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Divorce - General & Miscellaneous, Parenting - General & Miscellaneous, Divorce, Love & Romance, Social Interactions in Relationships, Marriage - General & Miscellaneous, Relationships - Interpersonal
Direct Answers: Frank Answers to Relationship Questions by Wayne Mitchell β€” book cover

Direct Answers: Frank Answers to Relationship Questions

by Wayne Mitchell, Tamara Mitchell
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Overview

Since 1999, Wayne and Tamara Mitchell have been answering relationship questions from newspaper readers around the world.

Now they have assembled a collection of their best answers to questions. This book, Direct Answers, is grouped around themes: wanting a relationship, dating, marriage, married with problems, divorce, and beginning again. The book also analyzes common problems like jealousy, cheating and addiction.

Each column contains a real life situation, its solution and the understanding behind the solution. Wayne and Tamara use stories, quotes and analogies to explain the essence of the problem and their answer. By example, each column teaches a concise lesson.

What Wayne and Tamara really teach is an approach to life, and they are willing to point fingers. Too much advice tries to make you take a part in something in which you have no part.

Their approach is illustrated by the following bonus column, which is not found in the book:

Standing Alone

My mother-in-law of 17 years is a nasty, difficult European woman who has been in America for 45 years. I don't know if we're having a culture clash, a personality clash, or both. For starters, in the beginning when my husband and I lived together she called me a whore, then the day after the wedding she asked me to call her mom. I refused.

We've been having loud arguments ever since. This upsets my children, so three years ago I stopped talking to her. It took her two and a half years to figure out that's what I was doing. She causes major marital problems as my husband refuses to protect me from her. He says she's always been that way, so tune her out. That's what he's done since high school.

Well, I can't tune people out. She criticizes my cooking, states I shouldn't have married her son, then denies it all when I confront her. I am considering a divorce over this as I can't live with someone who doesn't support me. Yet I don't want to break up the family.

Marianne

Marianne, G.K. Chesterton wrote, "There are no words to express the abyss between isolation and having one ally. It may be conceded to the mathematician that four is twice two. But two is not twice one; two is two thousand times one."

Sometimes a man doesn't realize a woman values him for his ability to protect her from harm. If the man won't stand up for her, she will lose respect for him. When your husband was growing up, he treated his mother like annoying music on the radio. He couldn't turn her off, so he learned to tune her out.

It's not that he disagrees with you. He knows she's a problem. The dispute is how to react to her bad behavior. A book we recommend is Susan Forward's "Emotional Blackmail ." It is a primer on how to handle annoying people like your mother-in-law.

In countries where women are free to initiate divorce, divorces are usually initiated by women. When a woman gets to the end of her rope, it no longer matters if her husband is finally ready to act. It is as if a switch has been thrown, and there is no turning back.

If your husband doesn't deal with this problem, then he's left the choice up to you. He needs to realize this. The Susan Forward book can help you both, but if he won't confront his mother, then in six months we may get another letter from you. That letter will begin, "I met this man…."

Wayne & Tamara

Synopsis

Since 1999, Wayne and Tamara Mitchell have been answering relationship questions from newspaper readers around the world.

Now they have assembled a collection of their best answers to questions. This book, Direct Answers, is grouped around themes: wanting a relationship, dating, marriage, married with problems, divorce, and beginning again. The book also analyzes common problems like jealousy, cheating and addiction.

Each column contains a real life situation, its solution and the understanding behind the solution. Wayne and Tamara use stories, quotes and analogies to explain the essence of the problem and their answer. By example, each column teaches a concise lesson.

What Wayne and Tamara really teach is an approach to life, and they are willing to point fingers. Too much advice tries to make you take a part in something in which you have no part.

Their approach is illustrated by the following bonus column, which is not found in the book:

Standing Alone

My mother-in-law of 17 years is a nasty, difficult European woman who has been in America for 45 years. I don't know if we're having a culture clash, a personality clash, or both. For starters, in the beginning when my husband and I lived together she called me a whore, then the day after the wedding she asked me to call her mom. I refused.

