Rick Brown - Therapist, Relationship Expert - Orlando, Winter Park, FL

Introduction to Relationship Therapy

Introduction
What's Really Going On in Relationships?
The Escalation of Loss and Dysfunction
Falling in Love
The Imago Emerges
Waking Up to Reality
Conflict is Natural
Making the Choice for a Conscious Marriage
What Happens in Imago Relationship Therapy?
An Example . . .
Reclaiming Ourselves
Learning to Love
For more information on counseling or workshops . . .

When couples arrive at my office or workshop for counseling, they are often in a stew of anger and shock, despair and sadness. Some are newlyweds, and can't understand how they have plummeted from the heights of love and glory into a swamp of hopelessness and conflict. Others have been married for many years, and though they have been slogging along--in calm or in storm--their days of wine and roses are a dim memory, they are no less devastated by the shambles of their marriage, and the consequent lack of fulfillment in their lives. Even if life at home is relatively peaceful, couples lament that they have "nothing in common anymore." And so they lead a disappointed or angry co-existence, each with their own friends and interests, in a marriage of convenience, or an arrangement they endure "for the sake of the children."

They wonder if they will ever again feel love for their mate. Can they ever breach the chasm of silence, or anger that has grown between them? Perhaps they should just cut their losses and find someone who loves and understands them, someone who offers one more chance at the love and security they long for.

Shattered dreams, whatever form they take, are painful. In seeking counseling, it is likely that you are also struggling to find love and meaning in your relationship. I assure you, as I assure other couples who have come to me, that there is hope. In fact the pain and conflict of committed relationships arise not out of lack of love for our partners, but from a misunderstanding of what love relationships are about. Your conflict can be the very fuel for the fulfillment you seek.

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What's Really Going On in Relationships?

What is really happening when we fall in--and out of--love? What's really going on when couples fight? To gain insight into the hidden agenda of a relationship, we need to look at the complex process of human growth and development, and at how we human beings fit into the larger scheme of things.

I believe that we are creatures of nature, with the evolutionary program of our species encoded in our genes, and that we all begin life in a state of relaxed and joyful bliss, with a feeling of connectedness to everything and everyone. Our overwhelming impulse at birth is to sustain this feeling of connectedness, to remain attached. If our caretakers are attuned to our wants and needs, ready and able to provide warmth safety and sustenance, our feelings of aliveness and well-being are sustained. We remain whole.

But even in the best of circumstances, our parents are not able to maintain perfect standards, to be available every minute, to always understand exactly what is needed or to meet every demand. Research indicates that we are likely affected in the womb as well. More to the point, most of our parents, hampered by their own nurturing deficits and beset by long-standing problems of their own, are unwilling or unable to meet our infant needs. Tired, angry, depressed, busy, ill, distracted, afraid--our parents fail to sustain our feelings of security and comfort.

Every unmet need causes fear and pain and, in our infantile ignorance, we have no idea how to stop it and restore our feeling of safety. Desperate to survive, we adopt primitive coping mechanisms. Depending on our temperament, and the nature of our caretakers' neglect, our feeble defenses may take the form of constant crying to get attention or alternatively, we may withdraw from whatever attentions our caretakers do provide, denying that we even have needs. Though we do what we can, already the world feels unsafe.

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The Escalation of Loss and Dysfunction

Our impulse to remain attached is only the first in a programmed series of impulses that emerge as we grow. After the attachment stage, the need to explore emerges, and our mission changes accordingly. We need the freedom to move away from our caretakers, and the reassurance that we can reliably return to them. Again, our ability to master this task of exploration depends on how well our caretakers understand and support this new impulse. It also depends on how well our caretakers laid the foundation at attachment. And so it goes, as the impulse to explore gives way to the impulse to establish a sense of identity, then competence, and on through concern and intimacy. Each stage builds on the last, forming the foundation on which new skills are built. Any impairment along the way compromises our ability to competently negotiate the next stage.

