Posts tagged ‘marriage’

February 9, 2012

You shall date your spouse!

Contributed by Family Bridges Staff

Small talk. That smile. You are special. How sweet. Be mine. Love you. I am yours. Only you. Soul mate. True love. Marry me. Live happily ever after.

You got together with your partner in life for many reasons: shared perspectives and outlooks, physical attraction, shared spirituality, shared professional lives, etc. But you also enjoyed one another’s company because it’s fun! In the beginning, you did not have much but each other, but it was enough. There were sweet words, long phone talks, walks and candlelit dinners. You had meaningful conversations, sharing your dreams and goals, planning your future together. What is your relationship like today? Does it still include fun times together, romancing each other or have you resorted to talking about and handling chores and responsibilities related to children, career and other duties of adult life?

When fun leaves a relationship, it can be a sign that the relationship is heading toward the rocks. Fun is a part of life and it’s definitely a part of any healthy relationship. It’s something that brought you together, made you want to stay with each other. It is something that helps you stay together, survive life’s hardships and forgive each other in bitter moments. When life gets difficult, it puts a heavy weight on your scale of marital balance, dragging it down. Good times together is the weight that you put on the other side of the scale, to give you a much needed internal lift. It helps you put things in perspective, balance it out and feel good about yourself, your partner, and your life together.

The way you and your significant other define fun is up to you, but it’s important to keep doing it even as your relationship matures. Love to dance but haven’t been in years? It’s time to make a new dance date. Liked watching movies together, but haven’t made time to do it in months (or years)? Pick a night and head to a theater or rent a movie. Have dinner in a restaurant or cook a meal together at home.

Remember that in our most bitter moments, what we crave most is some sweetness. In the midst of busyness and stress, we desperately desire lighthearted fun and relaxing moments. You don’t have to wait till things get tough to consider bringing fun back into your life. Nor do you have to wait for a special day, like a birthday or Valentine’s to become romantic and create special memories for the two of you. Do these things for you, for your spouse, for both of you as a family everyday, starting now. If you’ve noticed that your family bank of fun is depleted, begin depositing happy tokens today.

The Chicago Date Challenge can help you with some fun ideas and locate some couple friendly events in your neighborhood: www.datenightchallenge.com/chicago

January 27, 2012

Being Reactive or Proactive In Relationships: The Choice is Yours

Contributed by Nadia Persun, Ph.D., Licensed Clinical Psychologist

Another marital session with Mary was spent discussing her frustration with her husband. She told once again how he lacks empathy and ability to listen, has poor communication skills and messes up most of the things he does. In the last few months of therapy, her husband was trying hard to yield to the wishes of his wife, to hear her concerns and to reform his behaviors to her liking. Despite his trying, his efforts were fruitless. In fact, the harder he tried, the more faults his wife was able to identity. The more Mary confronted her husband, the more he withdrew, thus, allowing Mary to add an extra item to her complaint list: “He never talks to me!”

Watching this couple disagree and grow increasingly disheartened with each other, I began realizing more the limitations of trying to control another person’s actions and behaviors, while overlooking the power of examining and controlling our own. Every person can recall instances when blaming the situation or other people served as a convenient way to justify why their own actions and behaviors failed. There may be some truth to finding problems on the outside: the environment may indeed foster or impede our efforts. However, there is certainly a limit to the extent of how outside factors control us. We are still responsible for our reactions and free to choose our actions and behaviors. We have the freedom of being “proactive”. Proactive control means finding the sense of responsibility within ourselves, feeling in control of the choice of own actions, even when the outside conditions are not favorable.

People failing to take the proactive type of control over the situation commonly resort to being “reactive” in their response. They don’t attempt to examine how they may be at least partially responsible for the situation. Instead, they channel their time and energy into noticing and complaining about their disappointments, becoming more irritable and dissatisfied. Busy criticizing others, blaming the circumstances, complaining and ruminating, reactive people are left with no energy for examining the situation with the intent to generate plans to improve it. Therefore, they get “stuck” in the very situation that they dislike and wish to escape.

