• 023 Compromise In Relationships
    Oct 28 2020

    Today our topic is “Compromise in Relationships" recorded with the community on October 10, 2020.

    Happy Halloween!

    Anyone can join in on these calls by going to our Community Page and sign-up to receive notifications about upcoming calls.

    Contact Us

    Sandy & Lon Golnick
    www.RelationshipByDesign.com
    760-603-8343


    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 27 mins
  • 022 Community Call: The Pitfalls of Promises
    Sep 1 2020

    Today our topic is “The Pitfalls of Promises” on our twice-monthly Zoom Community Call.

    At the end of the call, someone asked if there would be a replay of the call? We took a poll to make sure nobody would have any problem if we shared the complete call. Nobody objected so here it is. The complete 1-hour and 18-minute audio version of the call.

    The complete video version is available from our YouTube channel and can be found here.

    Anyone can join in on these calls by going to our Community Page and sign-up to receive notifications about upcoming calls.

    Contact Us

    Sandy & Lon Golnick
    www.RelationshipByDesign.com
    760-603-8343

    Click HERE to join in on the conversations.


    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 19 mins
  • 021 Community Call: You can do it. Or you can pretend you can’t.
    Aug 25 2020

    The original title of this episode recorded on August 15, 2020, was “Do you have your relationship handled? Part 2" HOWEVER at the top of the call Lon asked the question “What’s possible with going forward?”

    So as it is with all relationships, things change.

    Carol England gave us permission to use her extended comments about how she and Jeff are thriving in “possibility” these days. You’ll want to hear about that.

    Do consider joining us in the conversations we’re having twice a month. Head over to the Community Page on RelationshipByDesign.com and sign-up to receive notifications about the next call and receive the Zoom links you’ll need to join us.

    Contact Us

    Sandy & Lon Golnick
    www.RelationshipByDesign.com
    760-603-8343


    Show More Show Less
    29 mins
  • 020 Community Call Exploring: Do You Have Your Relationship Handled?
    Aug 4 2020

    We thought today we’d give you more excerpts from the Community Calls we have a few times a month. We take people’s privacy seriously. You’ll only be hearing from the leaders of Relationship By Design. If you like what you hear, consider joining us for the next call by going to the Community page on our website at RelationshipByDesign.com and sign up to receive notifications about upcoming calls.

    Conversations and Topics Covered Today
    • Introduction to the topic for today
    • Lon, Paul, and Sandy’s comments
    • Carol on COVID and Racism
    • Paul on “handling it”
    • Lon says “Dance with it”
    • Closing words by Lon, Sandy, and Carol
    Contact Us

    Sandy & Lon Golnick
    www.RelationshipByDesign.com
    760-603-8343


    Show More Show Less
    19 mins
  • 019 Community Call Excerpts July 11, 2020
    Jul 21 2020

    We thought today we’d give you some excerpts from the Community Calls we have a few times a month. We take people’s privacy seriously. You’ll only be hearing from the leaders of Relationship By Design. If you like what you hear, consider joining us for the next call by going to the Community page on our website at RelationshipByDesign.com and sign up to receive notifications about upcoming calls.

    Conversations and Topics Covered Today
    1. Introduction.
    2. Power.
    3. What do I have to lose?
    4. Choice and the little things.
    5. Forfeit and power.
    6. We don’t know how much time we have left.
    7. Education. Live inside. I don’t know.
    8. Witness. Hallucinations. Gratitude.
    9. Allow and love.
    10. Listening and racism.
    11. Love and fear.
    12. Tomorrow. Being present. Being here now.
    13. And goodbye for now.
    Contact Us

    Sandy & Lon Golnick
    www.RelationshipByDesign.com
    760-603-8343

    Z1q6Pl31ayoNyc4eHcYY


    Show More Show Less
    32 mins
  • 018 What if a Snarky Remark is a Red Flag?
    Jul 7 2020

    Have you ever said something snarky, spiteful, unkind, or just plain thoughtless, to someone you love?  How did it go?  Did you get into a fight or hear a defensive reaction? Or worse. Perhaps you ended a relationship. 

    It happened to us and opened a door to greater intimacy. As Paul started to take lunch to his desk, Carol let fly this one: “So, do you like your computer better than your wife?”  

    The tone was accusatory, not inviting.

    As soon as Carol said it, she knew that it had come out sideways, inviting a fight rather than a joyful lunch together.  It was not aligned with her intention at all.  

    This is where she should have remembered the acronym WAIT, and asked herself “Why Am I Talking?” 

