2016-07-07
1 小时 7 分钟So imagine stepping out of your day to day life and just dropping yourself into a gorgeous 130 acre natural playground for three and a half days of learning and laughing and moving your body and calming your brain and reconnecting with people who just see the world the way that you do and accept you completely as you are.
So that's what we've created with our camp good life project or camp GLP experience.
We've actually brought together a lineup of really inspiring teachers, from art to entrepreneurship, from writing to meditation, pretty much everything in between.
It's this beautiful way to fill your noggin with ideas to live and work better, and a really rare opportunity to create the type of friendships and stories you pretty much thought you'd left behind decades ago.
It's all happening at the end of August, just about 90 minutes from New York City, and we're well on our way to selling out spots at this point, so be sure to grab your spot as soon as you can.
Interesting to you.
You can learn more@goodlifeproject.com camp or just go ahead and click the link in the show notes now.
If we make a contract with our partner, I will be your believing eyes.
I will see your greatness.
I will call forth your greatness.
I will encourage the parts of you that you may have doubts and insecurities about.
I can see you in some ways more clearly than you can see yourself.
That's a good contract.
Today's guest, Linda and Charlie Bloom have been together for the better part of 50 years and for a solid chunk of that time.
They're not only partners in life, married, but also partners in business.
They're therapists who work together, and they work in the field of building relationships.
And their relationship, their personal relationship, has been probably as much a cauldron for their understanding of how to build and grow together and also do a lot of myth busting and expectation shifts that many of us really don't deal with, actually.
And a lot of the things that they have learned through their own life and through their therapy practices and workshops and programs has been that there are a lot of myths that exist in relationships, whether it's between adult partners or parents and kids or even business partners that are massively destructive and utterly wrong.
And they talk about a lot of those in their newest book, happily ever after.
The conversation that we dive into today explores some of those myths, but even more just really explores the bigger dynamic of what is it really like to be in relationship with somebody else for an extended period of time?