Author Archive

June 8, 2007

Dad had a stroke and now daughter is struggling…

by Rod Smith

READER: My dad had a stroke last year but has recovered. During that time I had spent a lot of time caring for him and taking him for medical attention. After his stroke I have been having a lot of panic and anxiety attacks which results in me having high blood pressure and a raised pulse rate. My anxiety is caused when I have a headache, which I immediately associate with high blood pressure. If I have any aches I always associate it with some dreadful health issue. Please advise me as to how I can overcome this ugly feeling as I want to feel secure again and not have that dreaded feeling. Please help me?”

Visit your private physician for a complete checkup. Your experience with your dad has baptized you into a milieu of illness and anxiety, making you hypersensitive to your own potential to be sick. It is understandable that you will think the sky is falling and the worst is just around the corner with every ache or pain. It is time for you to recover from your dad’s stroke, and a visit to your doctor could help set that in motion.

Write to Rod@DifficultRelationships.com or visit http://www.DifficultRelationships.com.

June 7, 2007

They only contact me when they need something…

by Rod Smith

“Since I have stopped communications with two of my friends via telephone, ‘sms’ and visiting to their homes the relationships have ceased. Prior to this I highlighted that if I did not contact them, they’d not communicate with me. They would not bother sending me an sms checking to see if I was doing okay. Their excuse was always distance and airtime, yet, when they needed a loan or something, distance did not stop them coming to my home. One of my friends began communicating with my partner, little chitchats, and not once did I see a message from her asking how I was doing. Am I just a friend to them when they need something? Am I being petty or is what i am feeling true?” (Edited slightly)

Rod replies: The relationships are not reciprocal and you feel used. The details might be petty but the feelings are real. Remain calm and tell both friends exactly what you see and feel. You may have to resign yourself to enjoy one-sided friendships, or find more responsive friends. Resist reading your partners chitchats with others. It’s not a good idea. Then, if you want someone to know how you are, tell him or her, rather than wait to be asked. The former is healthy. The latter is a manipulative ploy.

June 6, 2007

A reader writes on blended families…

by Rod Smith

“My second marriage did not withstand the pressures of blending a family. I recommend professional family counseling for all who try. The divorce rate amongst couples with children from previous marriages outpaces the horrendous rate of first time marriages.

“My stepson viewed me as the enemy. I represented the deathblow to his fantasy that somehow his parents would reconcile. Children very often feel as if the divorce was their fault, and, as irrational as that may be, it is what they feel. It’s important step-parents understand that the child is projecting all of the rage, fear, and heartbreak outwardly towards the new scapegoat.

“Many parents feel guilty about their divorces, and so have unhealthy boundaries with their children. They overcompensate, or do not expect enough. This creates fuel for a fire that is going to rage anyway. Anyone who has raised teenagers understands that this may be one of the most challenging times in the family life.

“As difficult as it may be to hear, blending families rarely works. If one has the option I would suggest separate living arrangements. It doesn’t mean that the relationship can’t continue, but I would remove myself from the dynamics of the parent/child/ex-spouse and regain a sense of self and peace.” (Edited for space)

June 4, 2007

My parents in New Zealand need help….

by Rod Smith

“I seek help for my parents who live in New Zealand. I have ticked all the items from your article on 2006/05/18 about spousal abuse on my mother’s behalf but both are in dire need of immediate help. They have been married for 32 years and I have grown up seeing my father mistreat and disrespect my mother. She thinks about leaving him all the time but says she doesn’t know stops her. My father gambles their savings and he’s an alcoholic who blames my mother for his failures. It’s almost as though my mother has become comfortable with being uncomfortable all her married life. As they are getting older, I fear more and more about their safety and I want to help them. Can you help me help them at all?”

Rod responds: After 32 years they are “in dire need of immediate help.” I don’t think so. They have danced this way for so long you can be sure nothing will change because anyone of us writes of says anything. Until your mother sees something about her behavior that must change, things will stay the same. Regard yourself as powerless over your parents’ marriage. The sooner you do this, the sooner one of them might get some helpful help.

June 4, 2007

Travel Schedule

by Rod Smith

I will be in Australia for a week (next week), Taiwan for the next two weeks, then Korea for one week after that.

I will return to Australia for a few more weeks (visiting Sydney, Canberra, and Melbourne) and head home to the USA in the later part of July.