We've been having loud arguments ever since. This upsets my children, so three years ago I stopped talking to her. It took her two and a half years to figure out that's what I was doing. She causes major marital problems as my husband refuses to protect me from her. He says she's always been that way, so tune her out. That's what he's done since high school.

Well, I can't tune people out. She criticizes my cooking, states I shouldn't have married her son, then denies it all when I confront her. I am considering a divorce over this as I can't live with someone who doesn't support me. Yet I don't want to break up the family.

Marianne

Marianne, G.K. Chesterton wrote, "There are no words to express the abyss between isolation and having one ally. It may be conceded to the mathematician that four is twice two. But two is not twice one; two is two thousand times one."

Sometimes a man doesn't realize a woman values him for his ability to protect her from harm. If the man won't stand up for her, she will lose respect for him. When your husband was growing up, he treated his mother like annoying music on the radio. He couldn't turn her off, so he learned to tune her out.

It's not that he disagrees with you. He knows she's a problem. The dispute is how to react to her bad behavior. A book we recommend is Susan Forward's "Emotional Blackmail ." It is a primer on how to handle annoying people like your mother-in-law.

In countries where women are free to initiate divorce, divorces are usually initiated by women. When a woman gets to the end of her rope, it no longer matters if her husband is finally ready to act. It is as if a switch has been thrown, and there is no turning back.

If your husband doesn't deal with this problem, then he's left the choice up to you. He needs to realize this. The Susan Forward book can help you both, but if he won't confront his mother, then in six months we may get another letter from you. That letter will begin, "I met this man…."

Wayne & Tamara

About the Author, Wayne Mitchell

Direct Answers is the weekly advice column by Wayne and Tamara Mitchell. The column was begun in April 1999 and within two years appeared in newspapers in more than a dozen countries.

When Wayne and Tamara Mitchell began their column in 1999, it was with the intent of answering each letter in a way that gives the reader deeper understanding. As they have often said, they intend to help people become students of relationships, so they can answer their own questions.

Each column is 650 words long, and Wayne and Tamara don't waste words. That is why there is no 'Dear Wayne and Tamara' and no 'We care.'
Dispensing with extra words allows the reader to get a better feel for the letter writer, and it allows the reader to think about the letter, form an opinion, and consider how they might answer. The letters are like the case histories used to study law or business.

Dispensing with extra words gives Wayne and Tamara extra room for their direct answer. Often they use an example, a metaphor, or a nursery rhyme to drive a point home. Or they may quote a line from writers as diverse as T.S. Eliot, Stephen King, or Joshua Slocum.

The name of the letter writer is always changed, and usually there is no mention of city, state, or country. Trouble is the same everywhere. The letters read as if they came from your next-door neighbor, and they might have. Or they might have come from Australia, South Africa, or Spain.

There is a voyeuristic quality to the letters, but what is that voyeurism except a chance to learn? Reading each letter is like sticking your hand into a box of unknown contents. When you confront the letter writer's problem, you learn what the box contains, and consider how you might deal with it.

That is what advice is all aboutβ€”turning the advice over in your mind and deciding if it makes sense to you. You decide if it touches you or not. You decide if it really offers help, or if it is just the same old thing with no understanding behind it.

That is how you determine the quality of the advice giver.

Reviews

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Editorials

Lorenz Plourde

Wayne and Tamara shoot from the hip with direct, no-nonsense answers to a wide range of relationship questions that are as informative as they are entertaining.

Mark Hinchliffe

We have been publishing your column since you started...keep up the good work!

Pat Gaudette

Their advice is always right on target.

Sara Blue Butler

Wayne and Tamara Mitchell, authors of the popular syndicated weekly advice column, "Direct Answers from Wayne & Tamara," have recently published a new book about relationships. This book just might be the cheapest therapy session you ever had!

Susan Bray

I could talk to these people for hours.

Book Details

Published
November 25, 2010
Publisher
Purcell and Morrissey
ISBN
9780966122046

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