While we’ve had our bumps along the way, I’d generally say that my marriage is in pretty good shape. Before we were married, an issue forced us into counseling, but through that we learned how to communicate with each other and actually address our issues before they blew up into big problems. Even now, Aaron and I often recommend counseling to friends who confide relationship problems to us. We sincerely believe it can help if both partners are committed to improving their relationship.
But what if you don’t have time to go see a counselor, or what if you’d simply like to do a little preventative maintenance on your relationship? A counselor isn’t always the most practical solution. Which is why eHarmony (yes, the singles site) has created the eHarmony Marriage site.
Click here to read the review…
I wasn’t sure where you would want me to ask this question, so I will post it here… but recently I read an article that brought to light some pro-religion aspects of eHarmony. Did you get that feeling in the marriage site as well?
Yeah, it does have some pro-religion aspects to it. We were penalizied in the Values category for not being religious people with frowny faces based on our answers. However, we just chose to ignore the religion section of the profile.