“They didn’t know each other at all!” she said.
365 Dates offers a page for each day of the year that includes three “courtship questions” couples can discuss to build emotional intimacy.
She and her husband, David, enjoy day trips around their home in Plano, Texas. Dana purchased some similarly themed books to spark conversation on their drives but found the selections included racy questions that made her uncomfortable. She resolved to provide an alternative Christians could enjoy. Always one to prepare, Dana wrote 4000 questions from which she culled the final selections. Some are fun or flirty, others serious, intense or romantic, but they steer clear of R-rated content.
The first Ready question is designed to warm up the conversation – Green Light! This question is something light and easy that’s not going to get you into a fight or cause a wreck, Dana said. An example she posts on her website, dananygaard.com, “Which of us is more likely to laugh at an inappropriate time?” The Set question goes deeper but doesn’t cover such personal information that a couple would be worried if their conversation was overheard at a restaurant, for instance, “If you could time travel to meet family members, would you rather go back in history or into the future?”
The Go question “is meant for couples to enter into a thought-provoking conversation stirring curiosity while gaining new insights into their spouse’s perspectives,” she wrote. One might ask, “Which 3 words come to mind when you think of God?”
Also included is space to write down reflections, a personal preparation prayer and another for the couple to pray together. As questions deepen within the date, so, too, does the level of intimacy increase longitudinally throughout the book, Dana noted.
Couples can utilize 365 Dates at their own pace. If they refer to it once a week on a date, it will take more than seven years to get through the book, she remarked. She and David like to use it for the purpose it was originally written – in the car. Dana purposefully did not let her husband see the questions before publication, so their conversation remains fresh. She was touched when she was the driver on a rare occasion, and David asked her if she wanted him to get out the book.
“It was one of the sweetest moments,” she said. “His asking me meant something. He wanted to know me more and share more about himself. Wow! I felt pursued.”
Others have incorporated the questions into their Bible reading or prayer plans. Even long-married couples have told Dana how much they enjoy 365 Dates, and many marriage ministries promote it on their website and events. She has released an edition designed with prayers and references for Catholics, which has received an imprimatur from a Dallas-area Bishop authorizing its content. Another version has been slightly re-tooled for the Protestant audience. The book also has been translated into Spanish.