Always good to see you Rebreather. Both yours and my picture, must be why I can relate to your posts so closely.
Occasionally we'll fall back into the old patterns, but almost always one of us will snap out pretty quickly and that pulls the other right back out as well.
We notice this too. A while ago I was telling my husband what I would do in a certain situation, which I shouldn't have been doing in the first place, because it was his situation to deal with. He said -- That's conflict avoiding. Dammit, he was right. How did he get so smart? In the past he was Mr. ConflictAvoidant and now he was analyzing the situation in detail to NOT do that and here I was suggesting it. Oops!
I was impressed. The key is we discuss various things in detail now, when before there was very little awareness and even less follow-through.
TG, I remember all the conversations we had about this and how our spouses were similar too. And we are all moving through it. Awesome, isn't it?
Morhurt, I'm just curious why the term CoD turns you off so much? Don't feel you need to answer, I just know there are others who feel the same way as you do.
Althea, getting back to your question about resources. I have soooo many books here, and many I haven't read.... yet.
I went into the marriage books after dday, but I needed to focus on my own childhood issues first and I'm not done with that yet, maybe never will be. Things about abandonment, and I know you mentioned Claudia Black's Changing Course. Journey to Abandonment to Healing is another. Books on ACOA have helped personally. They explain patterns/behaviors that are set up in childhood and they are related to any family of dysfunction, not strictly just those which dealt with alcoholism. Toxic Parents and Emotional Blackmail by Susan Howard. The Shame That Binds by John Bradshaw (and he has many others about family).
Early on to just get a basic understanding about the patterns/dynamics, we read Love Obsession (or addiction, can't remember) by Pat Love. CoD No More of course. Stuff about passive aggressiveness and emotionally unavailable men, Mother-emeshed men and the problems that can cause in marriages.
Some others I've read or I've heard about working towards healthy marriages specifically that come to mind are:
Books on boundaries by Cloud and Townsend
Hold Me Tight, as was mentioned.
Books by Harville Hendrix such as Getting the Love you Want. And before you can even get to accepting that love, Receiving Love and why it's hard for some people to even accept love.
Books about intimacy and what it is, like Seven Levels of Intimacy
The Seven Principles of Marriage by Gottman.
And we attended Retrouvaille. Religious aspects aside, it discussed FOO and roles and conflict but mostly it helped me to understand, identify and discuss feelings in a way that I wouldn't have been able to do had I not learned it there. And that work with feelings has helped us connect and reconnect and be more aware of each other and ourselves.
We check in regularly with the other one now to see how they are doing/feeling instead of getting lost in our own worlds when life gets busy for example.
HTH.