Thanks for your interest.

I will post daily “You and Me” columns from those destinations.

Rod and Children

rodface.jpg

June 4, 2007

Room with a view: I am in Switzerland for the week….

by Rod Smith
June 4, 2007

My fiancé has anger problems and it got so bad that he threatened to beat me

by Rod Smith

Reader: My fiancé has anger problems and it got so bad that he threatened to beat me. He says he is not physically abusive but the verbal threats scare me enough. He blames me, saying I provoke him and if I do, I don’t know how I am doing it. He gets angry even at the baby sometimes. I have got myself into a bad situation because I’m financially dependent on him and we have a baby together. He is so sweet and, boom he changes with outbursts of rage. I love him and then I’m scared of him. I try to trust God that he will show me what to do, but anxiety and depression get in the way of seeing things clearly. I pray and still find no peace.

Rod Responds: This is not about love, but safety. Please read Anna Quindlin’s book entitled “Black and Blue” and do whatever you can to remove yourself, and your baby, from this dangerous situation. You, no matter what you do, cannot provoke him to abusive acts. His anger is HIS responsibility. Please do not marry this man. Marrying him will solve nothing but only allow him even more control of over you and your life.

June 3, 2007

Some of Life’s greatest joys:

by Rod Smith

1. Knowing that your aging parents are satisfied with life
2. Seeing your children engage in work and learning because work and learning are good despite the promise of reward
3. Carving out the time to read a great book
4. Turning an enemy into a friend
5. Finding a wad of unexpected cash in an old suit pocket
6. Getting your shoes shined in an airport while you just sit there looking rich
7. Being served a perfect cup of tea
8. Enjoying good curry
9. Hearing a family member apologize when wrong
10. Bathing a baby, then rocking him or her to sleep
11. Long-lasting friendships
12. Finding you keys and wallet when, this time, you thought they were gone for good.

May 30, 2007

My husband says he needs his space. What is going on?

by Rod Smith

You are probably feeling enormous pain and, while this is not meant as a cheap pun, playing “space invaders” is seldom comfortable. Desiring “space” is normal and, not in itself, an indication of rejection.

The “space” people want at first is emotional space. If there’s no room to move (emotionally) they will want out (physically)!

Overcrowding each other is not helpful. We are each designed to know and experience our unique freedom. If it’s not respected, things get uncomfortable. The secret is creating “space” within the relationship rather than leaving (ending) the relationship. A person who cannot find the space they need within a marriage is unlikely to find it outside the marriage or with someone else.

When people enter each other’s private emotional environment too often or for too long, even if they are in love, somebody’s going to resist, retaliate, run or at the least, become very crabby. All people need and want space to move and be unencumbered even when very much in love (perhaps even more so!)

Begin all relationships with some distance “built in.” Don’t give 100% of your time to anyone (not even to a baby; even babies need space). If “emotionally overcrowding” each other were avoided, people would not need to “tussle” for breathing space, thinking space, or resting space.

May 29, 2007

Life’s toughest assignments, or challenges, I have observed people face…

by Rod Smith

1. Loving others when you are not loved in return
2. Working in your family’s business
3. Being a preacher or pastor’s son or daughter
4. Marrying someone with children (and doubly so when you have children too)
5. Completing (coming to terms with, finding peace after) a divorce
6. Accepting your children’s step-parent(s)
7. Forgiving unfaithfulness
8. Digging yourself out of debt
9. Surviving as alcoholic or mentally ill parent
10. Facing prolonged or severe illness in yourself or your family
11. Being deceived by someone you love
12. Teaching and training your memory and your imagination to serve you well

13 – 20 are from Nancy Axelrad http://www.nancyaxelrad.wordpress.com/

13. Laying down your life for others
14. Enduring trials and suffering without faith in Christ
15. Leaving the one you cannot bear to be away from
16. Marrying for the wrong reasons
17. Marrying for the right reasons but life happens
18. You see good marriages flourish while you still wait for Mr./Ms. Right
19. You cannot have the children you want
20. Living in a ghetto of unfulfilled dreams
21. Weight loss (Anthony Lombardo)
(add your own through “comments” and I will be happy to add them to the list)

Write to Rod@DifficultRelationships.com or visit www.DifficultRelationships.com