Author Archive

July 13, 2009

Ex and new husband turn my children against me….

by Rod Smith

“My ex-wife and her new husband misrepresent me to my three children (8, 10, and 12). When I see my children on weekends they are guarded and anxious. Where do I start to get my children to see they are being turned against me?”

ACT, Australia

ACT, Australia

It would be a good idea to sit down and talk with your ex-wife about how this situation is impacting you. The most important thing is that the adults work at the best solution for this transition for the children. Separation and divorce hits kids deeply. Remarriage on both parents’ parts must be as difficult, or even more so. It’s important for the children to talk about how they feel and what they think about what’s happening in their lives. Knowing that both sets of parents are working together will be helpful to the adjustments that are needed.

USA

USA

Avoid recruiting the children into the inevitable crossfire. This issue, real or perceived on your part, is an adult matter, and it is to be addressed by the adults. It requires an on-going conversation among all the adults. I do not mean dialogue through Email or phone calls. I mean regular, scheduled, face-to-face discussions; meetings where all the adults (parents and step-parents) sit together around a table and give focused time to discuss how each adult will play his or her part in appropriately providing and caring for the children. Is this difficult? Of course it is. Parenting is for adults. Step-parenting and co-parenting is for super-adults! The more the children see all the adults working together, talking together, and providing each other with appropriate support, the more likely the children are to turn difficult circumstances into personal strengths and assets – and the more likely they are not to “side” with one parent over another.

Scotland

Scotland

It is sad when children are asked to split their loyalties between parents. I wonder how they really feel about it? I can hear your fears that they are being turned against you… The best thing you can do is to continue being the best father you can be for them; no bribes, no turning them against their mother and new step-father, no spoiling them. Trust them. Children have an uncanny way of sensing when they are with people who are genuine. Take them to the park, have fun with them, respect them, and teach them to respect you, and their mother, and stepfather. They will then have no reason to feel guarded and anxious around you, and you will have no reason to feel anxious and defensive around them.

Midwest, USA

Midwest, USA

Your ex-wife and you are the parents, hopefully the adults in this equation. Therefore, it is your responsibility to find time and maturity to be able to talk about what is bothering you or what you suspect to be happening. The children have gone through a lot with your divorce and what they need is parents who can communicate with each other as their care givers. Talking to your kids will only serve to pull them further into the circle of anxiety, and doesn’t give them a chance to get out of the middle of your dance with your ex-wife. Talking about a person when he or she is not present is gossip, and is an attempt to gain emotional closeness. Don’t do as your ex has apparently done. Sort the matter out with her and her new husband, and leave your kids out of it. They will be very grateful to you for it.

July 13, 2009

My husband told me two weeks ago that he loves me but he isn’t “in love” with me….

by Rod Smith

“My husband told me two weeks ago that he loves me but isn’t in love with me. He isn’t happy in our marriage, work, or things he always enjoyed doing. He wants to feel his eyes light up when I walk in the room and have an exciting sex life. He is on medication for blood pressure and heart problems. He moved out. I cry myself to sleep. I am trying to do things for myself: gym, new haircut, but nothing helps. I put together a photo album for him asking him to focus on the positive things about our marriage. The last pages are photocopies of his love letters so he can remember the reasons he loved me. I sound desperate but my fairytale ending was to grow old with my husband.” (Edited)

From Canberra

From Canberra

Nothing you have done has brought about this change in your husband. There is nothing you can do to make it better. I affirm you for ‘giving him that space’. It must be very difficult for you as you continue to work for him. When we have shared our lives with another, then find that we are totally powerless over the outcome of what is happening, the grief, the loss, comes as a shock that we don’t know how to deal with. Your feelings are totally understandable. Get professional support for what you are going through. Hopefully your husband will seek his own therapy so he can process the inner struggle that he is having.

Scotland

Scotland

Your husband isn’t a happy man just now by the sound of it. Unfortunately there is nothing you can do to change him. His unhappiness is inside of him. You cannot make him happy through a new haircut, through the most exciting sex in the world, nor with a photo album. Fairy-tale endings are just that – fairy-tales! Made-up stories we tell children. Real life is usually less certain, and certainly messier. Keep taking care of you! It is your only way out.

