The 3 Most Powerful Questions to Bring Back Trust, Intimacy and Love to a Dead Marriage

The 3 Most Powerful Questions to Bring Back Trust, Intimacy and Love to a Dead Marriage
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

MEDICAL DISCLAIMER: DO NOT ATTEMPT THIS IF YOU HAVE HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE, HEART DISEASE OR ARE PRONE TO STROKES

More often than not, the truth can set you free, but sometimes it can kill you if you can't take it. And this might be one of those times.

What you're about to read and try is likely to blow such a big hole through you and your spouse's denial that your relationship may not survive. And truly, if you have one of the above conditions, it actually could kill you. On the other hand, it has a very good chance of bringing back trust, intimacy and love that has been dormant rather than dead for decades. If it does that, one or both of you are likely to begin convulsing -- and I am serious -- as you reawaken it.

Desperate times call for desperate measures.

As I looked out at the marital and relationship landscape I saw at first the leak and then the hemorrhaging of trust, intimacy and love out of them. I saw relationships have all the relating leave them and turn into arrangements. I saw couples who didn't want that to happen but had no way to stop it and now way to bring back the trust, love and intimacy.

The tragedy of something that could have been preventable or retrievable has caused me to search for an elixir and antidote.

And here it is.

The 3 Most Powerful Questions

To do this, you will find a private and quiet place to ask them of each other looking deeply and intently into each other eyes with a sincere desire to hear what the other person says. When they respond, you will not react, become defensive or take what they say personally, but rather you will see them as finally getting something off their chest that has been weighing them down and pulling them away from relating to you for a long time.

When you are set to start, flip a coin and the winner gets to go first asking them of your partner or having your partner ask you for you to answer. If you are the one answering the questions, provide both answers and instances to further explain and do not hold anything back.

  1. What have you been most disappointed about regarding me, yourself and us during our marriage? Explain and give me some examples.
  2. In each case did you feel more hurt or more anger and how much? Explain and give me some examples.
  3. What did you do about it and what do you now want to do about it? Explain and give me some examples.

Simple but incredibly daunting questions.

If you are to afraid to ask them or answer them, you don't have to, but your relationship in which you have already grown apart will continue to do so and no amount of buying things, having children, collecting pets or just frenetically keeping busy will stop it.

You can still continue in it, but you know as well as I do that loving and liking each other will have died and your relationship will have become an arrangement and at best a marriage of convenience.

Resources: If you have done this exercise and reached this point, some additional resources:

Popular in the Community

Close

HuffPost Shopping’s Best Finds

MORE IN LIFE