President/Founder, Inspiration for Women Ministries,  non-profit, non-denominational counseling center, since 2005
					B.A., Christian Counseling, Cornerstone University
					M.A., Clinical Counseling, Calvary Theological  Seminary
					Married, 25 years to her husband, Del
					Children: Tess, 25, and Tad, 21
									 			
			 
			
			
				
				
					Jason and Leah Jackson agreed to 
					
take Kim’s challenge to cook for  4 nights and share their experience with Kim on The 700 Club.
					Jason is the music pastor at Faith Alive Church, in Chesapeake, Virginia.
					Jason  and Leah married almost 3 years ago and have an 18-month-old son, Jaden.  The couple just found out recently that they  are expecting another child.  
									 
					 
		
		
		Guest
		
		Kim Reutzel: 'Kissing and Cooking' for Couples 
		
		By Mimi Elliott
                	The 700 Club
                	
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
			 KEEPING IT SPICY
		Kim met her husband, Del  Reutzel, when she was 18 and he was 20. They met through friends who were  hanging out. Those friends never went out again, but Del and Kim got married!  With her background in counseling, Kim wanted  to give biblical advice to women who were going through divorce but couldn’t  afford counseling. Soon men even started coming into see her.  
		“A lot of men’s issues were  marital,” Kim said.  
		Also, a few marriages in their  community had disintegrated at the same time. Kim wanted to do something to  keep her own marriage from failing.  
		“I knew I needed to develop  something, not only for my life, but for others,” Kim said.
		One day, Kim was watching a  cooking show and solutions to keep her marriage spicy danced in her head.  
		“Could we cook together?” Kim  asked herself. “I was not a domestic goddess, so what was I thinking?”  
		Kim realized she had to think of  something to entice her husband to participate. She would make his favorite  lasagna dinner. So, she planned this first kissing and cooking night. Del’s job was to simply  make sure a lot of kissing got done. He obliged.
		On the day of their cooking  date, Del and  Kim teased each other all day.  
		“Things started to get hot in  the kitchen and it wasn’t from the oven!” Kim said.  
		 
		Before their date, Kim even  planned on asking questions to stimulate conversation and intimacy. The  questions were designed to go outside their normal everyday conversation.  
		“We both learned new and  interesting things about each other and had a lot of fun,” Kim said. “We left  with a new understanding and bond to each other.”
		KISSING AND COOKING
		What started as a kissing and  cooking date night, became the solution for Kim’s desire to help other couples.  The date night starts out with tasks for him and for her. There is a menu and  list of ingredients to purchase ahead of time. There are exchange cards to fill  out and give each other during dinner.  
		“It helps to give positive  feedback to each other,” Kim said. 
		She says cooking together and working  to create the meal is good for a marriage, too.
		“It’s putting the meal together  for the common good,” Kim said. 
		Kim designed the meal so that  cooking won’t take longer than an hour and both participate. If only one person  can cook because of time constraints, then Kim suggests taking the book to the  table to ensure conversation takes place.
		Kim says marriages take work. So  many times, a wonderful wedding is planned but not much effort goes into  ensuring that there is a wonderful marriage.  
		“There will be tough times we  need to work through,” Kim said.  
		One thing she and Del agree on is to  disagree.  
		“Basically, I call it throwing  in the towel,” Kim said.  
		There are times when couples  simply cannot resolve an issue.  
		“The best thing a couple can do  is discuss it later when there is less anger,” she said.
		
		
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