There is a drastic difference in the choice of vocabulary between proactive and reactive people. Proactive people say “I can; I chose; I want.” Reactive people tend to say “I wish; if only; I have to.” Being a proactive person does not imply overlooking or ignoring an unfavorable situation. On the contrary, it includes a careful examination of the circumstances and events that led to disappointments. It may also include a period of inactivity and grief. However, at some point, a proactive person makes a choice to transition to an active phase, examining the situation from a new angle and trying to understand own contribution to the problem. Next step includes mobilizing personal resources to generate a new plan and act differently, and not wait for others to change.

Reactive people begin with a critical review of the negatives of the situation they find themselves in and never abandon their “frustrated examination.” They convince themselves that the change does not depend on their own beliefs and actions but is contingent on the changes outside of them. They blame their partners, the circumstances, wishing they would change. Reactive people gradually start feeling like victims: helpless and hopelessly immersed into a never ending cycle of problems. Their problems seem grave and permanent and reactive people start believing that they do not have the control or power to change anything. Facing this sad realization, they get further immersed into a pattern of chronic complaining and blaming. This unattractive habit pushes people away and creates more relationship problems and disconnect. Thus, reactive people get trapped in the wicked cycle filled with sense of misery, hopelessness, and disappointment with the world and behavior of other people.

What can you do if after reading this article, you identify with behaving reactively? The fact that you are able to recognize and admit it is the first and very important step reforming yourself toward becoming proactive. Change begins with a careful and non-defensive examination of our own behavior, realizing that in most situations, we are a least partially responsible for some of the difficulties we face. Next step includes focus on changing personal behavior, training self to react to others with greater acceptance and flexibility. Becoming proactive includes refraining from complaining about others but working to change our own expectations and behavior, and acting differently regardless of the circumstances or your partner’s actions. Being proactive means deciding to stop waiting for a perfect time or a rescue team to arrive. It comes down to the choice of simply going through difficult experiences with much complaining and lack of action, or growing through enduring the same experience by understanding that the secret of change is within each of us, thus becoming stronger and wiser as a result of this personal transformation.

November 9, 2011

Kim Kardashian’s Marriage-Divorce Circus

Contributed by Nadia Persun, Ph.D., Licensed Clinical Psychologist

When it comes to Hollywood marriages, it is more surprising when they last versus when they don’t. However, it is still striking when “forever” becomes “forget it” in just 10 weeks. Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries have called it quits. It’s quite stunning that their marriage did not last. They seemed like a perfect couple, with a deep connection and so much in common, after all both of their first names begin with the letter “K”.

Kim releases a statement, “I had hoped this marriage was forever but sometimes things don’t work out as planned.” On the contrary, perhaps things have worked out for her exactly as planned. Following the highly publicized nuptials, reports claimed Kim earned up to $18 million from the event.

It would be silly to expect these two to grow old together, but they should have lasted for at least one season of Kardashians! However, maybe the script for this marriage included a quick divorce. Regular day-to-day relationships are boring, they clearly fade in comparison with the drama of vice, promiscuity, adultery, dirty fighting and make up sexual scenes. Anything what sells shall be offered to those willing to consume. It’s likely that the show producers are busy working on the idea for a show sequel about reconciliation. Kris Humphries’ recent statement gives a clue about the upcoming saga: “I love my wife and am devastated to learn she filed for divorce.” So, he was not the first to know? “I’m willing to do whatever it takes to make it work,” Kris adds.

So, it’s quite likely that show watchers will have an honor to be privy to Kim and Kris’ “deep, meaningful, and private” TV broadcasted conversations and may be even to their couple therapy sessions. People can watch more of their fake displays of sentimentality and affection and their washing of dirty laundry in public. It’s a shame that these characters and their staged dramas still find a sizable audience, helping them to capitalize on rituals and values that are not for sale, while also trashing and trivializing them along the way.

Some questions to ask before saying “I do”

The success or failure of marriage may hinge on how well partners deal with issues such as finances, sexuality and expression of affection, communication and conflict resolution, desire to have children and parenting philosophy, dealing with relationship in-laws and other family or origin issues, ways of spending leisure time, agreement about personal values and spirituality, division of household chores, and other relationship related expectations. Ability and willingness to communicate and negotiate about these issues, as well as partners’ mutual desire to adjust and grow along the way, are the keys to a successful marriage.