Meanwhile, throughout our childhood, we are also being socialized, molded by our caretakers and communities to fit into society. We are told what to do, what to say, how to behave; we see behavior modeled by friends, teachers, TV characters; we are intimate witnesses to the relationship modeled by our parents. Observant and malleable, we learn what to do to gain love and acceptance. Socialization, too, chips away at our sense of wholeness and safety, for inevitably we come to see that certain aspects of ourselves aren't accepted--the way we look or talk, the things that interest us, our abilities, our attractiveness as boys or girls. In the interest, again, of survival, we repress or disown parts of ourselves that society finds unacceptable or unlovable. Our sense of "all rightness" diminishes further; we end up as shadows of our whole, true selves.

At age two or three, most children are still exuberant, lively, unique and eccentric, though some already show signs of apathy, anger or fear that a deprived infancy can create. By age eight or ten, the inhibitions become more obvious and numerous; it's the rare ten-year-old who is still unmistakably, unabashedly himself. By mid-teens the effects of incomplete nurturing and societal conditioning are widened in the rebellion, depression, or lack of self-esteem we often see in inadequately loved teenagers. To the degree that our caretakers and our society are able to support the emergence and solidification of our innate impulses, and to the degree that we are allowed to be ourselves, we survive and prosper. Most of us had "good enough" caretakers; we do all right. Some of us didn't fare so well, and our lives are handicapped by deep hurts. All of us were wounded in childhood to some extent. We are now coping as well as we can with the world and our relationships by using the feeble set of defenses born of the pain of childhood, a time when parts of our true nature were suppressed in the unconscious. We look grown up--we have jobs and responsibilities--but we are walking wounded, trying desperately to live life fully while unconsciously hoping to somehow restore the sense of joyful aliveness we began with.

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Falling in Love

When we fall in love, we believe we've found it. Suddenly, we see life in technicolor. We nibble each others' ears and tell each other everything; our limitations and rigidities melt away. We're sexier, smarter, funnier, more giving. We decide that we can't live without our beloved, for now we feel whole, we feel like ourselves. For a while we are able to relax. Finally we feel safe, and breathe a sigh of relieved deliverance. It looks like everything is going to turn out all right, after all.

But inevitably--often when we marry or move in together--things just start to go wrong. In some cases, all hell breaks loose. The veil of illusion falls away, and it seems that our partners are different than we thought they were. It turns out they have qualities that we can't bear. Even qualities we once admired grate on us. Old hurts are reactivated as we realize that our partners cannot or will not love and care for us as they promised. Our dream shatters.

Disillusionment turns to anger, fueled by fear that we won't survive without the love and safety that was within our grasp. Since our partner is no longer willingly giving us what we need, we change tactics, trying to maneuver our partners into caring--through anger, crying, withdrawal, shame, intimidation, criticism--whatever works. We will make them love us. Now we negotiate--for time, love, chores, and gifts--measuring our success against an economic yardstick of profit and loss. The power struggle has begun, and may go on for many years, until we split, or we settle into an uneasy truce, or until we seek help, desperate to feel alive and whole again, to have our dream back.

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The Imago Emerges

What is going on here? Apparently you have found an Imago (IH-MAH-GO) partner. Someone, I'm afraid, who is uniquely unqualified (at the moment), to give you the love you want. Furthermore, this is what's supposed to happen!

Let me explain. We all think that we have freedom of choice when it comes to selecting our partners. In a way, we do; ours are not arranged relationships--after all, there are no exchanges of money or cows between our families. But regardless of what it is we think we're looking for in a mate, our unconscious has its own agenda.

Our primitive "old" brain has a compelling, non-negotiable drive to restore the feeling of aliveness and wholeness that we came into the world with. To accomplish that, it must repair the damage done in childhood as a result of unmet needs, and the way it does that is to find a partner who can give us what our caretakers failed to provide.

