Quotes
The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work
6 memorable lines from The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work by John M. Gottman, Nan Silver, each with the idea behind it.
“Friendship is the emotional foundation of a lasting marriage.”
The book keeps returning to one structural idea: couples survive stress when they maintain detailed love maps, explicit admiration, and a habit of turning toward small bids for connection.
“The way a conversation starts predicts the way it ends.”
Gottman makes the first three minutes matter. A harsh startup pushes partners toward defensiveness; a softened startup keeps repair possible before the nervous system floods.
“Repair attempts are the secret language of resilient couples.”
A joke, pause, apology, hand squeeze, or sentence like let me try that again can interrupt escalation when both partners are willing to receive it.
“Influence is not surrender; it is how two people become a relationship.”
Accepting influence means letting your partner feelings affect your next move. The marriage becomes safer when both people can be changed by each other.
“Gridlock often protects a dream, not just an opinion.”
The breakthrough is to stop treating recurring conflict as stubbornness and start asking what identity, history, fear, or hope is underneath the position.
“Shared meaning turns household logistics into a life together.”
Rituals, symbols, roles, holidays, and inside jokes make ordinary life feel chosen. The couple is not just managing tasks; they are building a small culture.