One sound.
It buys you eight seconds and tells your spouse you're still there. The opposite of the blank stare.
Most couples don't need better intentions. They need better tools. In one free hour, you'll get the exact language thousands of couples use to stop missing each other.
You've read the books.
You've tried counseling.
You pray together, and still feel like roommates.
You love each other. And you keep missing each other.
You're not broken. You were never recoded, only reprogrammed. The original wiring is still there, and one hour is enough to start finding it again.
It buys you eight seconds and tells your spouse you're still there. The opposite of the blank stare.
They replace the question that starts almost every fight in your house. Once you hear it, you can't unhear it.
They open the door back up after you've missed each other, without groveling and without a lecture.
Will you be there for me? Am I good enough for you?
The two questions underneath every marriage. The phrases keep both answers yes.Glenn and Phyllis have been married almost 40 years. The first 20 were painful. They'll tell you what changed.
The exact words, why they work in the brain, and how to use them this week without it feeling scripted.
A guided moment in the chat. You'll watch this work for other couples in real time, then feel it land in yours.
For couples who want help putting this into practice, there's a clear next step. No pressure, no games.

Dr Glenn Hill spent decades as a marriage and family therapist watching couples who loved each other keep missing each other. He and Phyllis lived it too: knocked off course on their honeymoon, and decades finding their way back.
What they found became Connection Codes, a framework now practiced by tens of thousands of people. These days a tense moment in their house rarely lasts 30 seconds. That's not personality. That's tools, and they're handing you the first three on July 14.
“Tuning into my emotions instead of just reacting has been a huge shift.”
Jeannie Hinds
“Connection Codes helped us start our marriage on a strong foundation.”
Judy Egleti
“These practical and profound tools have changed our lives.”
Luke & Claire Farman
Bring your spouse if you can. Come alone if you can't. One person with new language changes the whole conversation.
Yes. One hour, live, no charge. At the end we'll mention a next step for couples who want help implementing, and you're free to ignore it.
Nothing. Show up, maybe with something to write on. The phrases are short enough to remember without notes.
Monday, July 14 at 7pm Central. Live, free, and gone when it's over.