WHAT WILL YOUR VALENTINE’S DAY BE LIKE?

February 13, 2014

Tomorrow is Valentine’s Day. Are you looking forward to the day? Would you rather skip over it? Are you indifferent about the occasion? Your answer probably depends on the health of your closest love relationship.

Whatever your thoughts and feelings are about this Hallmark card, candy, and flowers holiday, you can benefit from learning about (or reviewing) circular patterns in relationships – both romantic and not. Take 10 minutes to discover what they are and how they lead either to relationship problems or relationship health. Best of all, find out what you can do so you are happier in your relationships. This 10-minute investment can lead to a small change in your actions that then can lead to a big change in a relationship. Is it worth it to you?

On Marriage and Family Matters psychologist Dr. David Stoop’s blog post describes circular patterns in a way that is easy to understand, and gives an example of how an unhealthy pattern was broken. (Sometime you may want to take a longer look at his blog. His posts are good.)

Then, be prepared to laugh out loud on your way to a healthier relationship with your partner as you watch comedian Amanda Gore. In this five-minute video she shows her audience the differences between what turns on men and women (and what turns them off). She hints at how to change circular patterns that don’t work into ones that do.

Remember this take-away. When it leads to an unwanted outcome, it doesn’t matter who breaks the circular pattern. What is important is the pattern gets broken.

Happy Valentine’s Day!


HEALTHIER RELATIONSHIPS FOR THE HOLIDAYS

December 17, 2013

Happy Holidays!

For as long as I can remember, I’ve head Andy Williams sing the lilting vintage holiday favorite “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year.” The lyrics include,

“… everyone telling you ‘Be of good cheer’”
“It’s the hap-happiest season of all…”
“…and gay happy greetings when friends come to call…”
“… and hearts will be glowing when love ones are near…”

(Listen to it here. This video just went viral and it’s a hoot! Sing along if it suits you!)

As this song suggests, holidays can bring out the very best in people. Unfortunately, holidays can also bring out the very worst in us. You know what I’m talking about. Been there; done that.

Ask yourself these questions.

What have I done in the past to bring out the best in me?
What worked that I can repeat?
What have I done in the past to bring out the worst in me?
What do I need to do or stop doing to prevent it from happening now?

Read on for tips you can use to have a positive effect on your relationships that can help you and those around you have a pleasant holiday season. I hope it is the best one you have ever had!

Bringing Out the Best in You
When you bring out the best in you, it follows that you feel better about yourself. And, by bringing out the best in you, you quietly influence others to bring out their best.

How does this work? Your words and actions set off a chain reaction of events. I call it the “domino effect.” I strongly urge you to watch this absolutely incredible video of a domino chain reaction.  This is a great visual for recognizing the unexpected effect of the power your words and actions can have over what goes on around you. As you see the first domino tip over, imagine it represents something you say or do. As you watch all the other dominos tip over, imagine them representing the chain reaction you started.

Stretch Your Change Muscles
Stretch your change muscles. How? Here’s a proven successful tool to set a tone for a positive outcome. Pause and collect your thoughts before you react to someone with the same old pattern that doesn’t work. In that pause, take some slow deep breaths, and then ask yourself, “Is what I’m about to say or do likely to contribute to a problem or prevent a problem from growing?” If it likely to contribute to the problem don’t say or do it! Sometimes doing or saying nothing is the best solution.

This is important: if you keep responding the same way you always have, you will get the same results.  This is also important: responding differently does not guarantee a good outcome. You might experience the same outcome or a worse one. By changing a pattern that doesn’t work using the tool in the paragraph above you can, however, reduce your chances of having a worse outcome.

Other considerations:  a response that is cruel, cutting, or embarrasses someone in front of others is a spoiler and will not work. It undermines your efforts to have a positive outcome. Too much alcohol, stressing over details, overstimulation (such as attending too many events, shopping in crowded stores), overspending your budget, or trying to do too much tends to lead to having a shorter fuse which also undermines your efforts for a positive outcome.

Remember the R’s
Repetition of a message is one way to Remember and Reinforce an intervention. It is one way to set yourself up for success. Rehearsing is another way. If you are ready to give the tools in this newsletter a go, print it out and Read it daily between now and the new year. Use it to help you create the kind of relationship you want with yourself and others. I encourage you to hold on to hope and to try something new.

You can make a difference!


SLEEP DEPRIVATION – A HIDDEN CAUSE OF RELATIONSHIP PROBLEMS?

