Today, my daughter-in-love Emma joins me for a Q & A session about relationships. We discuss the role of guilt when apologizing to others and how to avoid getting pulled in by other people’s emotions to keep your own groundedness. We also discuss why couples should be both friends and lovers and how to make a habit of creating moments that will sustain your relationship.

Show Notes

My daughter-in-love, Emma Olyff, is in a relationship with my son, Zander. Currently living in the Netherlands, she is attending Maastricht University with Zander, where she is studying psychology. She is also the founder and jewelry designer at Emwa Jewelry, an artisan jewelry company she started from her passion for handmade jewelry.

 

Today, Emma joins me for a Q & A session about relationships. We discuss the role of guilt when apologizing to others and how to avoid getting pulled in by other people’s emotions to keep your own groundedness. We also discuss why couples should be both friends and lovers and how to make a habit of creating moments that will sustain your relationship.

 

“We need to have a vision - the vision of repair - because guilt makes us stay in paralyzation.” - Pripo Teplitsky

 

 

 

This week on Relationships! Let’s Talk About It:

 

  • Two significant parts of an apology that make apologizing easier and more sincere
  • Physical gestures you can do to deal with anxiety
  • How to avoid allowing your guilt to overshadow the empathy you have for your partner
  • How long you should wait before apologizing and handling the issue at hand
  • How to capture the moment-by-moment connections in a long-term relationship
  • The difference between constructive criticism and constructive feedback
  • The ultimate purpose of giving constructive feedback
  • Circumstances where you should learn to get comfortable with the uncomfortable
  • Understanding and performing individual and collective responsibilities in a relationship when dealing with the effects of negative past experiences
  • The best time to bring up and discuss unhealthy patterns in a relationship
  • How to work with each other to learn each other’s triggers
  • How to do the inner work of speaking to your heart and accepting vulnerability to avoid blaming others
  • The significance of celebrating relational wins and improvements
  • How to reinforce positive experiences to pursue more of them

 

 

Resources Mentioned:

 

 

 

Connect with Emma Olyff:

 

 

 

 

Sponsored by Gyro Creative

 

Transform your brand identity with Gyro Creative. Gyro Creative is a Detroit-based identity studio helping businesses, brands, and groups express their values through strategic brand development and design. Incite action, build culture, unite your community, and inspire change with your brand and brand message.

 

For more information or to start your brand identity transformation journey, visit www.GyroCreative.com

 

 

Let’s Talk About It!

 

Thanks for tuning into this week’s episode of Relationships! Let’s Talk About It - the show to help you forge deeper, more meaningful connections and relationships with those around you. If you enjoyed this week’s episode, please head over to Apple Podcasts, subscribe to the show, and leave us a rating and review.

 

If you have a relationship question you’d love to have answered, visit our podcast page to leave us a voice message. Your question may be featured on a future episode!

 

Don’t forget to visit our website, like us on Facebook at HeartShare Counseling, join our Relationships! Let’s Talk About It Facebook group, and follow us on Twitter and Instagram. Share your favorite episodes on social media to help others build better, more meaningful relationships.

 

And if our content has helped you forge deeper connections and more meaningful relationships, be sure to help support the show by visiting our Support the Podcast page!

 

Theme music “These Streets” provided by Adi the Monk

 

 

Relationships! Let’s Talk About It is produced by Auxbus. You can create your own great podcast - faster and easier - at Auxbus.com