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New! I am now offering confidential responses to your questions.
May 2005
Hanging on my grandmother’s wall was a plaque that always made me stop
when I was a child. It said that the greatest gift that a man can give his children
is to love their mother. When I was a child, I heartily disagreed with that
sentiment. I firmly believed that the best present involved a pony or candy;
however, now as a parent, a spouse and marriage and family therapist, I have
begun to think that Grandma was right.
In this crazy, rushing world that we live in today, we struggle just to get
to work, clean the house and take care of our children. We put our relationships
on the back burner and figure we will get to them when we have time. Unfortunately,
when we have time, we find that due to the long neglect that the relationship
has withered and died.
Why does it matter to our children whether or not our relationship is happy?
Aren’t children egocentric little monsters who only think of their own
needs? Well, yes, sometimes. But they grow better in an environment that is
filled with happiness, love and smiles. And children are incredibly sensitive
to the emotions that are swirling around them. If there is tension between the
adults in the family, the children will feel it and will become tense themselves.
They may also try doing whatever they can to fix the situation; they may try
to take on tasks that are too much for them, they may try to make everyone laugh,
they may simply disappear into the background or they may start acting out and
getting into trouble in order to have their parents focus on something else.
Children, developmentally, feel that the world revolves around them. They are
the reason that everything happens in this world. That means all the good stuff
in the world is due to them, but so, also, is all the bad stuff. I had a little
five-year-old boy ask me once, “If I had made my bed every day, would
my parents still love each other?”
So before you turn around and find that your relationship has disappeared, please
take some time to nurture it. At least once a month, go out on a date; twice
a month is better, every week is fabulous. When you are out, this is not the
time to talk about what bills are due or any other household junk. This is the
time to catch up on who your partner is now, what are both of your hopes and
dreams, where are you going, and how are you going to get there together.
It is also vital that you connect every morning and every evening. At the very
least, give each other a kiss good bye and wish each other, sincerely, a good
day. At the end of the day, check in with each other about how the day went.
End with a kiss. These connections will take a short amount of time, but will
have a major impact on the health of your relationship. By the way, kids love
to see their parents express honest, healthy affection (within appropriate boundaries).
But you may never get your child to admit that they think that it’s great!
Don’t forget the little things that you can do to tell your partner how
happy you are to be in this relationship. Slip a note in a lunch or briefcase,
send a seductive e-mail, give compliments, give hugs! The list is endless, only
you and your partner know what is meaningful for you. And if you have forgotten,
think back to when you were dating, or, even better, ask your spouse what would
make him or her feel loved, and then give them that gift of love. And watch
your relationship grow and thrive, as do your children in this wonderful environment.
And you too will understand the value of my Grandmother’s wisdom.
April 2005 - Sept 2005 |
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