September 10, 2013

Do you notice when you are tired you are more likely to

  • make unkind remarks,
  • be quicker than usual to anger,
  • have more negative thoughts,
  • misinterpret another’s actions or words,
  • be less tolerant of another’s faults,
  • focus on what you want and not care about what others want,
  • be more critical,
  • have difficulty thinking clearly,
  • be inflexible,
  • make a poor decision,
  • say or do something you later regret?

Many more reasons exist for tiredness as the source of relationship conflict. Multiply those thoughts, feelings, and actions by inadequate sleep on a regular basis and you have a setup for ongoing and worsening relationship problems.

Sleep deprivation often is overlooked as a reason for relationship problems. This is unfortunate, because it can do series damage and is a solvable problem.

According to James Maas, PhD, the world’s leading sleep researcher and educator, 74% of North Americans are seriously sleep deprived, and most of them don’t even know it Nearly all North Americans have some sleep deprivation. (Personal interview, February 8, 2010.)

Most people don’t consider the harmful impact sleep deprivation has on our relationships. Chronic tiredness can contribute to relationships falling apart. When we consistently get enough of the right kind of sleep (REM and Stage 4 sleep), we can have major improvement in how we get along with others. Overcoming sleep deprivation can even prevent relationship break-ups and divorce.

Healthy habits for restful sleep is an important area for you to look at in your own life. Research shows practices for restorative sleep can help you have a better relationship. However, many proven successful routines and tools for a good night’s sleep go against many common lifestyle choices. These choices alone can explain why we are sleep deprived.

Here are some of the top healthy sleep practices:

  • Drink no caffeine after 2 PM.
  • Avoid evening alcohol.
  • Keep electronics out of the bedroom.
  • Turn off computers and TV an hour before bed.
  • Go to bed and get up at the same time seven days a week.
  • Get at least eight hours of sleep every night.
  • Sleep on a supportive mattress and pillow.

Is that all you have to do to stop a relationship problem – get enough restful sleep? Maybe. Try it and see. It won’t hurt you to find out and it has the potential to heal and save a relationship you treasure.

For a small charge you can have instant access to your own copy of an hour-long downloadable MP3 recording of an engaging interview I had with James Maas PhD. Get the best information available from the world’s best. See the list of topics covered and order it here.


HOW TO BE YOUR WIFE’S WHITE KNIGHT (or your husband’s Queen of Hearts)

July 27, 2013

This afternoon I attended a community theater performance of “The Music Man” at my hometown’s high school. By the norms of River City Iowa in 1912, Marion (yes, Marion the Librarian) should be married. Townspeople consider her standards for a husband too high. They envision her becoming an old maid. Marion, too, secretly fears this will happen.

When her outspoken mother confronts her directly about it, Marion sings “My White Night” by Meredith Wilson. During this song we see Marion knows what she wants in a husband. Her standards include, “…I would like him to be more interested in me than he is in himself, and more interested in us than in me.”

Marion is right on target. The focus for a healthy, happy, lasting marriage does not belong on me or on you. It belongs on us (the relationship).

Questions for thought:

  • Do you want your marriage healthy, happy, and lasting?
  • If you don’t know what to stop doing or start doing to focus (or increase your focus) on the “us” in your marriage, are you willing to learn?
  • Will you take the next step towards that learning now?

Top resources exist to help you learn how to have a healthy marriage that can last a lifetime. Immediately available to you as a downloadable PDF e-book (also available in print) is 30 Tips to Healthier Relationships:  A guide for couples and anyone else who has relationships to treasure. See my other Top Book Recommendations here.


3 WAYS TO RESPOND TO A RELATIONSHIP CRISIS

June 9, 2013

Many of my therapy/counseling clients know I discourage thinking and speaking in absolutes or “black and white” (all or nothing, always or never). As a rule, in relationships this kind of thinking is inaccurate, unproductive, and worst of all, damaging. However, on rare occasions, like as I write to you now, there is a place for absolute thinking. Even I don’t always avoid it!

I can say with certainty that anyone who reads this has experienced relationship crises. It is inevitable. Faced with this certainty, how you prepare for crises and what you think and do during and after a crisis will determine how well you recover from it.

Once the initial shock of a relationship crisis passes, people usually respond with some combination of hurt, fear, and anger.  This is normal.  So what do you choose to think and do next? How do you want it to affect the rest of your life?

Recently I read Antifragile:  Things that Gain from Disorder by Nassim Nicholas Taleb.  Although not a book specifically about interpersonal relationships, it offers direct insight into the three ways people respond to relationship crises:  fragility, resilience, and antifragility.