USA

USA

There’s no quick fix. Surround yourself with healthy women (not those who “beat up” men and rehash their failed relationships). Attempt, as you have been, to get on with your own life. Trying to re-recruit your husband will only push him away. Take time to grieve, but the sooner you take up your life, the more attractive you will find everything. His issues are his. What he says he wants is unavailable to him – without you.

Midwest, USA

Midwest, USA

Being in love is a feeling which never lasts. Loving somebody is a choice with the potential to last forever. Focus on decreasing your dependency on him and increasing your level of self by discovering what you want from life. This will be more attractive then any new haircut or reminiscing over love letters. Read “Passionate Marriage” by David Schnarch. Meet him out for lunch and ask him the questions that you need answered.

July 12, 2009

Unavailable men… why the attraction?

by Rod Smith

There’s a segment of women in the wider community who, for some reason, are primarily attracted to unavailable men (married, committed, etc.) can you explore that as a topic of discussion?

It's self-esteem

It's self-esteem

KATHRYN: Women who are drawn to unavailable men have a low self-esteem (lack of a healthy sense of self). The confident exterior is a façade that covers the inadequacy they feel that lurks underneath, haunting them. They are drawn to the “chase” and the secretive way of life as it brings a sense of intense emotional intimacy that cannot be achieved without the third person (the wife or girlfriend). The focus is on the shortcomings of the third person of the inability to maintain a healthy relationship of her own.

From Canberra

From Canberra

JEAN: I believe that growing up within the family structure, we learn to relate. It is in the family that we learn giving and receiving of unconditional love – we learn ‘you are special, you belong, you are such a significant part of this family.’ This message meets and nurtures a very deep need inside of each us.

I know, I know, not many of us have that experience!

Any childhood wounding, from a lack of love and nurture, will influence greatly how we relate as adults. It sounds very simple, but life becomes very complicated as a result of our drive to get our relational needs met; to receive those messages that never came to us as children.

I ask women with a history of being attracted to unavailable men, what it is about the men they found attractive. They often tell me it was the man’s sensitivity and ability to ‘connect’. And/Or, they tell me that there was something in the man that turned was like their father. One speaks of the relational need, the other: unresolved issues from family.

Jo Russell, Scotland

Jo Russell, Scotland

JO: I can’t help wondering if women who are attracted to unavailable men are actually unavailable for relationships themselves. They say they want to be in a relationship, and they may think they want to be in a relationship, but then choose unavailable men as a way of then avoiding the reality of relationship. To love someone, and to be loved by someone can be devastating, particularly if our experience of loving thus far has been complicated by disappointment or hurt. It is easier to manage our fears when we don’t embrace the risks, and we believe we are inoculating ourselves from further pain. Far from advocating initiating a relationship with a man who is married or committed to someone else, find those who are already your friends; love them, and learn to let them love you.

July 11, 2009

My husband is charming the outside world but has violent outbursts with me…. Can he change?

by Rod Smith

Readers, kindly offer your insights through “comments” and read the therapists’ (Jean’s, and Kathryn’s) opinions in a day or two.

“I have been married for eight months to a man who seemed well educated and liberated. Barely months into the marriage he had a violent outburst and bullied me over a trivial things. In disbelief, I gave him another chance only to see him go off again. He used bad words, made me feel wretched, and blamed me for his outbursts saying I ‘provoked him’. We started therapy. I see him not getting violent. He is as touchy as ever, argues for hours, days even though I beg him to leave me alone. He makes demands and expects me to fulfill them and shows no appreciation. He makes me feel like I am a lowly creature with crude, unrefined thoughts. To the outside world, he is the most charming husband. Can he be expected to change?”

From Canberra

From Canberra

Change can happen – but it will be you who begins it. Are you able to tell him how you feel about the way he treats others in comparison with how he treats you? Would you be prepared to tell him that you won’t tolerate his choices to be violent with you? Change can happen, when you change the way you relate to him when he inflicts pain on you. If you need professional help to implement this, I suggest you go for it.

Can YOU change?

Can YOU change?

