About Course
Intimate relationships are among the most important aspects of a human life. They can impact everything from our emotional well-being to our physical health to our sense of belonging and connectedness to our resilience in the face of adversity as well as providing opportunities for us to grow as human beings. If our relationships are healthy, genuine, loving, and conscious, they tend to be supportive of these areas of our life. If they are not, they could be experienced as a source of distress, confusion, despair, or at best frustration.
In this course we’ll explore intimate relationships mostly through the lens of psychology (but also other ways of looking at relationship that one could say gives a vision that extend beyond what ever conventional psychology’s view is) The key advantage of exploring this topic with psychology is that various schools and researchers and theorists and therapists and explorers in the world psychology has studied it extensively, over a long period of time, and have come up with an amazing wealth of knowledge. A further advantage is that psychology provides various models and tools to help one reflect upon and become more conscious of their relationship dynamics in ways that benefit from this wealth of knowledge, and it a way that not just one person’s opinion about things. What’s useful in psychology is that people’s theories and ideas have to be tested against many people’s real life experience. And, sometimes the knowledge comes from asking sometimes thousands of people scattered throughout the population in such a way that helps us try to find universal patterns. Many people that are going through relationship difficulties may not know that the very difficulties they are going through may turn out to be very well understood in psychology as well as the ways for how to exit those difficult dynamics, and what also works well.
The reality may turn out to be that human beings and their intimate relationship may turn out to be extremely complex. Just as we once thought the physical body was merely flesh and bones and liquid stuff, so too may be the commonplace conception of relationships today. However, just as the natural sciences have developed to such an extent that we have a dramatically more differentiated and nuanced and better understanding of the physical body (which could have been unimaginable or inconceivable to our ancestors), so too we need to hold open the possibility that there is much, much, much more to intimate relationships and the psychology of intimate relationships than at first meets the eye.
The primary goal of this course is to equip participants with a deep and actionable understanding of some of this psychological knowledge we’ve gathered about the nature, processes, and dynamics of intimate relationships. Drawing from the insights of different schools and bodies of knowledge in the field, we’ll also see how we and our relationships may benefit from the knowledge.
The course is designed for a wide audience, including individuals seeking to improve their personal relationships, couples wishing to strengthen their bond, and professionals such as therapists, counselors, and coaches who work with clients on relationship issues. Participants will not only learn about the theoretical underpinnings of intimate relationships but also engage in practical exercises that apply these theories to real-life situations.