  1. Fragility. Something fragile easily breaks or falls apart under unexpected stress or shock. It doesn’t recover or become whole again. You and/or your relationship may have learned fragility as a response to crisis. After a crisis, neither you nor your relationship fully recovers. You function below the level you experienced before the crisis. Future events in relationships are affected negatively because you see and interpret them through glasses distorted by fragility.
  2. Resilience. Something resilient is flexible and durable in response to unexpected stress or shock. Once the crisis passes, it becomes whole and stable again. It functions the same as before the crisis. A resilient person and a resilient relationship returns to the level of functioning lived before the crisis. Nothing is lost; nothing is gained. The outcome is neutral.
  3. Antifragility. Something antifragile is the true opposite of fragile. It benefits from unexpected stress or shock. When they are antifragile, individuals and relationships become healthier and stronger from a crisis than they could achieve if they never experienced the crisis.

When you are  of fragility, resilience, and antifragility, you can identify your usual response under stress or unexpected shock. Which response do you have? Do you want merely to recover from a crisis? Or, since it happened, do you want to receive a positive payoff from the experience? If you discover you respond with fragility (becoming worse off than before) or resilience (experiencing no loss or benefit), you can choose to stretch yourself to make something good out of the crisis and learn antifragility.

A key concept in Antifragile is the occurrence of a crisis now and then can strengthen and make something better than before. The author (and I) does not recommend creating crisis to give you the opportunity to grow. Unexpected stress or shock happens naturally and unavoidably.

You can prepare for the inevitable crisis by choosing, in advance, to learn proven, successful tools to manage and get through the initial and later effects of a crisis. Relationship education through reading, workshops, and professional coaching are ways to learn these tools.

Although choosing antifragility can have extraordinary results, is not necessarily an easy road for awhile. The process of becoming stronger than before the crisis may take great effort and a long time. Even after taking preventative steps to learn how to survive crisis, once in the middle of it you may value from having additional proven, successful relationship tools and/or a skilled relationship counselor. It is healthy and wise to use all the support and education available to you as you strive for antifragility. In choosing this path, it is critical you don’t throw in the towel five minutes before you would otherwise see the results of your efforts.

Antifragile:  Things that Gain from Disorder by Nassim Nicholas Taleb, is a long, comprehensive, detailed book. The main concepts are explained in the introduction, while the rest of the book goes into depth in many areas including people, the body, technology, business, economics, politics, health systems, and how each have, have not, and can respond to antifragility.

 “A picture is worth a thousand words”

The Japanese art form Kintsugi or is a practice in antifragility. It takes broken pottery, mends it with a lacquer resin sprinkled with powdered gold, and turns it into something with a new beauty that was not possible before the break. I invite you to take a moment to check out a photo of Kintsugi. You may find this picture helpful in seeing how something rises above brokenness, transforms into something different from the original that is stronger and better than before. That is antifragility.


6 TIPS FOR GETTING THE MOST OUT OF COUPLES OR MARRIAGE COUNSELING

April 9, 2013

Sometimes it helps to start with a story. Some time ago, I attended a day-long workshop based on a positive program description and a recommendation of the presenter from a trusted source. My expectation was to gain a fresh perspective and tools I could use to unstick a particular stuck spot in my life.

This is what happened. For 10 minutes early in the workshop, each participant had the opportunity to name one, and firmly restricted to only one, exception to when he or she did not experience this stuck spot. For the remaining five hours, 50 minutes, the group leader and the other participants shared life stories and discussed the topic from a problem-oriented focus. They had a satisfying day talking about staying stuck. Even the facilitator talked about his own stuckness.

I listened patiently all morning. After lunch I experienced growing impatience as the clock ticked away the hours. I waited for the presenter to shift to a solution focus. It never came. My attempts to ask solution-oriented questions were interrupted, and my questions ignored. I seemed to be the only one who was interested in working towards becoming unstuck.

I left distressed, disappointed, and appalled! It was a waste of my time and money. You may wonder why I sat through this for six hours. I could have walked out. I stayed, hopeful with the expectation we’d eventually get to that solution-oriented talk.

My take away? This group colluded, joined together, to stay stuck. Each person clung to what is familiar, no matter how painful or how much it stopped him or her from living a healthier life.

When you go for couples or marriage counseling, how long do you want to stay stuck? How quickly do you want to move forward in a positive direction? Many people seek therapy (counseling) when they are in crisis, or as a last resort. Their pain is often so great they don’t have the patience or luxury to wait to see improvement in their situation. When choosing a therapist (counselor) for couples or marriage issues, you want someone with the experience to help you make progress right away. You want to start feeling better in the first session.

