Author Archive

April 23, 2006

Wisdom found from seeking advice from others

by Rod Smith

“I just read your column in The Mercury, Friday, April 21, 2006. How right you are to advise the lady to consult with her wise and long-term friends (regarding the sale and moving from her home). We have just sold our lovely family home after 28 years. We are down sizing and it is indeed a most stressful time. However, we are blessed to have each other to see ourselves through this time while trying to find a smaller secure ‘lock-up-and-go’ place to stay. We could not agree with you more. Now is the time for the lady to consult with trusted, long-term friends. We certainly value the advice and friendship we are receiving right now from such special friends. I dedicate your brief article to good, faithful friends worldwide.”

Wisdom can be the result when a community of friends put their heads together, shelve their personal ambitions, and seek to assist each other. My only hope is the reader has such a community and that her feelings of isolation are not exacerbated by my suggestions!

April 19, 2006

A person who loves you…….

by Rod Smith

1. Does not intentionally embarrass you in private or in public by what he/she says or does. Partners sometimes use scornful humor and cutting sarcasm in private and in public. Love does all it can to avoid such behavior. (Parents who intentionally embarrass their children may well love their children, but their behavior is not loving).
2. Listens attentively to what you have to say to others even if he/she has heard what you are saying many times.
3. Stands up for you when you are right and stands up to you when you are not.
4. Will refuse to be a pushover within the relationship.
5. Does not offer you unquestioned support no matter what you want to do. Unquestioned support comes, arises not from love, but from idiocy. Blind support is no sign of love, not even in a marriage.
6. Is not afraid to ask tough questions. He/she who knows he/she is loved will welcome tough questions.
7. Does not try to cut you off from your community, monitor what you read or to whom you talk.
8. Does not tell you how to dress, speak, think or feel.
9. Gives you regular uninterrupted, eye-to-eye contact time in order to hear what is occurring in your life and about what is important to you and to similarly reflect about his/her life. This means time without television, radio, music, and cellular phones, pagers, computers, Email, or children invading the holy territory between you.
10. Regards your shared private life with absolute and undiluted respect.

April 18, 2006

He is driving me crazy (with his jealousy)

by Rod Smith

He is driving me crazy! He goes through my mail. He scrolls the computer to see the websites I visit. I run a daycare. He accuses me of doing stuff with every dad, grandpa, uncle. I have never cheated but I feel as though I am being treated worse than if had. My daughter is 3 and he is like a step dad and has been there all her life. I am afraid if I leave him she will never get to see him and if she does he will tell her dad to start problems. He even has his mom and dad look down at our house to be sure nobody is here. Please write something about what I can do. (Letter edited)

Jealousy is a virus and he is riddled with it. His jealousy has NOTHING to do with you or your behavior. Is this the kind of man you want showing your daughter what men are like? I would hope not! Behave as you would hope your daughter would behave were she to one day find herself in a similar situation. Focus on your behavior and not on his! Unless you get yourself free, things will only get worse.

April 17, 2006

Triggers – hit hardest in intimate relationships

by Rod Smith

Have you had feelings come over, even overwhelm you, that you recognize from childhood? Has background music, the whiff of a particular perfume, seemed to emotionally cripple you? Unresolved childhood traumas will almost certainly visit victims as they get older.

Sadly, it is in intimacy that negative associations of childhood most strongly stir. It is in the beauty of loving relationships that the memory of an inappropriate or abusive moment tugs eerily from a distance. A forced closeness years ago now hinders you when you long for adult intimacy. It is in love that the traumas of childhood raise ugly heads. So intricate is our human makeup that intimate connections stir positive and also negative memories. It’s negative triggers that are indiscriminate, often unyielding, forming debilitating links to the hidden pain of our lives.

Tensions with a spouse might have nothing to do with the spouse but with what’s unresolved from our adolescents. We fight yesterday’s battles today, with the “wrong” person. The conflict is an attempt to settle childhood scores. There’s benefit to discovering relationship struggles often have their origins a generation from where we might seek resolution. Examination, prayerful consideration of our bundle of triggers can defuse them and peace might be found.

April 16, 2006

A love story

by Rod Smith

Steve and Ann Reynolds, my neighbors, have been married for 25 years.

Some years ago, Steve and Ann were each aware that Ann deeply wanted to return to university to pursue a Masters Degree. Having four teenagers, careers, and a home, the prospects of one parent assuming a heavy schedule of university classes was not too daunting for Steve or Ann.

Steve told Ann he’d take care of the children’s complicated lives of school, sport and extra-curiccular activities. He agreed to run the home, cook, do the shopping and manage the mass of laundry generated by six people. Steve, apart from working, agreed facilitate all their domestic responsibilities so Ann could focus on her studies – for the next four years!

They did it! With remarkable cooperation from the children, Steve did all he said he’d do (no maid, no yard help) while Ann completed her degree achieving high honors.

It was a pleasure to sit near the family in a packed auditorium and watch a husband, three sons and a daughter, enthusiastically applaud a wife and mother as she walked across the stage at her graduation ceremony. Such enduring cooperation between equal adults, each doing what was best for all concerned, makes a fine demonstration of what being in love is all about.

April 11, 2006

Sex education, puberty, and your children:

by Rod Smith

1. Be the first to talk to your child about sex. Do not leave this facet of your child’s life in the hands of the school, Hollywood, television, church, or other children. Your avoidance of this topic, when it is so prevalent in the culture, sends your child a confusing message.

2. Rather than wait for some “big talk,” have many “small talks” about all manner of human matters. This will make a “big talk” unnecessary.

