Five Languages of Apology: How to Experience Healing in All Your Relationships by Chapman, Jennifer Thomas

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: January 2008
  • 280pp
  • Sales Rank: 26,417
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2008
    • Publisher: Moody Publishers
    • Format: Paperback, 280pp
    • Sales Rank: 26,417

    Synopsis

    How many ways are there to say "I'm sorry?" Well, it depends on your language of apology. Just as you have a different love language, you also hear and express the words and gestures of apology in a different language. Best-selling author Gary Chapman has teamed with counselor Jennifer Thomas to explore the different languages of apology and reach a whole new audience with this easy to follow and quickly applicable communication tool.

    Publishers Weekly

    Chapman, author of the bestselling The Five Love Languages, teams up with psychologist Thomas for thoughtful dissection of another tricky subject. Chapman and Thomas choose to tackle the apology because, as with love, understanding it is essential for developing, maintaining and repairing relationships. Apology, however, covers a much broader scope, applying to all varieties of relationships, from the deeply personal connection between intimate partners to the formal relationships between nations. Chapman and Thomas's basic observation that we don't all agree on what constitutes a sincere apology is perhaps not surprising, but it may, as they show, help couples who can't resolve arguments because their apologies aren't accepted. The authors stress that you need to learn the "language" of the person you are apologizing to: for one person, it may be expressing regret, while for another it's accepting responsibility or making restitution. Especially useful is the chapter that helps readers learn which language of apology feels most sincere to them. Chapman and Thomas are most apt when they seek to repair relationships not with large ideas but with simple basics that are too often taken for granted. (Sept.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography

    Gary Chapman is the author of the New York Times bestselling The Five Love Languages. With over 30 years of counseling experience, he has the uncanny ability to hold a mirror up to human behavior, showing readers not just where they go wrong, but also how to grow and move forward. Dr. Chapman has been featured at the Pentagon and United Nations. He is a prolific conference speaker and makes his home with his wife in North Carolina.  

    Jennifer Thomas is a psychologist with Associates in Christian Counseling in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Jennifer counsels on a wide variety of individual and couples issues from communication to trauma recovery and spiritual healing. She is a member of the American Association of Christian Counselors. She and her husband serve on the marriage team at their church and have three children.

    Customer Reviews

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    Five Languages of Apology: How to Experience Healing in All Your Relationshipsby Anonymous

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    January 14, 2007: Since I read The Five Love Languages of Children, I knew The Five Languages of Apology would be just as thoroughly insightful. Who couldn't use some help enhancing relationships? The authors provide various examples, stories, and questions without making the reader feel criticized or reprimanded. For me, page 88, 'statements of genuine repentance' was practical. Chapter 14, Apologizing to Yourself is thought-provoking. The authors also emphasize that apologizing is a choice as is forgiveness. According to the authors, the 'art of apology' needs to be learned in childhood. When appropriate, parents need to apologize to their children - it's a way of taking responsibility for one's behavior. Since parents are the first and most influential teachers, we teach kids to apologize by doing so ourselves. It's not a sign of weakness to apologize - but of maturity and accountability. Chapter 15, 'What If We All Learned to Apologize Effectively?' is summed up with, 'Fewer people would turn to drugs and alcohol in an effort to find escape from broken relationships. And fewer people would live on the streets of America.' Keep this book on your shelf or bedside table as a quick and useful resource for the relationship challenges in daily life. Now, I'd like to see these authors write a book on how to confront effectively so relationship are preserved.