You'd think, then, that we would choose someone who has what our caretakers lacked. If only that were so! But the old brain has a mind of its own, with its own checklist of desired qualities. It is carrying around its own image of the perfect partner, a complex synthesis of qualities formed in reaction to the way our caretakers responded to our needs. Every pleasure or pain, every transaction of childhood, has left its mark on us, and these collective impressions form an unconscious picture we're always trying to replicate as we scan our environment for a suitable mate.

This image of "the person who can make me whole again" I call the Imago. Though we consciously seek only the positive traits, the negative traits of our caretakers are more indelibly imprinted in our Imago picture, because those are the traits which caused the wounds we now seek to heal. Our unconscious need is to have our feelings of aliveness and wholeness restored by someone who reminds us of our caretakers. In other words, we look for someone with the same deficits of care and attention that hurt us in the first place.

So when we fall in love, when bells ring and the world seems altogether a better place, our old brain is telling us that we've found someone with whom we can complete our unfinished childhood business. Our imperfect caretakers, "freeze-dried" in the memories of childhood, are "reconstituted" in our partner. Unfortunately, since we don't understand what's going on, we're shocked when the awful truth of our beloved surfaces and our first impulse is to run screaming in the opposite direction.

But that's not all the bad news. Another powerful component of our Imago is that we also seek the qualities missing in ourselves--both good and bad--that got lost in the shuffle of socialization. If we are shy, we seek someone outgoing; if we're disorganized, we're attracted to someone cool and rational. The anger we repressed because it was punished in our home, and which we unconsciously hate ourselves for feeling, we "annex" in our partner. But eventually, when our own feelings--our repressed exuberance or anger--are stirred, we are uncomfortable, and criticize our partners for being too outgoing, too coldly rational, and too temperamental.

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Waking Up to Reality

All of this seems to be a recipe for disaster, and for a long time this depressing state of affairs puzzled me. How can we resolve our childhood issues if our partners wound us in the same ways as our caretakers, and we ourselves are stuck in childhood patterns that wound our partners?

Consciousness is the key; it changes everything. When we are unaware of the agenda of love, it is a disaster, for our childhood scenarios inevitably repeat themselves with the same devastating consequences. However, there is method to this madness. The unconscious recreation of the ambience of childhood has the express purpose of bringing this old impasse to a resolution. When we understand that we have chosen our partners to heal certain wounds, and that the healing of those wounds is the key to the end of longing, we have taken the first step on the journey to real love.

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Conflict is Natural

What we need to understand and accept is that conflict is supposed to happen. This is as nature intended it: Everything in nature is in conflict. The hard truth is that the grounds for marriage really are incompatibility; this is the norm for relationships. Conflict needs to be understood as a given, a sign that the psyche is trying to survive, to get its needs met and become whole. It's only without this knowledge that conflict is destructive.

Ignorant of this process of healing childhood wounds through conflict in current relationships, our culture has made incompatibility the grounds for divorce. This counters nature's intention. Society has institutionalized permission for divorce out of a response to the childish wish for idealized, conflict-free relationships, which is a distortion of the natural process.

Divorce does not solve the problems of relationship. We may get rid of our partners, but we keep our problems, carting them into the next relationship. Divorce is incompatible with the intentions of nature.

Romantic love is supposed to end. It is the glue that initially bonds two incompatible people together so that they will do what needs to be done to heal themselves, and in the process, heal the rifts in nature, of which we are an integral part. If we remain fixated on romantic love --"in love with love"--we remain stuck at the one-year-old stage of Attachment. To restore our wholeness, our relationships need to successfully grow through all the developmental stages that were mishandled during our childhood. The good news is that although many couples become hopelessly locked in the power struggle, it too is supposed to end. The emotional bond that is created by romantic love to keep partners together through the hard times evolves into a powerful organic bond through the process of resolving conflict.

