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Free E-Book: Love’s Gumbo Available For Download on Amazon

BMWK family, today we’re sharing a super special deal with you! Author Brooke Brimm is offering her E-book Love’s Gumbo for…. FREE! Yeah I said it FREE! You would normally have to pay for it but she’s lowered the price to Free for a limited time. You can go to Amazon.com now to download your copy here: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B004ZUIWLK

Brooke Brimm believes that our homes, our lives, our children and our world can change when we learn to love in a healthy and balanced way. She believes women are the key to this change. When we love ourselves, choose a partner who loves himself, and work effectively within our relationships we can heal the world. If we continue to look to others to fill us up, grow us up, and love us up, we will continue to produce children who are broken and hurting. The cycle can end with us.

This book is designed to teach us:
1) How to love ourselves in action,
2) How to choose a great partner, and
3) How to work effectively within our loving unions.

The Author is a National Certified Counselor and has been happily married 18 years, despite coming from a family of origin affected by separation and other ills. She believes the keys are spiritual, emotional, mental, and physical awareness and activity. This book provides step-by-step examples and activities to teach women how to love and trust. It empowers women who want to be in and stay in long and lasting loving relationships.

It’s free today on Amazon!

Get yours today! If you don’t have a kindle, get the kindle app for free for your PC, MAC, iphone, ipad, ipod, android, BB, & windows 7 phone or read it on the Amazon cloud. Find out how staying happy & married for 18 years and counting is possible!

EXCERPT:

What is a Healthy Relationship?
By Brooke Brimm

Countless times individuals want to hold on to a love that is not healthy because many years have been invested. They say things like “we’ve been together for all these years, why leave.” Sometimes people stay in a bad relationship because it looks good to the outside world or because they are unsure what life would be like without their mate. However, deep inside their hearts they long to experience a truly fulfilling love.

I held on to an unhealthy relationship for 7 years before I came to the realization that it was not worth it for me to hang on any longer. The first year was the good year and the rest were off and on, and filled with disrespect, dishonesty, and emotional abuse. I held on because we had one thing in common, and I thought it was enough to make a future. I honestly believed we loved each other, and that in the end we would marry. I was wrong, and once I began to experience real love I realized that for years I had held on to an empty dream.

The term “unhealthy relationship” is thrown around so often by so many, that I feel compelled to explain what I mean by this term. I mean consistent destructive, abusive, disrespectful, unsupportive, uncaring, and demoralizing behavior. I mean the kind of deeds that make you feel anxious to take your partner around your friends and family, for fear of humiliation or embarrassment. I mean constant withdrawal and abandonment, and loveless actions and responses.

What happens in an unhealthy relationship is not to be confused with the constant minor annoyances within a healthy relationship. Nor the brief phases that partners go through, which make them seem distance. There are aspects of love that do cause minor hurts and aggravations, but may not warrant leaving a gratifying relationship. We may not like it or even admit it, but love can hurt. We are imperfect beings, so we tend to have personality issues, which we bring into every relationship we have with other imperfect beings. The result is often minor bickering, power struggles, and hurt feelings. However, mature adults who see value in their relationships talk over these problems and eventually work them out. They usually become closer and develop a keen sense of understanding.

There is a difference between an unhealthy relationship and a healthy relationship with normal human clashing. If you are unsure of the kind of relationship or friendship you are in, evaluate it, and pray for discernment.

Ask yourself these few questions:
Does this person have my best interest at heart more often than not?
Does this person have positive things to say to me more often than not?
Am I proud to have others see my relationship with this person?
Does this person forgive me easily when I mess up?
Does this person show me genuine love?
Do I feel valued in this relationship?
Do I smile and laugh when I am with this person?
Am I supported in this relationship even when I am silly, angry, unhappy,
insecure, or sad?
Do I feel free to be myself around this person?
Would others think this person abuses me?

If you find that you are in a relationship or a friendship that is not healthy for you, don’t be afraid to move on. Don’t think you can change the other person, just go. To linger longer than you should will only drain you and could possibly make you bitter. Refuse to be used, abused, hurt, misunderstood, and degraded. Know that something or someone better is out there for you.
If you find that your relationships and friendships are fulfilling, but have small issues, keep working at it. Keep talking it out, and keep being honest and open. We all have issues to work through, and as a result experience relationship struggles. We can work it out if we keep working at it.

This article was taken as an excerpt from the book: Love’s Gumbo: Ingredients for a lasting and loving relationship.

Brooke Brimm has a Master’s degree in Professional Counseling and 8 years
experience in the field of Human Science. She is currently studying for a PH.D. in Holistic Life Counseling. Mrs. Brimm has been happily married since 1993 and has two beautiful daughters and a young son. She currently edits an online ezine, LovesGumbo.com which discusses women loving themselves, their partners, and their relationships in today’s society.

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