Author Archive

February 14, 2006

My parents are critical of my husband…..

by Rod Smith

Reader: “My parents are very critical of the way my husband treats our children. I hear it (from them) all the time but they never say anything to him face to face. My husband is a strong and good father who doesn’t let our two children get away with laziness or without playing their part in the family. He is a really involved dad and we are very happily married. My mother tells me she thinks he is too strict and that the children will resent him when they are older. I don’t think this will be true. Please help.”

It is unlikely your children will resent their father if he is as you say he is. Tell your parents you will no longer participate in conversations about absent family members. Talking negatively (sometimes even “positively”) about someone who is not present (and therefore able to participate in the conversation) has a name: it is called gossip. Your account of your husband portrays a wonderful man, husband and father. Suggest to your parents that your husband be present for any conversations where his name is mentioned.

February 14, 2006

A friend gave me an invaluable gift….

by Rod Smith

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An oil painting (right) of my youngest son and me…………..

Here I was closing my classroom for the day and getting ready to gather my children and walk home — and a mother of a lower school boy, Audrey Krause, comes up to me and places this beautiful painting in my hands.

Nathanael — almost 4 years old — so safe; his head on my shoulder.

I am a truly blessed man.

February 13, 2006

My boyfriend threatens to “smack” me…

by Rod Smith

QUERY: My boyfriend and I are engaged and live together. He is faithful and always helpful. He wants marriage and children. When angry, he is insulting, verbally abusive and has threatened to “smack’ me. He then calms down and asks for forgiveness for the hurtful things he says. Although I am established, confident, and have good friends, the accumulative insults make me feel worthless, and sometimes I feel he does mean what he says. I cannot take his moods and verbal abuse any more, regardless of how great he is when he is “good”. He has previously promised the problem would not happen again.

RESPONSE: Unless this person gets “outside” help his episodes of anger will only escalate. When they occur, believe everything he says, and act accordingly. Leave the home, get protection, and never blame yourself for his outbursts. If he says, during the “apology phase”, “You know I don’t really mean it,” you must say, “Then do not ever say it.”

Verbally abusive people try to change the language to suit themselves, and the victim is supposed to adjust accordingly. You appear to have a lot to lose if you leave this man. You have whole lot more to lose if you stay.

February 13, 2006

I get a lot of mail about affairs…….

by Rod Smith

In the search for intimacy an affair can be is very seductive. By seductive, I mean that the affair removes us from reality and appears to offer something the marriage does not appear to offer.

The best time to end an affair is immediately.

You are on dangerous ground if:

1. You have become isolated from everyone who was formerly close to you – even if those who are close to you do not know it.
2. You cannot believe you have gotten yourself into such a complicated mess or how “low” you have gone in the search of meaning. There are moments when you are filled with self-disgust.
3. You are tired of playing hide-and-seek with life, love, joy, friendships, and your emotions. There seem to be no “straight lines” anymore. Everything is more complicated because so much is under-cover.
4. You have times when you wish you could wipe out whole portions of your life: your “pre-affair life” sometimes and, at other times, your “affair life.” You are literally trapped between two worlds.
5. The rest of your life (when you are parted from you affair) feels as if it is “on hold” or is a bad dream.
6. The irrational nature of your affair has taken over your life and many parts of your former life (the open life you once knew) feel uncomfortable and unmanageable.
7. Memories of you past life (before the affair) haunt you through music, photos, conversations and inexplicable connections that pour over you from time to time.
8. You have lied about so much you cannot tell the difference between what is fabricated and what is not. Your own lies are believable even to you.

February 12, 2006

What’s impossible / What’s possible – when it comes to helping others…

by Rod Smith

IMPOSSIBLE

There are some things a person simply cannot do for or to another person, no matter how much commitment there is, how noble the goals are, how much effort or determination is involved, or how significant the needs might be. This is true even when people are in love. In fact, it is when people are in love that they are inclined to most believe in their power to change and influence another person.

No person can make another person become healthier, any more than someone is able to breathe for another. This does not mean that two people cannot work toward their individual health together. It means that one person cannot make another person grow.

As far as other people’s relationships are concerned, it is impossible to keep people apart who want to be together and keep together, those who want to be apart. Working toward any of these goals is likely to have the opposite effect. People feel much closer to each other when their relationship is threatened. People tend to resist relationships that are coerced by others.