The way I have come to see it is that nature is healing itself in our relationships. Each individual is a thread of energy woven into the tapestry of being; a tapestry frayed and weakened where there is conflict. With our self awareness, we humans do not have to remain stuck in childhood patterns; we are uniquely able to correct what has gone wrong. When we heal our relationships, we heal the rift in nature: putting our relationship to rights is ecologically sound!

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Making the Choice for a Conscious Marriage

A ‘Conscious Marriage’ is not for the faint-hearted, for it requires reclaiming the lost, repressed parts of ourselves which we were told were dangerous to have, and which we unconsciously hate ourselves for having. And it means learning more effective coping mechanisms than crying, anger withdrawal or other defensive behaviors which have become so habitual for us. In Imago Relationship Therapy, we change to give our partners what they need, no matter how difficult it is, no matter how much it goes against the grain of our personality and temperament. We stretch to become the person our partner needs us to be in order to heal. This is not easy, but it works.

Regardless of what we may believe, relationships are not born of love, but of need; real love is born in relationships, as a result of understanding what they are about and doing what is necessary to have them. You are already with your dream partner, but at the moment, he or she is in disguise--and, like you, in pain. A Conscious Relationship itself is the therapy you need to restore your sense of aliveness. The goal of Imago Relationship Therapy is to extricate you from the power struggle and set you on the path of real love.

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What Happens in Imago Relationship Therapy?

How do we set about disentangling ourselves from this mess? We do this by redesigning our relationship to complete the unfinished business of childhood. In other words, our unconscious aim--to become whole, to restore our joyful aliveness--must become our conscious intention. Your goal is to become passionate friends with your partner, to develop what might be called "Reality Love," which is based not on childhood notions of attachment, but on knowledge, care, respect, and value of the other.

The essential background to all you will be doing is a willingness and openness to change. Some of your early therapy sessions will focus on creating a safe climate in which to do this difficult work. In the course of therapy, you will learn new ways to say what is frustrating you, and ask for the behavior that you want. Through all of this, you will be doing exercises designed to re-awaken your feelings of aliveness as well as relearning to laugh and have fun together.

Many couples' problems are rooted in misunderstood, manipulated, or avoided communications. To correct this, you will be introduced to a process of communicating with each other in a safe and effective way. Clear communication is a window into the world of your partner; truly being heard is a powerful aphrodisiac.

Now we come to the heart of the matter: in a conscious relationship we agree to change in order to give our partner what s/he needs. This is a radical idea. Conventional wisdom says that people don't change, that we should simply learn to accept each other as we are. But without change, there is no growth; we are confined to a fate, to remaining stuck in our unhappiness.

Change is the catalyst for healing. In changing to give our partners what they need, we heal our own wounds. Our own behavior was born in response to our particular deprivations; it is our adaptation to loss. In giving our partners what is hardest for us to give, we have to bring our hidden selves out into the light, owning traits we've repressed (rather than projecting them onto our partners), and enlivening atrophied parts of ourselves. When we change our behavior in response to our mate, we heal our partner and ourselves.

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An Example . . .

Here is an example of how this two-way healing works. Let's say that when your partner was a child, the mother was hospitalized, and was unable to give her child (your partner) much emotional support when she returned home. In this situation of powerlessness, your partner might have developed a fear of being abandoned, attended by a fear of being ignored. These fears would have gone "underground" into the unconscious, only to be expressed outwardly as clutching, dependent, attention-seeking behavior. Unless these behaviors were resolved later in childhood, they would show up in your relationship, and be a source of irritation and frustration for you. As you come to know your partner's history through this safe communication process, you will understand that these behaviors, though triggered by something you might do, actually have their roots in your partner's childhood. Rather than feeling angry or blamed, you will become more empathic.