Can you change? Do not cooperate with his pathological outbursts and bullying. Leave whenever it begins. Say, “I’ll come back when you get over yourself and begin behaving like an adult.” Expose his dark side to your closest family and friends. These patterns of his behavior did not begin with you and nor are they provoked by you, and are beyond your role as a wife to even begin to attempt to fix. The man needs help (and discipline, and a tough stand) beyond the calling of any wife. In short, get out of the way of his pathology, expose – as far as you are able and as far as it directly affects you – his charming appearance, and find your own powerful voice whenever you have to deal with him.

Midwest, USA

Midwest, USA

KATHRYN: He has pent up anger which didn’t just develop after your marriage. You’re the closest person to him, therefore he chooses to release it on you. Blaming you for his outbursts is his way of not dealing with it, which allows him to continue doing so, as long as you are a willing participant. You have the power to let him know what you will and will not accept in your relationship. Take it back. He may need individual therapy before marriage therapy may prove helpful.

READER RESPONDS (NO PICTURE AVAILABLE): Regarding the query from the woman whose husband is so discontented (Mercury, 16 July 2009) – this man has no concept of what it really means to love someone, let alone be contented. In fact, he sounds very self-centred and immature. A Don Francisco song goes, “Love is not a feeling, it’s an act of your will”. There is also a book on depression, by Minirth and Meier, with a title I like: “Happiness is a Choice”. There are plenty of other cliched truisms along this theme.

The concepts of love and marriage have been done a great disservice by the media’s romance industry. Yes, there is a place for romance, passion and excitement, but these are essentially self-centred and depend on feelings. One cannot remain infatuated and at a peak of passion all one’s life. True love is unconditional and other-centred, not self-centred – on both sides of the relationship. It values the other person and involves mutual commitment and fidelity, regardless of what life throws at them. In a one-sided relationship, there is a giver and a taker, which is unbalanced. The tragedy is that this man will probably leave a trail of broken hearts as he pursues his self-centred agenda, charming women then getting bored once the infatuation abates. He really needs to grow up!

July 9, 2009

Tim Ohai goes to Durban

by Rod Smith

Welcome Tim....

Welcome Tim

It is a long road that brings Tim Ohai, President of Growth and Associates, located in Brentwood, California, to Durban today. Tim and I met in Hawaii in 1986 when Tim was a know-it-all 15-year-old striding the university campus where I studied. Tim’s mother worked at the university while Tim strode the campus as if it were his very own creation. Even then he embodied generosity. Quick witted, visionary, Tim always seemed able and willing to develop a means to get what he needed, and a way to get where he wanted to go.

Congratulations, Tim. Not only have you have become the leader, and the teacher of leaders, making all who know you proud, you also offer hope to parents who might be overwhelmed, even intimidated by the zeal, determination, intelligence, and creativity they discern in their offspring.

Author, entrepreneur, and friend, welcome to Durban. I wish I were there to greet you, to haul you off to tea at Mitchell Park with Gordon, my favorite waiter in the world, and then show you Durban’s beauty. I will have to leave that up to those you meet while you are there. Durbanites will show you a good time. It comes as naturally to them as inspiring others does to you.

July 9, 2009

I am the other woman. Should I contact the wife and confess?

by Rod Smith

“I am the other woman in a relationship of five years. It just came out, and now the wife is leaving. I feel horrible. Should I contact her and confess? I have felt guilty for years but never ended it. I probably never would have ended if this wouldn’t have happened. The guy wants to still continue to see me but I just can’t.”

From Canberra

From Canberra

JEAN: One’s needs for love, comfort, feeling valuable and significant in a special someone’s life can override any of value/belief systems. Confessing to the wife will not alleviate your guilt. Perhaps this present circumstance is a good time to explore deeper why you put yourself through such inner turmoil in order to get your needs met.

Stay out....

Stay out....

Rod: Make contact with neither party. Don’t fall for the “closure” nonsense. You will be no help to the wife, and, it is already established that you and the husband are no good for each other. Five years is a long time to deceive. I have no doubt deception will have become a way of life for you, possessing somewhat of an addictive quality. Although you have contributed to significant damage for this couple, you cannot participate in their, or her, healing. Don’t try. Your complete disregard for the sanctity of marriage reflects on your apparent disregard for yourself. It is going to be a long road, but I hope you find the one that leads you to a realization of your own inestimable value.

