happy-marriage
npx skills add https://github.com/happy-marriage/skills --skill happy-marriage
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Skill 文档
Happy Marriage
Help couples build a strong, fulfilling relationship through practical, time-tested principles.
Core Philosophy
Happy relationships are built on deep friendship – mutual understanding, fondness, respect, and continuous turning toward each other in daily moments. The goal is not to avoid conflict, but to learn to handle it well.
The Essence of Marriage
“The basis for a happy marriage is a deep friendship – mutual respect and enjoyment of each other’s company.”
What Marriage Really Is
Strong marriages share five essential characteristics: deep friendship (knowing each other’s inner world), mutual support (actively backing each other’s goals), shared culture (unique rituals and meaning), constructive conflict management (discussing differences without harm), and positive emotional balance (daily deposits that buffer tough times).
What Destroys Marriage
Four destructive patterns (æ«æ¥åéªå£«) that consistently predict relationship failure:
- Criticism (æ¹è¯) – attacking character instead of behavior
- Contempt (éè§) – superiority, disgust, mockery
- Defensiveness (辩æ¤) – playing victim, making excuses
- Stonewalling (å·æ) – emotional withdrawal, shutting down
The Magic Ratio
Stable marriages maintain approximately 5 positive interactions for every 1 negative interaction. When this ratio drops too low, the marriage enters dangerous territory.
The 7 Pillars of a Strong Marriage (幸ç¦å©å§»ç7个æ³å)
These seven pillars form the foundation of lasting partnership:
| Pillar | Chinese (䏿) | Core Focus | What It Means | Quick Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Love Maps | ç±æ å°å¾ | Know your partner’s world | Build a detailed mental map of your partner’s inner life and changing identity | Ask one new thing about their day |
| 2. Fondness & Admiration | åç±ä¸èµç¾ | Maintain positive perspective | Express genuine appreciation and respect to create emotional safety | Express one specific appreciation daily |
| 3. Turn Toward | å½¼æ¤é è¿ | Connect in daily moments | Recognize and respond to bids for emotional connection | Be present when they reach out |
| 4. Accept Influence | æ¥åé å¶å½±å | Share power | Honor each other’s opinions and needs, especially during conflict | Acknowledge their point of view |
| 5. Solve Solvable Problems | è§£å³å¯è§£å³çé®é¢ | Handle conflicts constructively | Address specific issues with gentle start-ups and repair attempts | Complain without blame |
| 6. Overcome Gridlock | åè§£åµå± | Navigate perpetual issues | Move from impasse to dialogue by uncovering dreams behind positions | Understand the deeper meaning |
| 7. Create Shared Meaning | åé å ±åæä¹ | Build a life together | Establish shared purpose through rituals, roles, goals, and symbols | Create daily connection rituals |
How the Pillars Connect
These pillars form an integrated system:
- Pillars 1-3 build the friendship foundation (Love Maps, Fondness, Turning Toward)
- Pillars 4-5 enable healthy conflict resolution (Accept Influence, Solve Solvable Problems)
- Pillars 6-7 address deeper meaning and ongoing differences (Overcome Gridlock, Shared Meaning)
Without the friendship foundation, conflict management techniques fail. Without accepting influence, solving problems becomes nearly impossible.
Warning Signs: When Your Marriage Needs Attention
These critical warning signs indicate your relationship needs immediate care:
Six Critical Warning Signs (å©å§»ç ´è£ç6大迹象)
-
Harsh Start-Up (èå»çå¼å§): Conversations begin with criticism, sarcasm, or contempt – “You never…” or “You always…”
-
The Four Destructive Patterns appear frequently (see above for details)
-
Emotional Flooding (æ 绪淹没/è¢«æ¶ææ 绪淹没): Feeling overwhelmed during conflict – heart racing, inability to think clearly
-
Failed Repair Attempts (ææ ä¿®å¤å°è¯å¤±è´¥): When one partner tries to de-escalate (through humor, apology, touch) but the other doesn’t respond. The success rate of repair attempts is a strong indicator of relationship health.
-
Negative History Rewrite (ç³ç³çåå¿): Recalling the relationship negatively – “I never loved you anyway.” This often indicates serious deterioration.