But it would also be safe to assume that you have trouble dealing with this clutching or jealous behavior, and that you are emotionally distant and unsupportive of your partner. We could assume this because, according to Imago theory, your partner has an unconscious desire to change a person who is emotionally abandoning into a person who is emotionally close. One of the reasons your partner selected you is because you possess these required negative traits. Your own emotional distance is probably your way of coping with some childhood pain caused by emotional smothering, and you naturally defend yourself against a recurrence of the experience. However, if you could see that your reaction serves no purpose in the present situation, but instead is distancing you from your partner, you would be willing to drop this childhood defense and try a new approach which brings you closer together. Overcoming your fear and resistance to acting in this uncomfortable and unfamiliar way, you would grow to a new level of wholeness through accessing your denied affectionateness and emotionality. In the course of healing your partner's wound, in this case, the need for closeness--you would heal your own tendency to withdraw emotionally, and your partnership would transcend its former limitations.

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Reclaiming Ourselves

Change rarely comes easily; it requires great courage. Awakening traits long buried, traits both feared and hated while, learning new and uncomfortable behaviors can cause tremendous anxiety. As long as we hate ourselves for having repressed traits, we cannot believe that our partners can love us as we truly are. We are trapped in our own lie. But when we stop projecting our disowned traits-- anger, stinginess, sexual inhibition--onto our partners, and take responsibility for them, we see that our partners can accept us as we are.

I call the process by which we alter our entrenched behaviors to give our partners what they need stretching, for it requires that we conquer our fears, do what comes unnaturally, and move beyond our accustomed beliefs and behaviors to access long-dormant parts of ourselves. Our resistance reflects our defenses. Often we may feel that we're losing ourselves but we are not ourselves now; it is in the crucible of change that we regain ourselves.

Over the course of time, as our partners demonstrate their love for us, as they learn about and accept our hidden selves, and as we stretch to love our partners, our pain and self-absorption diminishes. We restore our empathic feelings for our partners, and our feelings of connection to the other that were lost in the pain of our childhood. Finally we learn to see our partners for themselves, with their own private world of personal meaning, their own ideas and dreams, and not merely as extensions of ourselves, or as we wish they were. We no longer say, “You liked that awful movie?” but rather "Tell me why you liked that movie. I want to know how you think."

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Learning to Love

The barrier to love is self-hatred. When it breaks down, in the course of dialoguing with our partner and in stretching to meet each others' needs, we see that we can be ourselves and still be loved. Finally, we can relax; everything is all right.

A conscious relationship has tremendous potential to correct the distortions created by our early caretakers and socialization. It is a spiritual path which leads us home again, to joy and aliveness, to the feeling of oneness we started out with. All through the course of Imago Relationship Therapy, you will be learning to express love as a behavior daily, in large and small ways: in other words, in stretching to give your partner what s/he needs, you learn to love. The transformation of your relationship may not be accomplished easily or quickly; you are setting off on a lifelong journey. In order to have a different relationship, you need something different. Your experience in Imago Relationship Therapy can be that something.

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For more information on counseling or workshops . . .

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Upcoming Events with Rick Brown - Relationship Therapist

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Rick Brown
Executive Director
1133 Louisiana Ave
Suite 209
Winter Park, FL 32789
(p) 407.644.3537

Comments from Workshop Attendees

Comments from
Workshop Attendees

“Life Changing Experience!”
Tim Kelly –
Retired, Greenville, SC

 

“This experience saved our marriage by allowing me to understand my husband’s affair and forgive him for it.”
Vivian Fulk-
Computer Programmer, King, NC

 

“May God bless you and keep you safe to help others succeed in life.”
Pamela Arthur -
Medical Practice Consultant, Lawrenceville, GA

 

“Thank you for who you are and what you do. I can feel it – you know it and live it and love it.”Cindy Cartee –
Private Practice, Spartanburg, SC

 

“Give you the way to really live.”Lynn Bennett –
Nurse, Greenville, SC

 

