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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Love and fruition

By Catherine E. Toth
Advertiser Staff Writer

Tom Merrill and Bobbie Sandoz-Merrill wrote "Settle For More: You Can Have the Relationship You Always Wanted ... Guaranteed!"

Photos by RICHARD AMBO | The Honolulu Advertiser

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BOOK SIGNINGS

"Settle For More: You Can Have the Relationship You Always Wanted ... Guaranteed!" by Tom Merrill and Bobbie Sandoz-Merrill
Friday: 7 p.m. Barnes & Noble, Kahala Mall
Saturday: Noon, Borders Waikele
Sunday: 2 p.m., Borders Ward Centre

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ASK YOURSELF

In the counseling and workshops involving Tom Merrill and Bobbie Sandoz-Merrill, they've asked thousands of couples to assess their desire and commitment to the relationship.

Rank these from 1 (lowest) to 10 (highest):

1. How would you rate your feelings of love for your partner when you first met?
2. How would you rate them now?
3. How high would you want this number to get?
4. Do you believe you can get there?
5. How would you rate the success of the relationship with your partner when you first met?
6. How would you rate it now?
7. How much do you want to improve your relationship with this particular partner?
8. How much hope do you have that this can be accomplished?
9. And how much would you want to have an outrageous relationship with this particular partner?
10. How much faith do you have that this can happen?
11. How do you think your partner would answer each of these questions?

Source: Tom Merrill and Bobbie Sandoz-Merrill

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‘STICKS’ CAN BE DANGEROUS

Here are the nine major no-nos — called “sticks” in the book — according to the Merrills. They’re destructive to a relationship, but they’re not impossible to eliminate:

1. Ditching the courtship mentality: You don't think of ways to please your partner as you did when you first met, by listening carefully, calling regularly, sending e-mails, giving massages or sending flowers.
2. Bringing your partner down: You discount, disdain, minimize and dishonor your partner's value, intelligence and contributions while elevating your own to others.
3. Valuing others more: You discount your partner's feelings and concerns while defending and/or taking the side of others (including ex-partners) who are ignoring, competing with or, in some other way, failing to respect and honor your partner.
4. Wanting to win: You blame your partner for all that goes wrong while defending everything you do, even on those occasions when you realize you have made an error.
5. Exerting control: You use a variety of ways of control such as dominance, anger, pouting, withdrawing, coldness, distancing and passive-aggressiveness to establish yourself as the one who makes the rule in the relationship.
6. Withholding love and positive possibilities: You allow the original feelings of closeness, connection and commitment to your partner to dim during times when you are feeling confidence and a bit superior. Then you push your partner away when you feel threatened by the distance.
7. Communicating ineffectively: You interrupt or fail to listen and tend to your partner with genuine interest, caring and compassion.
8. Communicating negatively: You covertly resist your partner by pretending to agree, then later act out disagreement in communication or action.
9. Communicating dishonestly: You justify not telling something to protect your partner from hurt, worry or getting angry and/or distanced from you, instead of giving your partner the courtesy of knowing the truth and letting him/her decide how to respond.

Source: Tom Merrill and Bobbie Sandoz-Merrill

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THE FRUIT OF CONNECTION

15 elements — called “apples” in the Merrills’ book — for the basis of a sound relationship:

1. Honoring
2. Honesty
3. Spiritual
4. Loving
5. Committed
6. Intimacy
7. Passionate
8. Connected
9. Inclusive
10. Expansive
11. Seamless communication
12. Safe
13. Sexual
14. Humor
15. Integrity

Source: Tom Merrill and Bobbie Sandoz-Merrill

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BOOK SIGNINGS

“Settle For More: You Can Have the Relationship You Always Wanted ... Guaranteed!” by Tom Merrill and Bobbie Sandoz-Merrill

Friday: 7 p.m. Barnes & Noble, Kahala Mall

Saturday: Noon, Borders Waikele

Sunday: 2 p.m., Borders Ward Centre

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Five years ago Tom Merrill and Bobbie Sandoz were happily single at 60.

Both divorced, they figured they wouldn't marry again.

