Relationship and Dating Help: How to find a Serious Relationship Test.
1. Ph.D./Dr.
Begin with finding a well-educated therapist with a doctorate degree. You want the questions and analysis to be the creation of someone who is well educated in the field of psychology and relationships.
2. Psychotherapist.
You want a person who has done more than just study books. Find someone who has worked with thousands of clients as a professional therapist in private practice.
3. Be prepared to pay a small fee for the service. A free test may not offer a serious analysis or be very helpful. Web sites, insurance and time to write are expensive for a professional.
4. Look for recommendations from reputable people who you recognize? Do they give their whole name when recommending the therapist? Happy couples are proud of the one who helped them.
5. Has the therapist been published? Getting a book published is an arduous and difficult task and many people are rejected. A published book on relationships indicates an expert in the field. Taking another person's advice is risky. Being published is one more substantiating recommendation.
6. Have they been quoted by major magazines, appeared on television or radio as an expert? You want an expert when it comes to finding help for your broken heart.
Use the following Internet search keywords to help you narrow your search to a quality relationship tests:
"relationship test" expert Dr psychology
BIO: Introducing the new relationship compatibility test, Match Lines Systems for Successful Relationships for Singles, Couples and Business by psychology expert, Dr. Molly Barrow. Official Web Site: http://www.DrMollyBarrow.com. Find love and healthy relationship advice for dating, pre-marital, marriage, and business relationships. Dr. Molly Barrow holds a Ph.D. in clinical psychology and is the author of the new book, "Matchlines: A Revolutionary New Way of Looking at Relationships and Making the Right Choices in Love," ISBN 159507158X. As an authority on relationship and psychological topics; a member of the American Psychological Association, Screen Actors Guild, and Authors Guild and is a licensed mental health counselor, Dr. Molly has appeared as an expert in the film, My Suicide, documentaries Ready to Explode and KTLA Impact, NBC news, PBS In Focus, WBZT talk radio, and in O Magazine, Psychology Today, Newsday, The Nest, MSN.com, Yahoo, Match.com, N Magazine, Women's Health, Harvard Business School, Women's World, has a radio show on blogtalkradio.com and is a columnist for Menstuff.org.
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