“For me this seminar was truly transformative. I am leaving a different and better person and partner.”
Tom Bennett –
Process Engineering, Greenville, SC

 

“Logan and I have been through many hardships then most married couples even though we have only been together for one year. The relationship was bad to start off with but has gotten better as the year passed and coming here has helped us learn a lot better communication skills, and work together toward a relationship we both desire.”
Lauren Lorick –
Working College Student,
Columbia, SC

 

“Rick Brown is the voice of a generation!”
Logan Galloway,
Columbia, SC

 

“Can’t describe how impressed we both were. We needed this. A lot of friends and relatives do to. Thanks!”
Doug McElleen –
Auto Dealer, Summerville, SC

 

“Worth every penny, you can’t put a price tag on saving your relationship, especially if you have children.”
Kimberly Reed –
Nurse, Clermont, FL

 

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Singer/Actor for Epcot/Disney World, Clermont, FL

 

“This should be a requirement before getting a marriage license AND before having children.”
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Housewife, Palm Beach, FL

 

“All married couples should be required to take this course.”Sabrina Williams,
Contracts Manager, Germantown, MD

 

“The insight gained from this workshop have made me a better human being and have renewed my potential for being a positve partner in a healthy relationship.”Leslie Moore –
High School English Teacher,
Lusby, MD

 

“Although I’m uncertain the direction of my marriage, I do know the exercises learned her will be beneficial for me in the future. I would recommend this to people before they get married.”Jennifer L Wolfinger –
Dental Hygienist, Richmond, VA

 

“Excellent Presentation. Thanks for a great leaving experience. Rick was a great presenter.”
John Holland-
Lawyer, Washington, DC

 

“This workshop will transform our relationship!!”
Jeanne Oliver –
Operations Director, Reston, VA

 

“I am so glad we chose to do this for our potential counseling. These are sills that we will be able to use throughout our entire marriage.”Amanda Mashburn –
Speech Language Pathologist,
Raleigh, NC

 

“Non-threatening look at the stuff in all of us that needs to change.”Douglas Hill –
Accountant, Lemoyue, PA

 

“I hope to use the things I’ve learned this weekend to improve my relationship and keep it moving forward in a positive direction.”Kathy Dawson –
Pharmacist, Groveland, FL

 

“An amazing gift for a couple to experience!”
Holly Bennett –
Private Practice,
Palm Beach Gardens, FL

 

“A fun filled way to focus on your most important relationship.”Susan Montanez-
Sales Manager, Longwood, FL

 

“You have been giving this workshop for a long time and bring terrific experience but avoid burn out.”
Rick Walderbant,
Tampa, FL

 

“The world would be a better place if everyone knew how to mirror.”
Cathy Muzzio-
Insurance Agency Owner,
Palm Beach Gardens, FL

 

“A must for all!!! This is life changing!!”
Tom Muzzio –
Baker owner,
Palm Beach Gardens, FL

 

“Rick Brown’s experience both personal and professional with marriages is so insightful. All the while he’s presenting one feels he is speaking about you. He humorously and gently invited you to discover that which will truly transform your marriage. This workshop should be part of marriage license requirements and I am confident divorce rates in America would decrease significantly.”
Lina Bergouignan –
Conscious Discipline Instructor,
Miami, FL

 

“Every couple in a serious relationship, regardless of age or state of their relationship, needs to attend this course and learn what they can’t know without it!”Larry Sille –
High Tech Developer, Melbourne, FL

 

“Just when you feel there is no hope left in your Relationships – come to this seminar and give it a go!”
Vivian Sieqel –
Artist, Cocoa Beach, FL

 

“Highly recommended. Presents a new outlook on marriage, relationships and life!”
Stuart Cohen –
Electrical Engineer, Cedar Grove, NJ

 

“An enlightening, life-changing experience!”
Linda Coleman –
Realtor, Indialantic, FL

 

