were those where the husband treated his wife with respect and did not
resist power sharing and decision making with her.