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Til death do us part... [Hardcover]

Rene Reid Yarnell (Author)
2.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 2001
When a relationship is at risk or breaks up, it is so easy for couples to hold each other responsible. Even when a relationship ends in death, such blaming occurs. “What if,” asks best selling author Rene Yarnell, “we entered our relationships realizing that they have a life expectancy—some longer, some shorter, some ‘'til death do us part’? It’s perfectly natural to want to prolong our relationships, but all too often they define their own boundaries, identifying the moments of culmination and breakdown, not so unlike the feebleness of old age signals impending death.

Here Yarnell tells the story of her own fairytale romance—an emotionally-peaked courtship and marriage that culminated in a shattered relationship. After her own difficult journey to come to terms with the breakup, she reminds us that, of all the people we have come to know or will ever know, there is something extraordinarily special about those with whom we share the emotional and sexual intimacies of living together in marriage or an equally close partnership. These relationships not only shape our life story, but also the unfolding and expansion of us as persons. It would be most unfortunate if, at the ending of such shared closeness, we found nothing to appreciate. The merit of a relationship is not necessarily in its lasting forever. Its value lies in the journey two people shared while together, and the heightened awareness that each carries forward.

Raising consciousness that a new paradigm is needed as couples embrace marriage, the author advocates for less focus on blame and guilt should it end, and more appreciation for the shared love and personal growth that was experienced while together. Hers is a message of hope - no longer viewed as a failed marriage as it closes down but one that prepares us for the next phase of life. Through the story, the objective of this refreshingly honest book is to encourage couples to emerge from marital crises more ready than ever to make sound choices - either to renew and enhance existing unions or to move on, perhaps giving birth to new kinds of relationships without the usual sense of failure. One such possibility, Yarnell suggests, is that of spiritual partnerships, a commitment to work together toward each other's personal growth.


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

No one is better qualified to discuss the intricate fabric of relationships than Rene Reid Yarnell, a well-loved international speaker and writer. Formerly a Catholic nun, with an M.A. in theology, Rene brings a surprising perspective to the established view of marriage. Having herself entered into a multitude of relationships from religious community to elected public office, from business associations to “relationship marketing,” from traditional marriage to spiritual partnerships, Rene offers a new paradigm for the ending of relationships. Her breakthrough message prepares each person more fully for the next phase of new beginnings.

Rene is the author of several business books on network marketing, and with her partner, built a world-class network organization of more than 200,000 members through relationship building. Set in the world of her familiar business and political environment, this book represents her debut as a personal-story writer.

Living in Reno, Nevada, her home of twenty years, Rene has two grown children: a son, Chris Grove, and a daughter by marriage, Amy Yarnell.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 560 pages
  • Publisher: Quantum Leap (April 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1883599172
  • ISBN-13: 978-1883599171
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.9 x 1.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,715,300 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.3 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Reader Beware!, July 7, 2001
By 
Herman Schoene (Claremont, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Til death do us part... (Hardcover)
There is something horribly wrong with this book. The author is a very intelligent, well respected, accomplished leader facing real life problems. I had hoped to gain insight and help in dealing with these problems. Instead I got just the opposite. As I began the book I soon became very troubled, then saddened, disheartened and dismayed by the author's ideas and actions that are delusional and destructive. When faced with alcoholic addiction, the author, without knowing it, became an "enabler". Faced with a crippling drug addiction, the author quickly became a "fixer", "manipulator" and "rescuer". Faced with an intimate relationship that has fallen apart, the author turns to reinventing the wheel rather than going back to the basics. If I continually tripped over my own feet and fell, should I seek help from a Physical Therapist on gait training, or should I reinvent gravity? All of these are unhealthy ways of addressing problems that tear a person apart. Yearly, vast numbers of people flock to the beach to escape reality. It is called a vacation. When faced with an intimate relationship that is crumbling, the author chose to run to the beach for an extended period of time to introspect, seek self counsel and find herself. I am all in favor of introspection and self searching, but when one does only this in the midst of a crisis without ongoing, competent help from an objective, knowledgeable, sensible, experienced third party, the outcome is anything but sound. It reminds me of the doctor who treats himself. He has a fool for a patient. There is no question in my mind that the author wished to portray herself in a very real manner. However, the person who emerges from these pages is perfect and innocent. She continues to be the perfectly innocent nun. Her spouse, on the other hand, emerges as an ogre. Halfway through the book I had to wonder why all this dirty laundry was being exposed so publicly and globally.

There is much religiosity in the book, but little true Christianity. What is depicted is the spiritual marketplace where one picks and chooses what feels good at the moment. What is most disturbing is that these deceptive ideas are bathed in sweetness and authenticity and will be easily accepted by the unwary. Reader beware!

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars you don't solve your problems by complaining about them, July 17, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Til death do us part... (Hardcover)
I just don't understand how writing a book about how badly you were treated is suppose to HELP inspire another person who is having marriage problems. Instead of offering hope, it burdens the reader with even more doubts and insecurities. The book is also very one-sided in it's point of view, with the author playing the victim and the husband the monster. It is confusing in text and offers little real advice on how to improve your love relationship. If you really want to improve your marriage realtionship try Dale Carnegie's "How to Win Friends and influence People" , "Don't Sweat the small stuff in Marriage" or " Courtship After Marriage" by Zig Ziglar.
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1.0 out of 5 stars 560 pages of sheer, unending dreck, November 13, 2011
By 
This review is from: Til death do us part... (Hardcover)
When a former Catholic nuns decides to extract revenge, she does it this way: pounding endlessly on a typewriter, recalling VERBATIM every single unpleasant conversation over a six-year period. She also dredges up oceans of the most pathetic doggerel disguised as "love poems," while including page after page after page of unintelligible ramblings from her "personal journal," what is apparently a bottomless well of self-pity. While ex-husband Mark Yarnell continues to brand himself as a business "leader" who has -- for the third time -- "flunked retirement," scorned wife Rene Reid is relentlessly determined to assure that her vengeance is complete as she details his apparent addictions to alcohol, Vicodin and Methadone. Perhaps most telling about this self-indulgent exercise is the fact that no reputable publishing house took notice of her massively redundant effort so Rene Reid was forced to go the self-publishing route, a course that insured no editor would ever indicate that the book could shed at least 200 pages. What she not-so-cleverly bills as a self-help guide for others experiencing the end of a bad marriage is nothing more than an attempt at legal slander from a woman apparently determined to insure that network marketers see "the real Mark Yarnell" in an attempt to crush his future aspirations. There is no doubt that in contrast to the business leader who preaches that network marketing is "the wave of the future," Mark Yarnell is like so many others who both work hard and get lucky in MLM; a guy who goes from deal to deal (Nu-Skin, 21st Century Global, Oxyfresh, Qivana) using up what little credibility he once had to extoll today's "latest and greatest." Rene Reid conveniently avoids these negatives as that would quickly diminish her own networking reputation; a track record build solely on the fact that she piggy-backed on the success of her former partner. This book is an agonizing read containing no value whatsoever to anyone seeking answers but if you're looking for gossip and spite, you'll find it here by the truckload but only if you're willing to wade through an swamp full of lukewarm hate and disguised revenge.
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