Remove yourself....

Remove yourself....

KATHRYN: What is it about your view of yourself that you became the “other woman.” Feeling guilty for years is the direct result of living a lie. It’s interesting that you ended it after the wife found out and is leaving. A confession would serve to alleviate some of your guilt perhaps, but is irrelevant and may cause more hurt to the wife unless it is something she requests for her own healing. Remove yourself. Allow them to deal with the pain that is the consequence of an extramarital affair. Learn from your feelings of guilt, sit with them, and allow this to stop you from dating married men again. Spend energy working on yourself consider the possibility of becoming involved in a healthy relationship that is open and free.

July 9, 2009

My husband is steadily gaining weight…..

by Rod Smith

“My husband is steadily gaining weight. He is obese (30kg over-weight) and we’re in our thirties. I’ve tried changing to a healthy eating routine and he loses interest. I’ve bought trainers to encourage him to begin walking with me. I have told him directly he needs to lose weight and he does nothing. It angers me that I make the effort to stay in shape by eating healthily and exercising regularly for various reasons, one of which is so that he can be proud of me in public. I am turned off in the bedroom and avoid intimacy whenever. I’m bothered that I’m looking at other men because I do love my husband. How do I get him to realize that this is a serious issue for me without hurting his feelings?”

KATHRYN: Pushing him to lose weight is producing the opposite results. No amount of energy spent on your part will ever be enough. The weight is symptomatic of a deeper issue, perhaps feelings of inadequacy. Thoughts about other men points to intimacy problems in your marriage that have nothing to do with sex. Plan a date for the two of you and look beneath the layers of subcutaneous tissue where you will indeed find your husband again. Energy spent in this way will not be wasted and perhaps he will begin discovering who he is and see you again in the process.

ROD: 1. Get his weight off your shoulders by telling him your complete truth. Your emotional health is more important than his feelings. Incredibly, he is free to dig his grave with his teeth or to find appropriate help.
2. Never have sex you don’t want.
3. Realize that while you perceive yourself as responsible for his health you will ruin your own. While it’s your issue it will never be his. The best help you can be is by NOT helping.
4. Get out of his sinking boat by taking your hands off his diet, exercise, and image. Remember the more your work the more he won’t. Sorry, this is not because your husband is in some manner peculiar, it is the nature of dependency.

JEAN: If you are frustrated that your husbandhas gained weight since your marriage, there must be frustration on his part too. Advice we listen to; but it’s pain we obey. Your husband will need to realize himself that he doesn’t want to be overweight because recovery for him will be hard work. Addiction in a relationship can subtly draw in the partner who tries to ‘fix’ the other. When he or she can’t, he or she can become controlling, angry, and resentful. Find ways to encourage your husband but look after your own needs. Seek help about wanting someone else.

July 8, 2009

Childrens’ visits leave us confused…

by Rod Smith

“My stepchildren (9 and 11) are a delight and we have so much fun when they visit. Really, my children (8 and 12) adore them and long for their visits. Then something odd occurs. They go home and become like little strangers to my children and to me. While their mother and I do not see eye-to-eye on everything we do get on reasonably well and most of the small skirmishes are about times and dates and who’s picking up and so forth. When the children are here it is like they don’t have another home, and when they go to their mother it is like we don’t exist. Please comment.”

Keep the conversation going

Keep the conversation going

KATHRYN: How wonderful that the children get on so well. It would serve you well to work out, with biological mom, any unspoken rules in the two different households. The children are probably adapting to what they believe both mothers need. They will always have two homes, thinking otherwise is unrealistic. Consider opening up the conversation by asking questions about their “other home”. This will give them permission to reconcile their two worlds. Healthy functioning parents produce children who are free to be in relationship with others.

Thanks for writing...

Thanks for writing...

ROD: All of your children appear to be coping well with the comings and goings that are the by-product of most blended families. Rejoice. When children live in two homes every loyalty in their fiber is challenged. I expect their appearance of disconnect with you and your children, while hurtful to you and to your children, is a product of confused loyalties. Have ALL the adults to meet face-to-face as often as possible to reduce scheduling issues. While you are not required to be friends, a high degree of cooperation among you will do all the children a great service for their exciting futures.

