Entries Filed In: Parenting
Self-Help Favorites
Thursday, July 09, 2009
I was recently asked which are my favorite self-help books to find healing. So I perused my shelves and pulled out the ones that I have found most helpful for myself and the clients that I have worked with over the years. Here are the top 6:
1. The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work by J. Gottman
I believe that everyone who is in a relationship or looking for one should read this book. It gives so many helpful ways to keep perspective on yourself and the relationship as well as how to develop the friendship, problem-solve and get through the ups and downs.
2. Conquer Your Critical Inner Voice by R. Firestone, L. Firestone, & J. Catlett
This book does what it says. It helps to identify the critical messages that we tell ourselves that work to keep us unhappy. Then it helps figure out how to confront and change these messages into ones that are not destructive.
3. Letting Go of Shame: Understanding How Shame Affects Your Life by R. Potter-Efron & P. Potter-Effron
This book is similar to the previous one in that it educates about shame and helps us to heal from the shameful messages in our lives.
4. Yes, Your Teen is Crazy!: Loving Your Teen Without Losing Your Mind by M. Bradley
The title sums it up perfectly. It normalizes and gives ideas to parents who are feeling helpless.
5. Thee Good Divorce: Keeping Your Family Together When Your Marriage Comes Apart by C. Ahrons
You have tried everything and are now at the last possible option. This book helps the process to be one that is focused on the kids and collaborative rather than conflict-ridden.
6. I Heart Female Orgasm by D. Solot & M. Miller
What is not to love? Everything you wanted to know and more.
Priorities
Friday, June 19, 2009
I have been noticing a theme lately: couples put everything else before each other—work, children, email, cell phones, housework. And the Couple is down at the bottom of the list. Now I understand sometimes work and kids HAVE to come first. But it should not be like that every day. Some days the Couple has to come first. Some days emails, work and phone calls can be put off to later.
* It’s OK to say to the kids: “You go play in the other room. Mommy and Daddy are going to talk for a little while.” Then take a few minutes to catch up on your day away from each other. Talk about the things that are important or interesting to you. Listen to your partner about what is important and interesting to him or her. Pay attention. Ask questions.
* After the kids go to bed, don’t focus first on the housework that needs to be finished. First pay attention to each other. Catch-up; touch each other. Trust me, the laundry and dishes will still be there in 30 minutes.
* Find a trustworthy babysitter and go out together. Do something that you both enjoy without the children.
* Designate a 30 minute period each evening to ignore the cell phones, emails, and turn off the TV. Focus on your partner. Touch each other. Laugh.
Make the Couple a priority in your life.
Parenting Together
Thursday, July 10, 2008
Relationships are never simple. Balancing two people’s needs, wants, desires, and hang-ups are challenging. When you throw parenting into the mix it is even more complex.
One of the biggest challenges that couples face when they become parents is figuring out how to take what they learned from their parents about what to do (or what not to do) and meld it with someone else’s ideas that they took from their own parents. Suddenly there are not 2 people involved anymore, but 6. One couple and two sets of grandparents. And if you are lucky you are only dealing with the issues you brought from your childhood and not grandparents trying to “contribute” on the day to day affairs.
What types of food. How much TV. Type of school. Should he or she play sports? Which Sports? How to handle peer influences. Discipline. Discipline. Discipline.
All of these issues can throw a wrench into the lives of a relatively happy couple. When there are already issues in the relationship, parenting just highlights them even more. The most important thing to do is to sit down with each other after the kids are in bed and talk about it calmly.
“How are WE going to handle [...]?”
“What are WE going to do about [...]?”
“I feel that it is important that WE [...].”
Notice that all of these sentences have an emphasis on the couple. The WE. It is not, “I don’t like it when you [...]” or “You need to stop doing/saying [...]”. Parenting is a partnership. Even if the parents are no longer partners, it is healthier for the children if they are parenting together and using the same techniques rather than fighting over each and every move.
Read books. Talk to other parents about what they do. Talk to your child’s teacher about what he or she suggests (this person has seen and dealt with more behavioral issues than you ever will).
Try not to be defensive. Don’t view it as a criticism. You are working together to parent and you can each draw on your partner’s strengths to make up for you own weaknesses. None of us are perfect and we all make mistakes when it comes to parenting. What is important is that we see that these are mistakes and try to rectify them and change. Forgive yourself. Forgive your partner and find new ways of handling frustrating situations.
You are raising a person. You want this person to be a happy, healthy, decent, and loving individual. And for that to happen you need to be as happy, healthy, decent and loving as you can be. To your child, to your partner, to yourself.
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