“Workshop is well suited and applicable to couples of all walks of life that are willing to open themselves up to a better relationship.”
Jon Kish –
CIO Computer Technology,
Merritt Island, FL

 

“I came to this workshop with the anticipation of moving out of my home soon after; however, after this 2-day workshop, I am excited about re-imaging my partner and fulfilling our most basic desire…to be relaxed and joyful.”
Heidi Hughes –
Business Owner, Cape Canaveral, FL

 

“The workshop is a precious gift that all couples deserve to have an opportunity of experiencing!”Meghana Tembe –
Clinical Psychologist, Fairfax, VA

 

“This workshop is a must for anybody who has a burning desire to create a special and lasting relationship.”
Abhi Gore –
IT Manger, Fairfax, VA

 

“Probably saved our marriage. Should be required for all couples those in crisis.”
Reuben Brigety –
Scholar/Consultant, Alexandria, VA

 

“I came just to satisfy my wife, however, I fell I have learned some very useful family skills. I realized there is no right and wrong in relationships, but just taking time to listen without a response.”
Richard Aiello –
Contractor, Union Bridge, MD

 

“Great Experience. I love the positive energy this creates.”
Susan Houston –
Director of Governance, Bethesda, MD

 

“These two days have given us the opportunity to start our relationship over the new eyes, new ears and hopefully new hearts.”
Scott Houston –
Electronics Tech Security,
Bethesda, MD

 

“I was nervous about attending but the experience was really memorable and helpful. I am looking forward to putting into practice what we learned.”
Steve Reed –
Banker, Rockville, MD

 

“This workshop has given me the tools to create a successful marriage. I’m truly appreciative of all the insight and tactics employed.”
Yasmin Ode –
Pharmaceutical Sales Rep, Miami, FL

 

“Very happy we came. I truly didn’t think we would remain married. I feel we will now. Bill and I will continue with an imago Counselor when we return home. I feel we will now have our dream marriage now.”
Ellen Huey –
Teacher, Lakeland, FL

 

“My fiancé and I recommend this seminar to any couple that wants to avoid the pitfalls and pair of past relationships.”
Joe Castrofort –
Attorney, Orlando, FL

 

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Human Resource Coordinator, Orlando, FL

 

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Dentist, Dover, DE

 

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Julia Pillsbury –
Pediatrician, Dover, DE

 

“The Getting the Love You Want Workshop by Rick Brown should become the cornerstone and foundation for all couples looking for life long growth and happiness together.”
Caroline Baker –
Marketing Director, Owings, MD

 

“I had no idea coming into this program that I would leave feeling so happy and hopeful about our future and knowing that I am with the right person after 25 years.”
Patricia Dunn –
Management Consultant,
Washington DC

 

“I came into the seminar really not thinking it could do much to help our relationship. I was wrong! It gave us the insight and tools we need to grow together in a mature and happy way.”
Douglas Green –
Attorney, Washington, DC

 

“The weekend was well organized, and an intensive insight into our relationships and us. I feel more hopeful about my relationship and I am more comfortable going home.”
Stephanie Harvey-
Chiropractor,
Bolton, Ontario, Canada

 

“I think this workshop is good for all married couples. It does not matter your race, location or economic situation. The tools and techniques you learn will benefit you marital situation.”
Christopher Bell –
Lawyer, Washington, DC

 

“Rick has great energy and speaks not only from education but also from personal experience. Highly recommend this workshop!”
Ron Grant –
Engineer, Arden, NC

 

“I have never really felt heard until this weekend. When I came here I thought there was no way James and I would ever get along or be right for each other. I now know that we are exactly what each other needs and what was missing in our lives. Now I know how to get those needs met. I feel renewed and rejuvenated about my relationship.”
Beverly Branch –
Nurse, New Port Richey, FL

 

“Rick Brown is a leader, his work supports our community by helping us have strong relationships, foundations of families is also strengthened.”
Joanna Marqueros –
Therapist, Alfany, CA

