Review of Learn to Love: Guide to Healing Your Disappointing Love Life
Posted: 07 Sep 2021, 04:05
[Following is a volunteer review of "Learn to Love: Guide to Healing Your Disappointing Love Life" by Thomas Jordan, Ph.D..]
Love and grief are two of the most strenuous but natural emotional responses. This is how the book begins, with the author asking and quickly providing the rationale as part of his metacognitive strategies to pique his readers' interest. How did the inviting introductory write-up help you assume the book's context? This book is about how and what we will learn about love relationships, as well as a powerful approach for dealing with the underlying causes of love life disappointments. This will be extremely beneficial to those in the rehabilitation process who are seeking advice and desperately hoping to reenact an unhealthy, toxic relationship. Are you going through a period of constant disappointments in your love life? Are you not in control of your relationships? Want to get through it? Go and read this book to witness how this guide works.
This book entitled Learn to Love: A Guide to Healing Your Disappointing Love Life is a helpful guide that will assist you in revamping and recreating your current unhappy relationship. Those who have had replicated love life disappointments will find this book initially assumed. I've seen a lot of good things as a result of finishing the book. It is merely a depiction of rediscovering your own worth while living your life in the dark about the connection you are making. I associate with the book because I am one of Thomas Jordan's target readers. As someone in a dysfunctional relationship, it is extremely crucial to reevaluate and broaden your perspective on the idea of love and how to safeguard yourself at all costs. I concur with the author when he asserts that our love lives are more than just the people we have loved and continue to love. Our love life is also shaped and determined by what is inside us, which shapes and defines the types of relationships we form and the experiences we will or will not have in love. The author's endeavor in aligning the measures he offers for unhealthy love life is commendable.
Loving is innate, and nobody can halt us from feeling it on our own. When it applies to acknowledging the love and handling love life frustrations, everyone has their own treatment and approach. However, I eventually notice that because of the author's horrific experiences and the firsthand accounts he encountered from his prior clients, this creation appears to instruct everyone not to express the love sensations that we all hold openly. Gratefully, he regained my adulation when, on page 89, he conclusively proved that it is our love lives that are at stake, and it all depends on us. It is reasonable to love and feel the energy as long as you know your value and learn how to deal with love life disappointments.
Love is a proactive subject matter, and reading this guidebook is captivating. It is very educational and has ventured into comprehensive clinical studies that really help individuals engage with toxic relationships. I give this book 3 out of 4 stars because it makes me feel relieved after reading it; the author's intent has been satisfactorily conferred on me to primarily know the cornerstones I need to integrate into my mind; however, I find it to be quite long and complicated to peruse at points of time, and some of the terms specified are quite abstract.
I recommend the book to anyone who has suffered or is currently struggling in an unstable relationship, as well as anyone who wants to learn further about love and how to seek and uphold a stable relationship. This is a book that everyone should read because it is an interesting discussion that everyone should appreciate. Love can hang tight for our young adults, and in hopes of avoiding being engaged in the aforementioned horrific events, be cognizant. Let’s all live in harmony and full of happiness.
******
Learn to Love: Guide to Healing Your Disappointing Love Life
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon
Love and grief are two of the most strenuous but natural emotional responses. This is how the book begins, with the author asking and quickly providing the rationale as part of his metacognitive strategies to pique his readers' interest. How did the inviting introductory write-up help you assume the book's context? This book is about how and what we will learn about love relationships, as well as a powerful approach for dealing with the underlying causes of love life disappointments. This will be extremely beneficial to those in the rehabilitation process who are seeking advice and desperately hoping to reenact an unhealthy, toxic relationship. Are you going through a period of constant disappointments in your love life? Are you not in control of your relationships? Want to get through it? Go and read this book to witness how this guide works.
This book entitled Learn to Love: A Guide to Healing Your Disappointing Love Life is a helpful guide that will assist you in revamping and recreating your current unhappy relationship. Those who have had replicated love life disappointments will find this book initially assumed. I've seen a lot of good things as a result of finishing the book. It is merely a depiction of rediscovering your own worth while living your life in the dark about the connection you are making. I associate with the book because I am one of Thomas Jordan's target readers. As someone in a dysfunctional relationship, it is extremely crucial to reevaluate and broaden your perspective on the idea of love and how to safeguard yourself at all costs. I concur with the author when he asserts that our love lives are more than just the people we have loved and continue to love. Our love life is also shaped and determined by what is inside us, which shapes and defines the types of relationships we form and the experiences we will or will not have in love. The author's endeavor in aligning the measures he offers for unhealthy love life is commendable.
Loving is innate, and nobody can halt us from feeling it on our own. When it applies to acknowledging the love and handling love life frustrations, everyone has their own treatment and approach. However, I eventually notice that because of the author's horrific experiences and the firsthand accounts he encountered from his prior clients, this creation appears to instruct everyone not to express the love sensations that we all hold openly. Gratefully, he regained my adulation when, on page 89, he conclusively proved that it is our love lives that are at stake, and it all depends on us. It is reasonable to love and feel the energy as long as you know your value and learn how to deal with love life disappointments.
Love is a proactive subject matter, and reading this guidebook is captivating. It is very educational and has ventured into comprehensive clinical studies that really help individuals engage with toxic relationships. I give this book 3 out of 4 stars because it makes me feel relieved after reading it; the author's intent has been satisfactorily conferred on me to primarily know the cornerstones I need to integrate into my mind; however, I find it to be quite long and complicated to peruse at points of time, and some of the terms specified are quite abstract.
I recommend the book to anyone who has suffered or is currently struggling in an unstable relationship, as well as anyone who wants to learn further about love and how to seek and uphold a stable relationship. This is a book that everyone should read because it is an interesting discussion that everyone should appreciate. Love can hang tight for our young adults, and in hopes of avoiding being engaged in the aforementioned horrific events, be cognizant. Let’s all live in harmony and full of happiness.
******
Learn to Love: Guide to Healing Your Disappointing Love Life
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon