Want to Take the Future of Your Marriage into Your OWN Hands?

Many women are unhappy in their marriage and feel hopeless because they can’t get their husband to work on the relationship.

At Strong Women, Strong Love, we’re committed to showing you how to use your own power to turn your marriage around, with or without his cooperation.

When you know what YOU can do to rekindle love, you will relax knowing you’re not leaving the most important relationship of your life completely up to chance.

You’re a strong woman who deserves an equally-strong love. Let’s show you how!

Hello, I’m Dr. Poonam Sharma. As a psychologist practicing for over 25 years, it breaks my heart to watch strong, capable women like you struggling with your marriage.

I know the stakes are incredibly high. No one goes into a marriage thinking they may end up in divorce court one day. And yet, we know that many marriages struggle, and women are usually the ones to call it quits.

At Strong Women, Strong Love, my goal is to show you exactly where to target your energy, so that you’re not guessing about how to keep the love and passion alive in your marriage. I’ve been personally trained by many of the leading marriage experts in the world. They have already discovered the essential keys to building the strong and happy relationship you desire.

Read my book, explore the blog, and take matters into your own hands. With the right information and your strong will, you can defy the odds and get your marriage back on track.

You deserve a relationship where you feel cherished, appreciated and fully supported by your husband. Let me show you how!

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Take Time for Joy This Summer

This blog can get heavy. We talk about serious issues in marriage. Things like affairs, infertility and separation.

Not today, though.

Today I just want you to find a way to lighten things up.

The weight of all our daily tasks and worries can wear us down — even when we think that they’re no big deal. Have you ever read the “How heavy is your glass of water?” story. The point of it is that we all have to put down our burdens sometimes.

Now that we’re in the heart of summer, maybe there’s some extra space for you to do this. If the pace of your work life and family life is a little slower right now, don’t rush to fill that freed-up time with things from your to-do list. Your world won’t fall apart if you take a break from being responsible and mature. Really.

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How Your Brain Reveals Your Love Story

It might not sound romantic, but Helen Fisher has love down to a science.

Fisher is a biological anthropologist and a scientific advisor to Match.com. She and her fellow researchers have spent a lot of time using MRI scanners to look at the brains of people in love.

While all of Fisher’s work is fascinating, her findings about people in long-term relationships who report that they’re still in love are especially intriguing. We usually think of new love as the most exciting and swoon-worthy. But the brains of Fisher’s subjects — mostly n their 50’s and married an average of 21 years— clearly showed their passion still burning.

“Psychologists maintain that the dizzying feeling of intense romantic love lasts only about 18 months to—at best—three years. Yet the brains of these middle-aged men and women showed much the same activity as those of young lovers, individuals who had been intensely in love an average of only seven months,” Fisher writes in O Magazine.

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Why Does Marriage Get Worse After Kids?

Did your relationship go downhill after your kids arrived? You’re far from alone.

Author and psychology professor Matthew D. Johnson doesn’t mince words about it:

For around 30 years, researchers have studied how having children affects a marriage, and the results are conclusive: the relationship between spouses suffers once kids come along. Comparing couples with and without children, researchers found that the rate of the decline in relationship satisfaction is nearly twice as steep for couples who have children than for childless couples. In the event that a pregnancy is unplanned, the parents experience even greater negative impacts on their relationship.

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