 

“I am so grateful to have attended this session; it will open many doors for us and help us to move our relationship forward. Thank you!”
Tiffany Irwin –
Pharmacist, Greenville, SC

 

“The workshop provided us with the tools we needed to help us communicate with each other.”David DeCorlis –
Sales, Greenville, SC

 

“I believe that anyone willing to try can truly experience an empathy twist would floor even the biggest hearts. Don’t miss the opportunity.”
James Puckett,
Greenville, SC

 

“Rick made it easy to learn and understand, even the toughest things to hear!”
Alyssa Berman –
Marketing, San Francisco, CA

 

“If wild horses can’t drag you to this workshop, surrender to experience because you may be very pleasantly surprised and will probably learn about yourself and how to communicate more meaningfully with your loved ones.”
Paul Tuff –
Teacher, Salinas, CA

 

“Every couple would benefit from attending this workshop.”
Kim Kingswold –
Computer Programmer, Salinas, CA

 

“Really enjoyed the way Rick taught me to mirror and stop and smell the roses. But the biggest thing for me was how to communicate to my kids and wife. He told stories of himself that could have been me.”
Gary Dixon –
Union Rep/ Official,
Anchorage, Alaska

 

“I look forward to using these tools to form a deeper, committed, lasting relationship. Thank you!”
Ed Thompson –
Project mgr/ College Prof.,
Common Park, CA

 

“Really simple and revolutionary – I feel hopeful in myself, my partner and our relationship.”Catherine Lerza –
Philanthropic Advisor, Berkley, CA

 

“Thank you Rick, I learned much and enjoyed the time in your class. I think this was a great investment in our marriage and w myself.”April Jacob –
PA-C, San Francisco, CA

 

“A workshop every couple should & needs to attend.”
Jason Formenti –
Multi Finc. Analyst,
Highlands Ranch, CO

 

“Amazing experience, I feel a sense of revival with my husband. Rick is a very inspirational teacher.”
Nicole Formenti –
Teacher, Highlands Ranch, CO

 

“So valuable to take a chance in a safe place- I trusted your implicitly. You make me laugh. You make me cry. I believe what you said and offered.”
Gail Ostrow –
Community Activist & Educator, Bridgeport, CT

 

“Excellent workshop that can open even the most stubborn eyes.”
Mica Beving –
Architect, Ventura, CA

 

“Concepts learned improve self-understanding and gives you tools and insight for more effective communication, interaction and living- not just as it relates to significant other but with all creatures.”
Marcelo Lescaud –
Attorney, Delray Beach, FL

 

“I wish I had known about this workshop 27 years ago- it would have saved us both a lot of pain and bought us years of happiness, fulfillment and connection.”
Debi Duckett –
Attorney, Delray Beach, FL

 

“Thank you so much for all you do. It is an inspiration to see that there are ways to make it work! I am very excited to get started on being a better wife and mother.”Vanessa Carvajal –
Housewife, Miami, FL

 

“I recommend this program to any couple who is interested in saving their relationship as they grow themselves.”
Steven Asarch –
Attorney, Boca Raton, FL

 

“I learned so much about myself and my relationship. I am so excited to start a life with my future wife. (March 14, 2009 – Til I rest).”
Daniel Laubacher –
Developer, Pointe Vedra, FL

 

“Gave me great tools to save and strengthen my relationship with the most important person in my life, my wife.”
Kevin Jones-
Sales, Windermere, FL

 

“This workshop has renewed my faith in love and relationships. It was a truly heartfelt that I will never foregut- My sincerest thanks for your time and devotion.”
Billie Frohlich-
Firefighter/Paramedic, Cape Coral, FL

 

“I have fallen in love and started relationships many times in my 50+ years – Rick taught me how to appreciate the gift God gave me with Jack and how to grow into love and not run…Priceless.”
Marna Cogswell-
Retired, Sarasota, FL