Then one morning in Waikiki Merrill ran into Sandoz — literally. He was heading to an appointment after a morning workout; she was running late for a breakfast get-together with girlfriends.

After some spilled coffee, Merrill realized who he had nearly knocked over: the girl he had a crush on in eighth grade at Punahou School.

Sandoz remembered him, too. In fact, she had put his name on her wish list of men who might make ideal partners.

So they quickly exchanged e-mail addresses and promises to get together soon.

They did — and the romance after five years, the Manoa couple said, hasn't ended.

"This is the first relationship I have ever been in where I haven't felt any limitations," said Merrill, 65, a full-time clinical and forensic psychologist specializing in marital and family therapy. "I feel incredibly lucky. It's everything that I want in a relationship."

It's been going so well, in fact, that the Merrills wanted to share their relationship secret with the world. So they sat down together and co-authored "Settle For More: You Can Have the Relationship You Always Wanted ... Guaranteed!" (Select Books, $21.95), in stores this week.

Their relationship might not have turned out this way had the couple not found an intentional method to keep their relationship strong and thriving — especially considering the odds were stacked against them.

The divorce rate in the United States, which hovers around 50 percent for first marriages, shoots up for second (60 percent) and third (78 percent) matchups.

This union would be the second for Sandoz and the third for Merrill. Those odds were just unacceptable.

"I didn't want to be another statistic," Merrill said.

They flirted with the idea of not getting married. But they decided that wouldn't work, considering what they both wanted in a relationship.

"You can't really have what you're dreaming of without a commitment," said Sandoz-Merrill, 65, a personal development consultant and award-winning columnist.

So despite the statistics — and people telling them the courtship wouldn't last — they plowed ahead, got married and have been head-over-heels ever since, thanks to what they call the Merrill Model.

It shows couples how to preserve the intensity of their love, rather than let it fade away. It's about being responsible for the well-being of your relationship. And it's about raising your standards on your relationship — and not settling for anything less.

The model has proven to be so successful in their own marriage — and of those they have co-counseled — the Merrills decided to share their concept with every couple out there set on defying the odds and having a fulfilling, limitless relationship.

"There is a relationship crisis in our country particularly, and nothing that's been thrown at it is changing it," Merrill said. "If anything, it's getting worse."

The Merrills point to negative stereotypes marriage has in today's society: Married couples are miserable and unhappy; wives nag, husbands cheat.

Couples, once happily engaged and eager to please, may sink into a state of apathy, neglecting their partners and, in the process, their relationship.

But it doesn't have to be that way, the Merrills said.

"People really do want to have meaningful, healthy, warm, supportive relationships," Sandoz-Merrill said. "They're just not trained in how to get that."

"Settle For More" identifies 15 key elements — metaphorically called "apples" in the book — for the basis of a sound, strong relationship. These include honesty, commitment, honoring, passion, connectiveness and seamless communication.

The Merrills say couples should know what they want in a relationship, rather than in a person. Knowing what they want will help them make smarter decisions about things that could impact that relationship.

Each "apple" is put in a bowl, which represents the relationship. All the apples have to be in the bowl in order for the relationship to be complete. If you take out one apple, the relationship will suffer.

"If the relationship is that important and I know what I want, and I'm aware I'm taking something out of that bowl, that makes the relationship not the one I want," Merrill said. "Now why would I do that?"

The Merrills consider themselves living proof that this relationship model works. They make decisions with the other in mind. They share goals and values. They don't keep secrets from each other. They enjoy being together. They golf, walk, write, laugh, cook and travel together. And they love every minute of it.

"We're adamant about keeping it this way," Merrill said. "I couldn't have possibly imagined a relationship like this before. If we didn't have the model, we probably wouldn't have made it."

The book debunks such marriage myths as "It's not easy" and "Fighting is healthy." According to the Merrills, marriage can be as fun and easy as the relationship was during courtship.

"It can get better, actually," Sandoz-Merrill said with a smile. "This really is a love affair."

Reach Catherine E. Toth at ctoth@honoluluadvertiser.com.