-
Chronic Physiological Arousal (æ ¢æ§ççåºæ¿): Consistently elevated heart rate during conflict makes productive conversation impossible.
Take Action If Two or More Apply:
Quick Start: The 5 Hours Per Week
Weekly 5-hour investment plan – see quick-reference.md
Daily Practices
Morning: Departure Ritual
- Learn one thing about partner’s day ahead
- Kiss goodbye (6 seconds minimum)
Throughout Day
- Send one caring message
- Do one small task partner dislikes
Evening: Reunion Ritual
- 20-minute stress-reducing conversation (see exercises.md)
Before Bed
- Ask “How was your day?” and listen
- Physical affection (kiss, cuddle)
When Conflict Occurs
The Reality of Marital Conflict
Most marital conflicts are perpetual – they stem from fundamental differences in personality, values, or lifestyle. Expecting to resolve them completely is unrealistic.
Perpetual Problems: These root in core differences between partners
- Examples: neatness standards, intimacy frequency, spending habits, parenting approaches, time management
- These will not be fully resolved – the goal is learning to discuss them without hurting each other
Detailed Scenario Guides:
- Money Conflicts – 6 common financial conflict scenarios with scripts
- Parenting Conflicts – 6 parenting challenge scenarios with solutions
- Intimacy Issues – 6 sexual/intimacy conflict scenarios with approaches
Solvable Problems: Specific, situational issues with concrete solutions
- Examples: a specific chore dispute, a scheduling conflict, a misunderstanding about plans
Key Insight: When you choose a life partner, you inevitably choose a particular set of ongoing challenges you’ll navigate together for decades. Success lies not in solving these differences, but in managing them with grace.
Conflict Resolution
Use the 5-step process: check yourself (take a 20-min break if flooded), gentle start-up (“I feel… when… I need…”), accept influence, make repair attempts, and compromise. See quick-reference.md for details.
The “We” Consciousness: In-Laws & External Relationships
Core principle: Your partner comes first. Build a united front by standing with your partner (not mediating between them and your parents), defending them immediately when criticized, and establishing clear boundaries with extended family.
Key test: If your partner and parent disagree, whose side are you on? If not your partner’s, this needs immediate attention.
See 7-laws.md for detailed guidance.
Handling Perpetual Problems (Gridlock)
When the same issue keeps recurring:
- Uncover the dream: What does this position mean to you? What fear does it protect?
- Share without judgment: Take turns explaining your dream/fear
- Soothe each other: Acknowledge this is hard
- Temporary compromise: Try a 2-month experiment
- Say thank you: Appreciate their willingness to share
Common Repair Statements
Complete list of repair statements – see quick-reference.md
Common Examples:
- Need a break: “I need 20 minutes to calm down”
- Apologizing: “Sorry, I overreacted”
- Support: “I see your point”
- When hurt: “That hurt my feelings”
Reference Materials
- Detailed 7 Pillars: See references/7-laws.md
- Exercises & Worksheets: See references/exercises.md
- Quick Reference Cards: See references/quick-reference.md
Usage Patterns
Pattern 1: Relationship Check-In
When a user wants to assess their relationship health:
- Ask about the 6 warning signs
- If 2+ apply, prioritize immediate intervention
- Guide through the 7 principles assessment
Pattern 2: Conflict Resolution
When a user describes an ongoing conflict:
- Identify if it’s solvable or perpetual (most are perpetual)
- For solvable: Guide through 5-step conflict process
- For perpetual: Guide through gridlock resolution
Pattern 3: Building Connection
When a user wants to strengthen their bond:
- Start with Love Maps exercise
- Add daily appreciation practice
- Establish the 5-hour weekly routine
- Create shared rituals
Pattern 4: Crisis Intervention
When a user describes severe relationship distress:
- Assess for destructive patterns presence
- Teach self-soothing techniques
- Establish immediate repair protocols
- Recommend professional help if needed
Common Misconceptions
What Doesn’t Actually Work
â Formal Communication Training: Learning structured “active listening” techniques often fails in real emotional moments
â Shared Interests: What matters is how you interact during activities, not the activities themselves. A couple who fights while cooking is worse off than one who connects while doing laundry together.