    After a few tense moments, while Paul maintained a stunned silence, Carol apologized for the snarky remark and then revealed some feelings she had not disclosed before – or even consciously recognized. She told Paul that she had expected him to join her, and felt rejected or abandoned when he took his food to his desk instead.  

    Anyone who has been in our 2-day workshop, Relationship: The Real Deal, knows the mischief that arises from unexpressed expectations. One person is disappointed and the other one feels blamed out of the blue. In our case, we had no agreement to eat our lunch together, just Carol’s uncommunicated expectation.   

    After communicating her (previously withheld) expectation, Carol could lovingly invite Paul to join her.  That’s all it took to restore our joy of being related.  

    By the way, Paul wasn’t abandoning Carol when he took lunch to his desk. It was just his habit  – what he’d been doing for decades before he met Carol. 

    The next time you hear yourself or another person making a sarcastic or biting crack, you could get curious rather than defensive. You might discover something new, and end up feeling closer than before the remark slipped out.  

    With love,

    Carol & Paul

    Contact Us

    Sandy & Lon Golnick
    www.RelationshipByDesign.com
    760-603-8343


    Show More Show Less
    3 mins
  • 017 Irritations in Relationships
    Jun 23 2020

    At the beginning of our workshop, “Relationship: The Real Deal,” some participants are startled when we announce this intention: 

    “The issues you have been dealing with, trying to fix, or just plain tolerating … dissolve/disappear simply by being in relationship.”

    For people who believe that successful relationships require work, that intention seems improbable, even outrageous.

    For Paul and me, issues dissolving and disappearing is a daily occurrence.

    Recently, I was irritated and annoyed with the pile of clothes in our bedroom – specifically Paul’s clothes. In the pile were shirts and pants he had worn three days ago!  

    Now, I know the “right” way to handle clothes. My grandmother Mimi taught me more than 60 years ago! Put them away, immediately, as soon as you take them off! 

    I can remember when I blamed Paul for my irritations. I used to demand that he clean up his mess. I  even tried to extract a promise that he would manage his clothes the right way - my way.

    I can also remember times when I just kept quiet to keep the peace in our marriage. I  was afraid of starting a fight over who gets to say how we deal with messes. And I was resigned to just putting up with the mess.

    But this time I said to Paul, “I’m irritated that your clothes are in a heap in our room.”

    Paul simply said: “Thank you for telling me.”

    Paul didn’t try to change anything. He didn’t resist my being irritated, or defend his actions or deflect blame.  When we both allowed me to be irritated, the irritation dissolved, and the joy of our being related revived.

    In our years of designing and leading workshops at Relationship by Design, it’s become clear to us that upsets, irritations, and disappointments will happen in all relationships. They’re completely normal. 

    What is not normal is for each of us to be responsible for our reactions rather than blaming the other person for causing them. What is not normal is to let go of trying to fix, change, or tolerate those reactions. What is not normal is to communicate our reactions and allow issues to dissolve. Yet that’s what happened in our relationship just last week.

    With love,

    Carol & Paul

    Contact Us

    Sandy & Lon Golnick
    www.RelationshipByDesign.com
    760-603-8343


    Show More Show Less
    3 mins
  • 016 When Your Relationship Isn’t Working, What Should You Do?
    Jun 9 2020

    Well, our first question for you is, “Are you willing to set aside your penchant to fix, change or leave your relationship?”

    Leaving, either physically or emotionally, surely doesn’t resolve anything. It simply transports your concerns to your next relationship.

    But staying and trying to deal with it doesn’t resolve anything either - especially when you don’t know what you’re dealing with. Fixing and changing do not work when you don’t know what you’re working on in the first place.

    So now what?

    Are you willing to let go of trying to find solutions?  And in doing so, discover there may be nothing to fix?  Are you open to seeing things about relationships that you haven’t seen before, the seeing of which has whatever hasn’t been working simply disappear? Vanish! Poof! 

    The first thing to see is that you, and all of the relationship experts that we’ve talked to, do not know what a relationship is. Simply because you and they haven’t been asking the question, “What is a relationship?”

    Are you open and willing to start from scratch, to explore and discover what a relationship actually is?  

    When you are clear about what a relationship is, what it is that you’re actually dealing with, most of the things that you have been working hard to resolve simply clear up. And you find yourself at ease with new concerns and possibilities. 

    Your relationships move through their ups and downs without major stress and frustration. They flow as they’re designed to flow, and you experience the peace, ease and fulfillment that are natural to relationship.

    Contact Us

    Sandy & Lon Golnick
    www.RelationshipByDesign.com
    760-603-8343


    Show More Show Less
    3 mins