Archive for the ‘Divorce Recovery’ Category

The Second Fundamental Rule of Growth:

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

Our Behavior Affects the Climate in Our Relationships

Sometimes its difficult to assess how our behaviors affect the climate of our relationships with others. What each of us talks about significantly impacts what others around us feel and think. If you would like an example of this, consider how you felt the last time someone told you bad news. Their information probably had a direct impact on your mood and how you felt inside. What we do can affect what others around us feel. For example, when parents are going through a divorce, their children are observing a lot of stress and tension in their caregivers.
The thing about divorce is that you have a story. Most people, including the cats and dogs, want to know why. “What happened?” and “Did he/she really…?” are the common question you will get. As you tell your story, this is the climate you are presenting to others.
A vindictive climate will often push people away. While you may have anger, these approaches will not help you heal more will they allow you to create healthy relationships.
So what exactly is your story? What are you telling others? A person’s story may go something like this: “My wife was impossible to live with. She had to keep a spotless house. I would get up to go to the bathroom in the middle of the night and she would make the bed. She took the spoon out of my mouth when I was eating to put it in the dishwasher. She was such clean freak-completely impossible. I’m sure lucky to be away from her.”
“Oh, he is such a slob. He leaves his socks, pants-you name it-on the floor. He’s so lazy and just wants to play. He never works. Good riddance to the bum.”
Your story may sound like this or may be something very different. “It was all her fault.” “It was all my fault. I’m so stupid.” No matter what your story is, it is important to know it. You go through the tale in your head on a regular basis. You must also observe how your story is understood or misunderstood by others.
Now it is time to examine your story and see how it works for you. Are you the victim? Are you the one who survived? Or can you see where both of you could have done things differently?
No matter what your story is, it is important to know it.
In this section you will be asked to determine how your story of the divorce influences the people around you. An added bonus will be that once you see how it affects others, you may see on a deeper level how it impacts you.
As you think about your story, it will have an impact on your emotions. You may get upset, irritated, sad, or you may feel relieved. These emotions turn into thoughts that create the climate inside of you. Your mind requires that you make meaning out of your divorce. Let’s see what your mind did with your experience.

ASSIGNMENT 4A: Take some time to write down the story you tell others about your divorce. What did you say? How did you describe the break-up?

ASSIGNMENT 4B: How did the individuals to whom you told your story respond? Did their response surprise you? Or was it predictable?

ASSIGNMENT 4C: Describe the effect their response had on YOU. Did it make you feel justified? Guilty? Pleased? Angry?

Now that you have gone in depth, looked at your stories, and consider how they affect you and others, your awareness of the power of what you say will stay with you as you put together more stories to tell in the future.
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Create Climate Where You Can Grow and Develop

Friday, October 8th, 2010

Now that you have listed some of the core challenge that have impacted you, it’s time to evaluate your current climate so you can identify the issues that are preventing you from moving forward. Every place, every person, every relationship has a climate. A climate is prevailing temper, trend, or condition. In order for human relations to grow and develop, it’s necessary to have a safe climate where thoughts, ideas, goals, and aspirations can be shared. The environment in which you find yourself impacts yours tae of mind. For example, have you ever walked through a messy kitchen where your foot got stuck on sticky stuff with each step? Stepping on sticky stuff will affect your thinking and feelings not only about the kitchen, but also about others you live with and life in general. This experience is totally different when the house is freshly clean and you know where everything is. A clean or dirty kitchen can affect the way you think and feel in positive and negative ways. The same principle applies to human development. It responds to both negative and positive emotions.

Most human development occurs in a safe climate. This means that if you want to grow and change, you need to understand how to establish and use a few fundamental rules that will help you enjoy your healthy relationship for growth and shape it for growth.

To be continued next week!

Excerpt from “Stop Marrying Mistakes”, available at Amazon.

Healing Exercises

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

Okay, now you are officially divorced. If you’re anything like me, when the announcement came it was a shock. Yes, I fought with my ex over the big screen TV, the dog, the children, and a thousand times I whispered that I couldn’t wait for the whole mess to be over. The reality that I was actually going to be a divorced person never completely registered in my mind. Once those documents were signed and the jduge put his John Hancock on the dotted line, boom, I found myself on a very different journey than I had traveled as a married person. What to do?