â Conflict Avoidance: Many happy couples avoid certain topics or “agree to disagree” rather than forcing resolution
â Blaming Affairs for Divorce: Most couples cite loss of intimacy and emotional connection as the root cause – affairs are often a symptom, not the disease
â Seeking a “Normal” Partner: The key isn’t finding someone without quirks, but finding someone whose quirks complement yours
Essential Guidance
- Focus on behaviors rather than attacking character
- Change takes time and consistent practice
- Both partners contribute to relationship dynamics
- Seek professional couples therapy when issues are severe or ongoing
- Happy marriages are built through small daily actions, not grand gestures. Consistency matters more than intensity.
Terminology Quick Reference (æ¯è¯éæ¥è¡¨)
| English Term | 䏿æ¯è¯ | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Love Maps | ç±æ å°å¾ | äºè§£ä¼´ä¾£å å¿ä¸çç详ç»è®¤ç¥ |
| Fondness & Admiration | åç±ä¸èµç¾ | ç»´æç§¯æè§è§ï¼è¡¨è¾¾çè¯ç欣èµåå°é |
| Turn Toward | å½¼æ¤é è¿ | 卿¥å¸¸æ¶å»ååºä¼´ä¾£çæ æèç»å°è¯ |
| Accept Influence | æ¥åé å¶å½±å | å享æåï¼å°éå½¼æ¤çæè§åéæ± |
| Solve Solvable Problems | è§£å³å¯è§£å³çé®é¢ | ç¨æ¸©åå¼åºåä¿®å¤å°è¯å¤çå ·ä½å²çª |
| Overcome Gridlock | åè§£åµå± | åç°ç«åºèåçæ¢¦æ³ï¼ä¸æ°¸ä¹ æ§é®é¢å ±å |
| Create Shared Meaning | åé å ±åæä¹ | éè¿ä»ªå¼ãè§è²ãç®æ å象å¾å»ºç«å ±åç®æ |
| The Four Horsemen | æ«æ¥åéªå£« | æ¹è¯ãéè§ã辩æ¤ãå·æââåç§ç ´åæ§è¡ä¸º |
| Criticism | æ¹è¯ | æ»å»æ§æ ¼èéå ·ä½è¡ä¸º |
| Contempt | éè§ | ä¼è¶æãåæ¶ãå²è®½ |
| Defensiveness | è¾©æ¤ | æ®æ¼å害è ï¼æ¨å¸è´£ä»» |
| Stonewalling | å·æ | æ æé缩ï¼å ³éæ²é |
| Emotional Flooding | æ 绪淹没 | å²çªä¸æå°ä¸å ªéè´ï¼å¿è·³å éï¼æ æ³æè |
| Harsh Startup | èå»çå¼å§ | 以æ¹è¯ãè®½åºæéè§å¼å§çå¯¹è¯ |
| Repair Attempt | ææ ä¿®å¤å°è¯ | 鲿¢æ¶ææ 绪å级çè¯è¨æè¡å¨ |
| Failed Repair Attempts | ä¿®å¤å°è¯å¤±è´¥ | è¯å¾ç¼åä½å¯¹æ¹æªååº |
| Negative History Rewrite | ç³ç³çåå¿/è´é¢å岿¹å | è´é¢åå¿å ³ç³»åå² |
| Positive Sentiment Override | 积æè¯ é | 积æçæ³ååæ¶ææ ç»ªçå¾å |
| Gridlock | åµå± | å ³äºæ°¸ä¹ æ§é®é¢çåå¤äºè®º |
| Stress-Reducing Conversation | ååè°è¯ | 帮å©å½¼æ¤ç¼è§£å¤é¨ååç20åéå¯¹è¯ |
| The Magic 5 Hours | ç¥å¥ç5å°æ¶ | æ¯å¨5å°æ¶çå©å§»æå ¥è®¡å |
| “We” Consciousness | “æä»¬”æè¯ | ä¸ä¼´ä¾£ç«å¨ä¸èµ·ï¼ä¼å ç»´æ¤å©å§»å ³ç³» |