Seeking premarital counseling and taking a premarital assessment inventory may be good ways to prepare before getting married. There are several premarital counseling questionnaires that are used for premarital assessment. Examples include, Premarital Preparation and Relationship Enhancement (PREPARE) and Study Assessment (FOCCUS), which are offered by some counselors at Meier Clinic in Wheaton. Premarital counseling questionnaires may help to identify what areas a couple needs to discuss further during premarital counseling sessions.

No matter what premarital counseling questions are for a couple, it’s best to get them answered before the wedding ceremony. Being married is much harder than getting married, and a therapist or spiritual counselor specializing in relationships may be able to help couples avoid some of the common pitfalls. Questions that couples have before marriage only intensify over time, and premarital counsel can help people resolve their issues before relationship problems arise.

August 16, 2011

I love you. Now, change!

Contributed by Nadia Persun, PhD

She married him because he was hardworking. She was considering divorce because he turned out to be a workaholic who was barely ever home. She loved his smile and sense of humor. Now she was blaming him for being bitter and sarcastic. She appreciated his easy going nature and laid back demeanor. It was maddening to her now that he would rather watch TV than talk to her about their relationship, that he did not help her to keep their house clean, and that he missed their bill payment deadlines on more than one occasion.

He married her because she was open with her feelings and straightforward about expressing her opinions. He now was irritated with her level of complaining, her blunt way of pointing out his mistakes and being overly focused on things that he considered small and unworthy of notice. He once loved spending time with her and telling her his deeper thoughts and feelings. He now was quietly terrified to bring up any issue of relative personal importance, as her tongue became sharp as a knife when it came to judging him. He would rather spend his after work hours watching TV and working on his car in the garage over the weekends.

She felt unhappy, lonely, misunderstood, and rejected. He felt hurt, criticized, unloved, and taken for granted. They both desperately yearned for love, respect, and appreciation, wanting nothing more but a hug. Unfortunately, their wicked way of negotiating their needs and expressing desires made them both decidedly unhugable. With perpetuating resentment and increasing distance, they were heading for destination called a Splitville. What has happened to this couple, so connected and loving only a few years ago, promising to each other with eagerness to love “till death do us part.”

Ironically, the qualities that initially cause love and attachment may, over time, morph into resentment and contempt. At the beginning of the relationship, our mindset is on building closeness. We focus on cooperating and seeking agreement. Over time, unfortunately, there is a shift in focus. Not because our partners change drastically and deteriorate in character as time goes by, but because we no longer notice what they do well. Such things become like air or water: much needed but taken for granted. We begin paying more attention to shortcomings. The focus perpetuates its motion: the more we zone in on the problematic habits and behaviors of another person, the more evidence of this sort we gather.

When picking on and criticizing our partners for their flaws and mistakes, we may even genuinely feel that our intentions are pure, that we point out these problems out of love, trying to correct things, and wanting what is best for the relationship. Despite good intentions, this approach has a strategic flaw. Trying to motivate someone to change, not by support and encouragement, but by bitter and steady criticism only creates hostility and a relational standoff. Unless we notice and disown this pattern, confrontation will become a habit, leading to the erosion of trust and making connecting conversations impossible.

In a safe relationship, partners can say awkward things, act conflicted, make mistakes, and still be forgiven. The opponent chooses to listen, support and connect, rather than judge, confront and correct. Feeling safe allows genuine communication and disclosure. On the contrary, when trust level is low, we listen to another person with increased guardedness and alertness. Most wisely chosen words and carefully selected arguments are easily misinterpreted. As conflicts increase in frequency and intensity and the negatives outweigh the number of good times spent together, partners not only avoid talking but become wary of each other’s company. The anticipation of spending time with a partner who is punitive and does not feel safe brings the same trepidation as the prospect of sticking hand in a mousetrap.

How do you end this bitter cycle and rejoice about the qualities that initially brought you together? The first step is trying to end the frantic search for self justice, tempering down the high expectations and judging stance. It is not about shifting to low standards but increasing patience and neutrality toward behaviors and points of view that disagree with your own. Examining your personal level of fairness and integrity in treating another person may be a painful but much needed introspective examination. Some of us may realize that instead of connecting and acting with integrity, we are having a one sided conversation about ourselves, our needs and preferences, while also being forceful, controlling, and even manipulative. Of course, personal goals and opinions are important. But in all honesty, they are a measure of preference, not superiority.

