Passion Keys - Steve Ubah - Dating Book Review
You have the hyped up, full-of-fluff dating gurus, the passionate, emacipated women who celebrate female-ness then you have Steve Ubah.
His approach to healing a broken relationship in "Passion Keys" is different in that the advice he suggests borders on laughable on the surface, when actually, if implemented, will yield favorable results.
"Passion Keys" is for women who are already in a relationship, preferably married, who want to resurrect a love long lost between them and their man.
Having said this, women who are single and dating to find a man will also receive beneficial advice on how to attract a man.
Although Ubah does not really address the reason as to why the spark in a relationship gets snuffed out in the first place, ladies who invest in "Passion Keys" will have their hands too full with the techniques suggested to realize this.
The most interesting techniques that Ubah talks about in "Passion Keys" are primarily, "ego caressing", "making love to his mind" and "getting rid of the 50/50 relationship model.
" Each presents a more different approach to the previous one to understanding the why a relationship is failing.
Although the finer points of each of these techniques can't be discussed in full here, it is safe to say that women are familiar with these points already.
It's just that they are explored to a further extent in Passion Keys.
For example, "making love to his mind" draws parallels to the more crude, "talking dirty", but "Passion Keys" suggests you implement it in such a way that instead of driving a man wild, it reminds a man why he fell in love with you in the first place.
The bad points of"Passion Keys" are few and far in between.
Ubah is not a professional dating coach, unlike the more well-known, "Relationship Doctor", Bob Grant, thus one will notice the difference in their writing styles.
One has to dig through a few more of Ubah's lack of structure and empty statements in "Passion Keys", whereas Grant's "The Women Men Adore" sets things straight.
Having said this, being from the perspective of a male, the advice Ubah presents in "Passion Keys" is far more straight-forward than Kara Oh's, "Men Made Easy", which focuses more on the female mindset.
On the whole, "Passion Keys" is a formidable title in the relationship self-improvement niche for women.
What Ubah lacks in professionality he makes up for unique advice.
Men will be inexplicably drawn to the woman who utilizes the techniques in "Passion Keys.
" Women will laugh but ultimately be left scratching their heads at the success of she who hits the "Passion Keys" of any man.