Tough Times Need Tough Marriages:
Ways to Improve Your Relationship in a Recession
A Seminar in 4 parts
Wednesdays, Sep 16, 23, 30 and Oct 7
7:00 to 8:30 pm
Taught by Kate S Evans, LCPC and Stephanie Nelson-Gerhardt, LMFT
@ Panera Bread meeting room
154 West Wilson St
Batavia, Il 60510
Everything is a challenge nowadays. We can’t afford what we used to take for granted. With jobs uncertain, yesterday’s good-life dream has become a bitter memory.
There’s no reason to lose heart or self esteem. During the Great Depression, people with no money at all would gather around campfires and cling to hope together. They knew things would turn around and eventually they did. But while times were bad, they found ways to bond and support one another. For a marriage that is exactly what is needed. Let us help you turn fears and anger around into mutual support.
We are offering a series of four seminars to help couples learn to work together when faced with challenges. Take home practical ideas and thought provoking ways to understand your own marriage. In the process you will discover how common your dilemmas are. They can be solved.
Make this recession your way to a stronger marriage.
Sep 16: The Bottom Line: Understanding Your Money Issue
Learn the common relationship pitfalls to avoid. Examine your individual money beliefs and learn how to understand and compare them with your partner’s.
Sep 23: Communicating Together: How to Hear and Be Heard
Learn the barriers to positive communication with your spouse and skills to overcome them. Create a more safe and open relationship
Sep 30: Investing in Family: Make it Thrive in Crisis
Learn to strengthen the family unit through trust and hope. Learn to talk with children about money and to connect without spending a fortune.
Oct 7 : Stressful Times: Facing them Together
While stress is normal, it does not have to jeopardize your relationship. Learn together to cope and build greater strength to face difficulties.
Call 630-377-7226 to register
Fee for all 4 is $95 per couple
Call today before space fills.
|