It is also important to keep the emotional intensity in check when communicating. Some people deliver messages to their loved ones acting like kettles at full steam. It only creates negative emotional contagion: partners retaliate with anger or retreat in defensiveness. The validity or goodness of the initial message becomes irrelevant as it can’t be received. Calm down and realize that your partner is a human being who just like you wants to be treated with respect and talked to politely, without demands and put downs. Maybe our imperfect partners can still be lovable.

Maybe this person next to you is not broken and in need of a complete personality and behavioral makeover. What if it’s your own emotional nearsightedness developed over time is to blame for honing in on the relational shortcomings? Relationships are complicated and couple’s circumstances are unique. Yet, it’s worth examining if some partner related frustrations are at least, in part, relate to your own compulsive cycle of digging in a bin of apples and acting increasingly frustrated about why you are not pulling out any tomatoes. This realization may lead to a new way of fixing the problem and improving your relationship: being more flexible and kind, having a more positive and forgiving attitude, rather than trying to perpetually criticize and and forcefully mold habits and behaviors of other person.

June 22, 2010

Family Bridges’ response to “The case against marriage” article in “Newsweek” of 06/11/10

By Nadia Persun, Ph.D. and Alicia La Hoz, Psy.D., Clinical Psychologists and Managing Partners of Family Bridges

Newsweek recently posted an article online entitled “The Case Against Marriage” – here’s our response to the article. (You can view the original Newsweek article at: http://www.newsweek.com/2010/06/11/i-don-t.html)

I guess I could have been just sitting on the couch with him one way ten years ago, watching a sitcom and sipping nice chilled Chardonnay. Feeling loving and sentimental, I’d just tell him in the spur of the moment: “Hey, I’ve been thinking about us. I love you and want to stay with you, hopefully for good.” He’d agree to my casual proposition: we wanted to be together. Wearing jeans, we’d exchange our informal vows and skip dealing with legalities, costs, and ado of a gown and a tuxedo party. However, we’ve opted out of the “promise of the couch” option and had a small wedding ceremony with friends and family supporting and celebrating our decision, thus creating memories and traditions that we now cherish and share with our children. Many things were to follow: becoming better friends, learning to share, compromise, and forgive, and figuring out that marriage is not easy but worth of effort.

Yes, I could support myself financially. After graduate school, I’ve landed a job that is both, fun and well-paying. However, I needed him to cheer me up through the hurdles of being a student and share both, delights and problems, of launching and building my career. He is my family, supporting and cheerleading, in thick and thin. Yes, I could probably get away without some of his help in the house. I do have expensive appliances in the house that make chores easier. However, my top of the line washer and dryer don’t give me a back rub when my muscles are sore, and my high end French door fridge does not listen and cheer me up when I feel sad.  I don’t believe that modernization and affluence can replace deep human need for a life time partnership with commitment and stability coming with marriage.

No, I did not have guarantees when marrying him that later I am not going to meet another “better suited” partner. I just genuinely liked him and desired to be together. So much that I vowed to make him a member of my family. Just like I’ve never attempted to exchange my sister during our disagreements for another, easier to get along-with human, I’ve extended the same no-expiration and no- exchange policy to him. No, I have never considered formal celebrations and tangible tokens of connection, such as rings, a wedding, and a marriage license, as redundant. I’ve heard cynical comments about marriage being just a piece of paper. However, history and experience show that some papers (think of the Constitution) are timeless, priceless, and capable of providing an irreplaceable foundation for creation of stability, deep meaning, and greatness.

Yes, there any many choices these days. It’s easy to get cynical and overwhelmed by variety, struggling with finding patience and ability to manage stress of life-long decisions. Just like many become shopping bulimics, buying, returning, exchanging, and upgrading goods in the land of material abundance, some try to apply same principles to intangible commodities, such as love and commitment, only getting increasingly overwhelmed, confused, and discouraged. Genuine love is not about staying together during a transient period of coincidental convergence of interests, ending upon expiration of passion and patience. Untainted definition of marriage includes life time commitment and loyalty, along with creation and preservation of a family tradition. It’s hard, and sometimes it does not work out. But you are darn lucky if it does. Why promote and foster marriage resentment? How about getting better at relational skills, overcoming marriage phobia, and learning to contend with and appreciate both, labor and fruits of grand yet great life decisions?