3. Don’t assume your child is a “blank slate” when it comes to matters of sex and relationships. Try to access what he or she already knows by allowing the conversation to take on a life of its own. Adults who “steer” conversations usually end up where the adult desires rather than where the child wants or needs to be.

4. Don’t trick or trap children into conversations. Parents trick or trap children and then wonder why children cease trusting parents.

5. Parents ought not to rely on “Spot had puppies” or “we visited a farm” to avoid warm and pointed talk about sex with their child. Animals have nothing to teach humans about human sexuality.

6. Parents who are guilt-ridden about sex and sexuality ought to work through their own hang-ups if they want their children to be less complicated than themselves. Married adults who cannot engage in meaningful conversations about sex are unlikely to be capable of helpful conversations about sex with their children. Talk with each other about this beautiful human gift without embarrassment, without trivializing its importance, or regarding it as taboo.

7. While it is often believed men should talk with sons and women with daughters about puberty and sexuality, both parents can do equally well in talking with both boys and girls.

8. Physical changes accompanying puberty ought not surprise children. Ideally many positive conversations will predate these changes for your child and therefore will be changes he or she knowledgeably expects and welcomes.

9. While physical changes might be “old hat” to other family members, the changes are likely to usher in a heightened sensitivity for the child. This journey ought not become a source of humor, teasing or belittling. Don’t announce Johnny’s “broken” voice or the hair on his upper lip. If you want a child to be willing to speak with you about important, private matters, respect the child long before such conversations become necessary.

10. Don’t be surprised when your carefree preadolescent, who has hardly closed a door in his life, wakes up one day and becomes Mr. Private, double locking doors everywhere he goes! The innocent child, who once gave no thought to running naked from the shower to his room, will probably stop this completely. He or she may also want you and other family members out of the room when he or she is dressing. Respect this without drawing attention to it.

11. Respect closed doors. The child who says he or she would rather not talk about matters of human sexuality ought to receive a secret gift of an age-appropriate book on the topic. Wrap it. Leave it for your child to find.

12. Your child’s transition into adulthood, along the often-troubled road of adolescents, ought to be as guilt-free as possible. Almost all teenagers engage in regular, lone, sexual self-gratification. The heavy layers of guilt so frequently associated with such activity are, in my opinion, more damaging than the act could ever be. As a parent, do your part in alleviating potential for guilt.

April 11, 2006

Must I stay or move on?

by Rod Smith

“After fifteen years my marriage broke down. I fell ill and my husband’s only interest was I was not sleeping with him. At work I conversed with a male friend. We fell in love. He was also married but we stuck to each other no matter what. Eventually we got caught and it all came into the open. His wife divorced him. We moved in together then he walked out without a reason. After looking I found him back with his wife. We still see each other but when I ask him where are we going he tells me to take it one day at a time. He makes me feel I have a problem. I love him. I would end this relationship if he would be honest and tell he doesn’t want me and I must move on. I’m torn between this guy’s love, loneliness, and not knowing what best for me.” (Letter shortened)

Break this off and consider no relationship for a year or two and you might begin to think clearly. It is not up to this man but up to you. Your affair has offered you no long-term fulfillment. The abdication of responsibility had misled you into a complex web that has blinded you.

April 7, 2006

The Pledge of a Growing Person

by Rod Smith

I am a person with a history to be respected, a present to enjoy and a future to build. I am fully capable of living my life to the full. I do not need a man or a woman to make me complete, although a respectful, equal and mutual relationship will enlarge both of our lives.

But, I will not be sidetracked by unhealthy relationships again.

Therefore: I will not build friendships, go out with, or become intimate with anyone who does not regard me with utmost respect. I want equality, honesty and trust in my relationships. I am better off single, alone and lonely than I am “sharing” my life with a man or woman who lies to me, cheats on me and disrespects me. I will not engage in sexual behaviour that I do not want or that my partner does not want.

I will move my life in a healthy direction despite the difficult hurdles that are in my path.

April 6, 2006

The Power to Forgive

by Rod Smith

Forgiveness is a wonderful gift. It can most dramatically precipitate
healing among and within people. He who chooses to forgive seldom loses.
He who initiates forgiveness reveals his strength. It is the stronger
person who is first to forgive, and when the exchange is made, both
parties – the forgiver and the forgiven – each benefit from the act.

As quickly as you find it possible, and can muster the strength from
within you: forgive when you have been wronged; when you are
uncomfortable being around a particular person and would rather avoid
them; when you find you have little or nothing positive to say to or
about someone; when you always look for a way to avoid a certain person;
when you find it hard to think positive thoughts about someone.

Forgive when someone’s actions (real or perceived) seem to be buried or
sealed into your consciousness and you can’t seem to free them from the
prison in your head. Forgive when you feel haunted by someone whose acts
against you will not let you go.

Forgiveness links us with the divine, heals fragile families, hurting
communities and restores hope within broken people – and sets the
forgiver free.

April 5, 2006

Husband told his dad he could stay with us….

by Rod Smith

I feel like I have been hit on the back of the head with a cricket bat! My father-in-law is out of work and my husband has agreed to have him move in with us on a temporary basis. After my mother-in-law passed away two years ago the man has never been able to recover and I know this (his moving in) is going to put extra strain on our already tough marriage. The man is very kind and does not drink or smoke. it is just that he will be even more of a financial strain once he is living here. My husband did not ask me even though I know I would have agreed. What plan of action do you think I should take about how long he should stay and so on?

Welcome your husband’s father. Regard his moving in as an opportunity to empower and challenge everyone to grow from the experience. There are too many unknowns for me to be very specific in my suggestions, but these kinds of arrangements tend to “fall apart” when there is a lack of clarity at the outset. If you see this as temporary you might want to have both men spell out what “temporary” means to each of them.