“Heal” is a message that divorced people hear a lot. I would be a millionare if I were paid a dollar every time someone told me, “You’ve got to give yourself time to heal.” Great. I’d love to heal. I have a life I want to get on with, so let’s do it. But how?

Before you can fix something, you have to know what the problem is. So despite the fact that it’s not fun to look at the truth of our wounded lives, it is important to be thorough and honest when doing so. If you’re not, you’re only cheating yourself.

Excercises to Assist in Healing

Take a few minutes now to think about what you’ve gotten through since the day your divorce was finalized.

In the assignment below you will be asked to identify some of the most challenging things you have had to deal with since your divorce. Do it. Grab a pen and honestly answer the questions. Remember: the more honest you are with yourself, the faster you’ll heal and the sooner you’ll be relieved of pain. Additionally, the more honest you are now, the faster you’ll develop the necessary skills to form a healthy lifestyle. So what are you waiting for? Let’s start.

Assignment 1: What are the five most difficult things you have had to deal with as a direct result of your divorce? Write down how each of these has impacted you, your children, and others.

example:

1) ____________________________

Impact on me:

Impact on my children:

Impact on others:

Excerpt taken from “Stop Marrying Mistakes”. Buy this book.

Successful Remarriage

Monday, December 14th, 2009

rings

Children are the number one reason why remarriages don’t last. Children often sabotage their parent’s new marriage. Children have many reasons for doing this. Here is a partial list: a. Dislike for the new stepparent. b. Erosion of hope that their natural parents will get back together. c. Realization that there is power in pitting one parent against the other. d. Jealousy of the new stepparent. e. Dislike of being parented by a stranger. d. Need for attention. Fights over how to parent the children can lead to many embittered feelings. Couples encounter problems when the physical parent won’t allow discipline to occur at all, or when stepparents insist on taking on the parenting role too soon. Other potentially hostile problems can occur when there is a blending of two sets of children. Favoritism can have a caustic underlying effect on the whole family structure.

What You Can Do To Believe In Yourself

Monday, December 7th, 2009

#1. Self-worth comes from being productive. People’s energy increases when they are doing positive things.

#2. Self-worth increases when a person is helping others.

#3. Self-worth comes when a person learns to be emotionally true and honest. They stop allowing others to hurt them. In other words, they take control of their life. It is valuing of self to not rely on others to feel valued.

#4. Self-worth increases when a person is in an environment that doesn’t bring them down. No matter how good a person is they need positive feedback. If they cannot find that in their current environment, they need to seek places of refuge. They need to find someone who values them and who they can value.

#5. Self-worth comes from creating relationships, being pro-active and involved with others. This increases people’s ability to realize that they are of worth.   (Excerpt from Stop Marrying Mistakes: Using Principles to Claim  A Healthy Relationship)

There are more to the list which I will post later, but I would love to hear what others think is important to add to the list.  I am sure that I missed some.

What You Can Do To Believe In Yourself Part 2

Monday, November 30th, 2009

#6. Self-worth comes when a person is able to identify people who are healthy and people who are not.

#7. Self-worth comes when a person is able to detach and let go of the pain from their past. It requires them to learn more about their emotions. They learn they can heal even if the other person never says, “I’m sorry.” #8. Self-worth comes from doing things people enjoy. It is necessary to fill the bucket. If a person is always giving, they will eventually get burned out. It is important to do something for self. #9. Self-worth comes when a person learns that others cannot give them their worth. They have it within themselves. As children, people learn to place value upon themselves when others (parents) give it to them. If that didn’t occur, they seek it from friends or others. If people don’t get it there, they either give up or keep their relationships at a distance. Only when they learn that they are of worth and that others cannot give it to them do they realize that they have had the feeling of worth within themselves the whole time.

#10. Self-worth increases when a person gets rid of their demons from the past. They can try and ignore them and hide them, but until they deal with the hurts and pains of the past, they are likely to have chinks in their self-worth armor. They need to deal with beliefs from their past. (Excerpt from Stop Marrying Mistakes: Using Principles to Claim A Healthy Relationship) Are there anything else that you have considered helpful?