April 14, 2010

All About Dad

Children and adolescents are the ones who bare the brunt of unhealthy marital relationships. Fathers, in particular, who are in supportive relationships tend to be more sensitive and attentive and less hostile and negative with their children. (Click here to see Responsible Father Spotlike Facts).

While at one time or another you may parent an adolescent who slams the door at you and screams with passion “I hate you” when you enforce a rule or deny them a privilige, if this is not a one-time occurrance but a sentiment that is felt on a continual basis, it may be worthwhile to explore how the father-mother relationship is faring. If you feel isolated from your children and can’t seem to connect with them, don’t just assume that it’s an adolescent hormonal stage, evaluate your marital relationship. Children and adolescents have an uncanny ability to pick up on parents’ distress and may resort to assuming passive aggressive attitudes and acting out behaviors that can test your patience and all of your established boundaries. They feel the tension in the home and this spills over to their school work, social relationships and coping skills. 

It’s interesting from the statistics noted that it’s not only adolescents and children that may feel like responding in a rebellious way, but fathers as well. When fathers do not feel connected with their partners, the tendency is for them to pull away from their children. So now you have fathers who alienate themselves from their children and children who respond aggressively and in negative ways.  Why do you think that fathers do this? That when their marital relationships suffer – commonly they also pull away from their children’s lives? Why is that even though, children are not at fault, they are the ones that pay the penalty for unhealthy marital relationships? Whatever the reasons, what we do know is that fathers who have healthy relationships are more responsive to their children. This is a HUGE reason for why we need to invest in healthy relationships – ultimately we are investing in the lives of our children.

March 9, 2010

The silent treatment

Contributed by Dr. Alicia La Hoz, Family Bridges’ Program Director

You are upset and bothered. You decide that it’s better to simply ignore your partner and hope he/she gets the point. The silence game is your last resort because you are officially over it and you figure this is the best way to get back at them.

There is no limit to the amount of time that this silent treatment can last – it can be for a day, two days, a week, a month. There are no rules except to ignore the person. That is why it’s so tempting to rely on the silent treatment. And it’s effective…in all the wrong ways. The silent treatment will effectively:

  • succeed to create unbearable tension in the home  - so much that everyone can feel it;
  • help you continue to imagine all the possible ways you were right and they were wrong – creating quite a defense case;
  • create more and more distance between you and your partner/or those who you are giving the treatment to; and
  • help keep your anger alive.

 We resort to giving the silent treatment out of pure frustration. While it seems to provide a way out from what seems like and unsolvable problem – it tends to only leave a bitter aftertaste for everyone. Sure it works to keep anger alive and to break down relationships…but, if you are at all interested in actually restoring your relationship, then resorting to a healthier option is a better answer. And yes, a healthier option does exist, it’s called communication. Working on active communication skills help clear frustration and anger and will in turn lead to problem solving. It’s also quite the opposite of giving someone the silent treatment and therefore much more effective.

Because we tend not to listen, because we weren’t all born with the innate ability to communicate clearly and effectively – conflict is bound to occur in relationships. Most of us have to learn and/or need coaching on how to communicate so we don’t resort to known and tried silent treatments or other negative types of communication when we feel frustrated.  This is why we really like what the Family Bridges program is about. Helping people break the silence.

February 9, 2010

Friendship Matters

Remember when you and your spouse started dating? Talking for hours on the telephone? Asking never-ending lists of questions to get to know him better? Going out of your way to make her smile? Spending all of your free time together? These activities most likely helped to strengthen your growing relationship and to build a foundation of friendship for your marriage. Research has shown that happily married couples begin with a strong friendship. Friendships are created and maintained when we go out of our way to nurture our marital relationship. During times of stress, this friendship allows positive feelings about our spouse to take priority over more negative feelings. What can you do to nurture a marital friendship? It’s not complicated.

  • Take a walk together.
  • Send a text message when your wife has a busy day ahead.
  • Stock your husband’s favorite soda in the refrigerator.
  • Have a 10-minute “check-in” time at the end of each day.
  • Plan a monthly date night.

Most of all, remember what made you fall in love with each other – and remind yourself of these positive qualities when the negatives feel overwhelming. Couples who spend time together, communicate intentionally, and work together are investing in their marital friendship.

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