Your progress may begin with one tiny step or one big step forward. If it is a tiny step, of course you want more. What is important is now you are headed in the right direction.

You want the tools to solve the specific problem(s) for which you need help. As a bonus, it is useful to have tools you can use to prevent a recurrence of the reason you asked for help and skillfully handle the inevitable new future problems.

Avoid finding yourself in a situation similar to the one in which I found myself when attending that dreadful workshop. I recommend these 6 tips as a guideline for getting the most out of couples or marriage counseling.

  1.  Choose a solution-oriented therapist – one who focuses on solutions rather than continually replays the problem with you. A problem focus does more damage than just keeping you stuck. Repeatedly replaying the problem makes you feel worse! Talking about a problem isn’t a solution.
  2. Choose a therapist who does not make recommendations about whether or not you should stay together. Hard to believe, but true, even highly skilled therapists are poor predictors whether or not couples stay together. Those we have serious doubts will heal their relationships often have stellar transformations, while those with easily resolvable problems can surprise us by ending their relationship.
  3. Choose a hope-filled therapist. When you are having difficulties, hope keeps you going. A therapist who has separation or divorce counseling as a default if you don’t solve your problems is not hope-filled.
  4. Expect your therapist to teach you concrete tools to solve the problem(s) for which you seek help. Remember, you are in counseling to solve, not perpetuate a problem.
  5. Between sessions, practice the tools your therapist teaches you. The best tools are useless unless you practice, master, and continue to use them.
  6. If, in spite of your best research or trusted recommendation, you discover the therapist with whom you meet is not right for you, stop seeing that person. Defy any thoughts of giving up, and keep searching until you fine the therapist who is right for you.

HOW DO YOU SAY “I LOVE YOU?”

March 26, 2013

Does it seem like the love you show isn’t received? Do you no longer feel loved by the one you used to be sure loved you? What went wrong? Has love ended?

Chances are, it hasn’t. Chances are, your experience is due to miscommunication. When love isn’t communicated to us in a way we recognize it, we feel disconnected and detached from the one we love. It’s an awful experience.

To make matters worse, when the reason our love is not being received, or the reason we don’t feel loved is miscommunication, we adopt false beliefs. Then, we risk making wrong decisions about our relationship based on these false beliefs.

Let me tell you what I mean by making wrong decisions based on false beliefs. As is the trend, I use a GPS to navigate when I drive to new places. The authoritative voice of the person who sits in the satellite out in space doesn’t pay close enough attention to my car’s location. She sometimes tells me “turn right” one street early, or waits until after I’ve passed the turn to give the instruction. So I take the wrong turn, or miss it, based on poorly timed information – miscommunication. I follow the GPS lady’s instructions due to a false belief that accurate communication took place.

Ways I might solve my GPS problem.

  • Stop using the GPS and use a map
  • Learn how to correct for miscommunication
    • Look for a pattern when the GPS makes errors
    • Accommodate for when the driving directions are likely to be slightly inaccurate

At least the lady in the satellite acknowledges the communication mistake immediately, saying “Recalculating.”

How can you use my GPS tale to be on the right road in expressing and experiencing love? Gary D Chapman is the famous expert in this area.  In his book The 5 Love Languages: The Secret to Love That Lasts, he identifies and describes five different love styles:

  • Words of affirmation
  • Quality time
  • Receiving gifts
  • Acts of service
  • Physical touch

In it, you discover how to give and receive love in ways that encourage connection and prevent disconnection with the one you love.

Using this book as a framework, I developed a chart to help you see how love is communicated successfully. It further provides a series of questions to help you predict outcomes based on how you love and how you are loved. If you discover you are stuck about what to do differently, please read the The 5 Love Languages (available in paper, Kindle, and recorded book formats) and seek out your solutions now.

In later books, he focuses this topic for men, singles, teens, and children. These books are available at Amazon.com and bookstores.


ABSOLUTELY – It Can Hurt Your Marriage

September 19, 2012

“He NEVER…” “She ALWAYS…” This is what a conversation with a couple in my office sounded like recently. When asked if they frequently speak this way at home, they said together “absolutely!” Well, they agree on one thing.

I often hear sentences beginning with these words when couples first come to me with marriage problems. Relationship favorites are “he/she never helps around the house,” “he/she always wants to talk about our relationship,” and “he/she always/never wants to have sex.”

Thinking in absolutes such as NEVER and ALWAYS doesn’t work in relationships and puts you at risk for rigid, stuck thinking that creates conflict. If your spouse NEVER seems to help around the house, you may feel you’re an unappreciated maid. If your spouse ALWAYS seems to want relationship talk and you don’t, you probably want to avoid contact. And both of you feel resentment. Not good, huh?

