Not In Love? The Marriage First Aid Kit Shows How To Re-grow Love.

Every marriage has problems but they can feel intolerable when you’re not in love.  Greater skill and tools are needed when you’re not in love.  All marriages have to evolve from the initial in-love stage to a more stable form of sentimental loving. This is what happens in a successful marriage when partners eventually find that they’re not in love.  If you find that you’re not in love, then it’s time for you get to work.  The Marriage First Aid Kit can provide you with the best tools.  It offers the following: 

  • Strategies and exercises to re-grow love and affection when you’re not in love
  • The hidden dangers to your relationship of which you are probably unaware
  • Six types of conflict including the three types which are essential for a healthy relationship
  • Strategies to prevent destructive forms of conflict
  • A way to structure finances and chores to promote healthy psychological boundaries
  • Strategies to re-balance your relationship when you’re not in love
  • Exercises to strengthen healthy parts of your personality that can promote passion
  • Common myths that can harm your marriage when you’re not in love
  • Destructive relationship patterns to avoid such as enmeshment, conflict avoidance, pursuer-evader and delinquent helper syndromes

You don’t have to take our word that this information will help if you are not in love with your spouse.  You can check it out for yourself.  There’s free help from the online section offering marriage first aid.  You can read Dr. Kaye’s advice to hundreds of people who have already sought his help, many of whom complained that they were not in love.  Use the diagnostic section to learn which of your relationship problems need to be resolved first when you’re not in love. 

Looking for help with your marriage when you are not in love? Get your copy of the Marriage First Aid Kit today!


Praise and Testimony

“This is a cognac of a book — meant to be sipped slowly as the Doctor has a lot to
say in a way that speaks to ordinary folks but never slights the enormity of science
behind it. This wonderful balance makes the book a vade mecum for my work as
well as my personal life.”


—William Mastrosimone
Emmy-winning playwright and author of The Woolgatherer, Extremities, Cat’s Paw, The Beast and Shivaree

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