

"Love as a verb isn't dependent on how you feel or even what you think.

"Love as a feeling is ephemeral and goes away when circumstances change," Hendrix says. While he speaks, his wife, Helen Hunt (not that Helen Hunt-this one helps run their seminars and has coauthored several books with him), listens intently (she and Hendrix were "the living laboratory" for their theories, she interjects) and occasionally touches his arm. It's a behavior in which the welfare of another person is the primary intention and goal." "Real love," says Hendrix, looking slightly professorial in a plum-colored sweater, "is a verb. Not only isn't love a feeling-love isn't even an it. We might want to rethink that, says Harville Hendrix, PhD, a groundbreaking marital therapist. In any event, it's one hell of a feeling, right? How nearly the author has accomplished her purpose to give to the public in one volume a clear and complete treatise on this subject, combining many fine qualities of importance to the reader, the intelligent and experienced public must decide.Ask anyone about love and they'll give you an opinion: It's written in the stars. Great pains have been taken to make this work superior in its arrangement and finish and in the general tastefulness of its mechanical execution. Her design in the preparation of this story is to give to the public a sketch of her ideas on the effect of “true love.” I have tried to make the plot exciting without being sensational or common, although within the bounds of proper romance, and create a set of characters most of whom are like real people with whose thoughts and passions we are able to sympathize and whose language and conduct may be appreciable or reprehensible according to circumstances. The author is aware that she is entering a field which has been diligently cultivated by the best minds in Europe and America. Download cover art Download CD case insert True Love: A Story of English Domestic Life