This is what the couple in my office decides to do to end their pattern of thinking NEVER and ALWAYS?

  • They decide to start fresh – to let go of the past.

Key point:  Holding on to past anger and resentments interferes with focus on the present.

  • They decide to become good detectives – to focus on looking for EXCEPTIONS to their beliefs of ALWAYS and NEVER.

Key point:  Exceptions to ALWAYS or NEVER can go unnoticed. It may seem as if he NEVER helps around the house, when at least sometimes he does. It may seem as if she ALWAYS wants to talk about your relationship, and at least occasionally, she doesn’t. Exceptions usually exist, even if they are very tiny and hard to see if you aren’t looking for them or don’t expect them. Imagine you carry a magnifying glass with you to help you find exceptions.

  • They decide that once they notice an exception, to figure out what happened before the exception.

Key point:  When you figure out what happens that is different before the exception, you can recreate it. Another approach is to figure out what happens before the ALWAYS or NEVER experience happens and stop doing it. Watch for the patterns that work and don’t work.

  • They decide to do more of that exception and make it the new normal.

Key point:  Repeat what works for both of you. Keep repeating it as long as it continues to work most of the time.

6 more suggestions:

  1.  Be willing to be first to break the ALWAYS/NEVER pattern.
  2. Ask your spouse for information. In the past, what EXCEPTIONS to a situation have you failed to notice?
  3. Give your spouse permission to tell you when they create an EXCEPTION you don’t notice.
  4. When the old pattern happens, recognize it isn’t ALWAYS that way. The EXCEPTIONS exist.
  5. Be willing to make mistakes and accept the mistakes of your spouse while you experiment with ending the ALWAYS/NEVER pattern.
  6. Act with kindness and good will as you follow these suggestions.

Do I believe this can help your marriage? ABSOLUTELY!


Opposite Sex Platonic Relationships – Do they work when you’re married?

April 30, 2012

The question.
Last week I had a phone interview with a feature writer for a magazine. She wanted material for an article on platonic relationships with opposite sex, (opposite gender) adults. The interviewer began “let me start off with an easy question – is it OK to have opposite gender platonic relationships?”

That’s an easy question? I wondered what the hard ones would be. My interviewer had not considered the variables. Is one or both people single? Is one or both married or in a committed relationship? It was all the same to her. But it is not.

The interviewer was surprised I did not support her belief that opposite gender platonic relationships are largely healthy for married people. They, instead, can put the health of a marriage at serious risk.

What’s the big deal?
I talked with her about the serious risk of opposite gender friendships turning into emotional and/or physical affairs. Once this happens

  • boundaries break down,
  • values are compromised, and
  • trust is broken.

Broken trust is arguably the most difficult marriage problem a couple can face. More people come to me for marriage counseling due to broken trust than for any other reason. My clinical experience finds restoring trust the most difficult and slowest marriage problem to heal.

“It will never happen to me.”
Don’t risk it. The statement I usually hear from someone who has had an extramarital affair is “I can’t believe I did that. I didn’t plan for it to happen. I never thought it would happen to me!” It happens – even to people who have a commitment to high moral character.

What should I do?
Traditional marriage vows include “forsaking all others.” This is old language to say “leaving other relationships behind and putting my marriage first.”

  • Revisit your marriage vows and values.
  • Be clear what they are.
  • Recommit to them.
  • Do whatever it takes.

I won’ deny I take a strong conservative stand when it comes to opposite gender platonic relationships for those who are married. I won’t deny that successful exceptions exist. I challenge you to search your heart to see if any platonic opposite gender friendships is or could risk damage.

What else can I do?

  • Remember that grass isn’t greener on the other side of the fence. It is greener where it is watered and tended. The same is true for marriage.
  • Seek a well-trained marriage counselor if your solutions to marriage issues aren’t working or if you believe you have done everything to solve them. Read this short article first:  “Choosing a Martial Therapist.”
  • One of my best received and most supported articles “Protecting Marriages from Past Friendships” tells the story of an opportunity I had to reconnect with a male college pal. Click on the title and take 3 or 4 minutes to read it.

3 REASONS TO SAVE YOUR MARRIAGE

November 17, 2011

“A picture is worth 1000 words.”

I see 3 reasons in this photo why I am in favor of resolving problems that might drive a wedge in a marriage.

What reasons to you see? Write them in the reply section. Share and care about healthy marriages and healthy relationships.

marriage_healthy_relationships
3 (or more) reasons to save your marriage. (Photo used with permission.)