Two systems....

Two systems....

JEAN: The children are living in one family system and visiting another. It sounds like they are quite relaxed and enjoy your times all together. However, coming back home again would take adjustment. Are they able to ‘talk’ about their thoughts and feelings about this? Are the expectations of continuing the ‘bonding’ process after your visits realistic?

July 7, 2009

Wife smokes in every room…

by Rod Smith

“I am struggling to keep my marriage together. My wife, a heavy smoker, smokes in the house, in every room, and even smokes in the bedroom when I am there. She smokes watching television. She does not care where she smokes. As a trained nurse she should know better. I have asked her to be considerate and smoke in places that will not affect her families’ health. The request falls on deaf ears. She reminds me that I was once a smoker. I make her tea every morning and we drink it together, then she lights up. She works from her office at home and smokes continuously. I cannot sit and talk to her in the office, as the smoke is terrible. What should I do?”

Kathryn Powell

Kathryn Powell

KATHRYN: Having smoked in the past has no bearing and, is no reason to compromise your health by continuing to allow your wife to smoke in the home you share. Putting herself at risk for lung cancer is her prerogative. Jeopardizing your health, and your children’s health, shows her lack of respect. When the smoke is present, you are not. Consider looking at how you have allowed the smoke to act as a barrier in your marriage.

Smokescreen!

Smokescreen!

ROD: This is a smokescreen. Deeper, longer-lasting, unresolved matters among you lay beneath every pack of cigarettes. And, Sir, it is easy to think you are the hero/victim (having quit the habit) and to think of your wife as the villain for persistently lighting up. These matters are seldom simple. Couples therapy is highly recommended and that you find a professional with the chutzpa to help you and your wife find, then fight, your enduring unresolved battles.

Three Cs

Three Cs

JEAN: There are three broad principles I like to suggest in regards to your marriage. The first is ‘Care for yourself’; the second ‘Care for your mate’ and the last is ‘Care for your marriage’. Seek help in why you have poured yourself out for your family with little thought to your own needs. You will be surprised at what you find.

July 6, 2009

I wonder if I drive my partners to alcohol….

by Rod Smith

ONE QUESTION / THREE THERAPISTS ANSWER INDEPENDENTLY:

“I am divorced and engaged. Our relationship was idyllic and we plan to be married in September. I have serious misgivings. He is fine when not drinking though as soon as alcohol is involved he thinks nothing of disappearing for days on end, doesn’t take my calls and skips work. He always has a reason for this hurtful behavior – it’s normally my fault. He has been in a rehabilitation centre early last year at risk of losing his job and was fine for a few months and then reverted to this pattern again. As I type he is continuing with last night’s party, called in sick and is refusing to talk to me. When this binge is over he is very apologetic. My previous marriage was very similar, which brings me to wonder if I drive my partners to alcohol. I’m terrified of failing at another relationship.”

You don't DRIVE him anywhere....

You don't DRIVE him anywhere....

ROD: No. You do not “drive” your partners to alcohol. If you were that powerful you could similarly “drive” them away from it. I’d encourage you to discover why you find drunks attractive. If being engaged is stressful, full of games of hide, seek, and blame – your marriage will be all this and much, much more. Cut ties, move on, don’t date, and get healthy!

Jean, Canberra, Australia

Jean, Canberra, Australia

JEAN: I applaud you for listening to your heart and mentioning that you have serious misgivings. Everything that you communicate about this person who, by the way, is who he is because he chooses to be and not because you “drive” him to it, indicates that he is not a good candidate for marriage. Take steps to find out why you are so vulnerable to loving this kind of a man.

Alcohol is HIS problem...

Alcohol is HIS problem...

KATHRYN: His alcohol problem is his. It will not improve until he is willing to take necessary steps. Marrying him will solve nothing. Learning from your previous marriage is essential. His blaming and cutting you off are unloving behaviors, regardless of how well he apologizes. Over-functioning for him will help no one. Take steps to get yourself healthier and all your relationships, even with your daughters, will benefit.