THE FIVE LOVE LANGUAGES A book by Gary Chapman. IMPORTANCE OF LOVE Isolation Solitary Confinement...
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Transcript of THE FIVE LOVE LANGUAGES A book by Gary Chapman. IMPORTANCE OF LOVE Isolation Solitary Confinement...
THE FIVE LOVE
LANGUAGESA book by
Gary Chapman
IMPORTANCE OF LOVE• Isolation• Solitary
Confinement• Marriage designed
to meet need for intimacy & love.
EMOTIONAL TANK• Needs to be filled with
love.• Then will grow &
develop normally• If tank is empty, will
misbehave.
• Key – figuring out how to fill your mate’s emotional tank.
• Learn to speak their language.
FALLING IN LOVE• First meet• “Love Alert” system goes
off• Become emotionally
obsessed• Under illusion all is perfect
AND THEN...• Romantic obsession
lasts about 2 years• Reality sets in• Must learn to love mate• So, love is a rational
volitional choice
LOVE IS...The object of love is not
getting something you want but doing something for the well-being of the one you love.
Love grows and develops. It is a process more than a product.
FIRST TRUTH• Actions before marriage
aren’t the same as after marriage• Before marriage – “in-
love obsession”• After marriage –
influenced by our parents, personality, perceptions, personal needs, etc.
SECOND TRUTH
Love is a choice and cannot be coerced.
LOVE IS A CHOICELove doesn’t keep a score of
wrongs.Can’t change past. Just confess & ask for
forgiveness.The partner has the option of
justice or forgiveness.
LOVE IS A CHOICEChoose justice = getting revenge = no
intimacy
ORChoose forgiveness = restored
intimacyForgiveness is:
A feelingA choiceExpression of love
THIRD TRUTH
Listen to your partner’s criticisms for a clue about their language.
THE FIVE LOVE LANGUAGESWords of AffirmationQuality TimeReceiving GiftsActs of ServicePhysical Touch
Words of Affirmation Verbal compliments, words of
appreciation, and encouraging words are powerful communicators of love.
They are best expressed in simple, straightforward statements of affirmation.
Words of Affirmation Encouragement requires empathy
and seeing the world from your loved one’s perspective.
If we are to develop an intimate relationship, we need to know each other’s desires. If we wish to love each other, we need to know what the other person wants.
Words of Affirmation Love makes requests, not demands. Requests affirm your loved one’s
worth and abilities. You are in essence indicating that she has something or can do something that is meaningful and worthwhile to you.
However, when you make demands, you become a tyrant. Your loved one will feel belittled.
Words of Affirmation Requests imply choice. Your partner
may choose to respond to your request or to deny it, because love is always a choice. That’s what makes it meaningful.
To know my partner loves me enough to respond to one of my requests communicates emotionally that I am cared for, respected, admired, and he/she wants to please me.
Words of Affirmation If a partner complies to a demand, it
is an act of fear or guilt or some other emotion, but not love.
Thus, requests create the possibility for an expression of love, whereas a demand suffocates that possibility.
When we receive affirming words we are far more likely to be motivated to reciprocate.
Quality Time Wanting attention, focus on me, give me
time, do things with me. Togetherness not just proximity but
focused, undivided attention. Not watching TV together…, but taking long walks…
Includes quality conversations - a sympathetic dialogue where two individuals are sharing their experiences, thoughts, feelings, and desires in a friendly, uninterrupted context.
Seek to understand and sympathize, not to solve their problems.
Quality Time - Listening Tips Maintain eye contact. Don’t listen while doing
something else at the same time.
Listen for feelings. Observe body language. Refuse to interrupt.
Quality Time Quality conversation requires not only
sympathetic listening but also self-revelation.
Must be able to express what you are thinking and feeling. Difficult for some people because of how they grew up. Also depends on personality types. For example the “Dead Sea” and the “Babbling Brook”.
Quality Time
At least one of you wants to do it The other is willing to do it Both of you know why you are doing
it -- to express love by being together
Essential ingredients in a quality activity are:
One of the by-products of quality activities is that they provide a memory bank from which to draw in the years ahead.
Receiving Gifts Gifts are visual symbols of love. These
symbols are more important to some people that others. For example: differing attitudes to wearing wedding rings.
Gifts come in all sizes, colors, and shapes.
Gifts can be purchased, found, or made. May require a change in attitude about
money - spending vs. saving.
Receiving Gifts Physical presence in the time of
crisis is the most powerful gift you can give if your partner’s primary love language is receiving gifts.
Acts of Service Doing things you know your partner
would like you to do. You seek to please him/her by serving them, to express you love by doing things for them.
Examples: cooking, cleaning, painting a bedroom, maintaining the car…
They require thought, planning, time, effort, and energy. If done with a positive spirit, they are indeed expressions of love.
Acts of Service Acts of service can be negative if they
are coerced by fear (You will do this or you will be sorry” or manipulated by guilt (“If you were a good partner, you would do this for me”). These will lead to resentment.
Acts of service may mean overcoming stereotypes of traditional gender roles.
Physical Touch Numerous research studies have shown
the importance of physical touch, especially in child development.
Physical touch can make or break a relationship. It can communicate hate or love.
Holding hands, kissing, embracing, cuddling, and sexual intercourse are all ways of communicating emotional love. Must discuss which touches bring physical pleasure and which are irritating and annoying. (Blowing in ear.)
Physical Touch In time of crisis, more than anything, we
need to feel loved. We cannot always change events, but we can survive if we feel loved.
If your partner’s primary love language is physical touch, nothing is more important than holding them as they cry. Words may mean little, but tender touches will be remembered long after the crisis has past. Failure to touch may never be forgotten.
Physical Touch Many males automatically assume that
physical touch is their primary love language because their desire for sexual intercourse has a physical root.
But if he doesn’t enjoy physical touch at other times and in nonsexual ways, it may not be his love language at all.
Sexual desire is quite different from the emotional need to feel loved.
Physical Touch For females, sexual desire is
emotionally based. If she feels loved and admired and appreciated by her husband, then she has a desire to be physically intimate with him.
Most sexual problems in marriage have little to do with physical technique but everything to do with meeting emotional needs.
DISCOVERING YOUR PRIMARY LOVE LANGUAGE What makes you feel most loved? What do you desire above all else? What does your partner do or say or fail
to do or say that hurts you deeply? What have you most requested of your
partner? How do you express your love to your
partner? If I could have the ideal partner, what
would they be like?
ASSIGNMENT
Write down your primary love language and tell what led you to that conclusion.
List the other four languages in order of importance.
NOTE: It is possible to be bilingual.
THE FIVE LOVE LANGUAGESWords of AffirmationQuality TimeReceiving GiftsActs of ServicePhysical Touch