It is impossible to make another person:

1. Be happy or fulfilled, angry, change, succeed or fail.
2. Love you, want you, need you, miss you, be glad to see you.
3. Trust you.
4. Love, want, need, miss or be glad to see someone else.
5. See, feel or think in a certain manner for an enduring period. (Most people are willing to “sell out” their minds, ideas for romance, but this does not usually last for very long.)
6. See the light, or get some sense into their lives.
7. Lose or gain weight, save or spend money, want or not want sex.
8. Use or stop using drugs, alcohol and cigarettes or bad language.

POSSIBLE

Below are the things that are helpful and possible to do for our family and friends:

1. It is possible and helpful to care about others. On the other hand, caring for or on behalf of others is not very productive in the long term.
2. It is possible to be responsible to others. On the other hand, being responsible for others is not usually helpful. Life works better when each person learns to be responsible for him or herself.
3. Sharing each other’s day-to-day burdens (helping each other out with problems that come our way) is helpful. On the other hand, attempting to remove the natural responsibilities every person has to face is not usually helpful.
4. Being present and non-anxious (available, focused, and attentive without being preoccupied with our own concerns) and listening to each other is both helpful and possible.
5. It is possible to pray for others, encourage others and be supportive to others all without meddling in their lives.

Copyright, Rod E. Smith, MSMFT, 1998

February 10, 2006

Much more than love to sustain a marriage

by Rod Smith

I do not “knock” divorce. I advocate clearer, healthier relationships. Much pain might be avoided if people were not so convinced that “all you need is love.” There is much to be said for intensive marriage preparation that most couples enter with the eagerness of a visit to the dentist.

Can you know someone is the “right one”? Probably not. I don’t believe even God would make this choice crystal clear. Divine leading would remove necessary development of faith in each other and obviate the need for strong negotiation skills. Note I have said nothing about love. Every couple that believes “love alone” will sustain them is in for a rude awakening. Every divorced couple claimed love for each other when they got married. It takes more than love to make a meaningful life together.

When couples answer questions like: “Does your relationship have what it takes to survive?” and “Can you admit you might become a divorce statistic?” they are demonstrating the kind of courage needed to stay married. Such questions seem absurd to couples “in love.” It feels disloyal, negative. I known engaged couples would rather have set fire to my office than believe their up-and-coming marriage had as much potential as any not to work. Planning a wedding itself changes the dynamics of the relationship. People are hardly “themselves,” engagement makes them “crazy” magnifying the good and blinding them from the “bad.” The expense alone, in fact a cheap set of wedding invitations or a down payment on a photographer, are enough to keep an anxious couple from expressing doubts about a decision to marry.

All marriages are tribal warfare to some degree to birth a new family. Family history powerfully influences marriages and will not be silent for long. It does not take too long before people are fighting yesterday’s battles, today, with the “wrong” person. Believing the “past is the past” without trying to understand it is naïve, and likely to facilitate the worst of the past repeating itself. History is uncanny in this matter; it refuses denial. It shows up, uninvited, in the present. Knowing and understanding what has occurred within the last three generations of each tribe is more important than being in love.

I have met many couples that are “happily” married and it is common to find that she (sometimes he) no longer exists. She’s physically present, but the woman has escaped her body. He has an empty shell at his side. She is dreamless, without ambition. She has sacrificed it all so “he can be all he can be.” Give me a break! This is not marriage – it’s abduction! I have much deeper respect for couples that who have developed their individual lives and achieved their shared ambitions.

While love is important “honesty with kindness” is probably as useful. People get derailed because they sacrifice telling the truth for saying what they believe the other person wants to hear. Clearly, it is better to tell the truth and risk losing a relationship, rather this than face the disappointment and the sadness that comes with battling over these things later. If a prospective spouse cannot cope with the truth it is unlikely he’ll “cope” with you once married.

I believe couples should not give in to each other so readily. This is not love. It’s stupidity. A couple that can negotiate without backing down, find a mutually acceptable position so that each person can grow, sits on a marriage with wall-socket potential. Perhaps you are prepared “to die” for him. It sounds so loving but it is not very realistic. Rather, I suggest, develop a relationship where each of you can truly live. If your fiancé is already threatened by who you are then the future is quite bleak. No marriage is strong enough to remove a partner’s insecurities. It is possible for both people to have a voice, for mutuality to reign, and respect for each other to be a deeply held value.

February 9, 2006

Problems usually become larger problems when they are ignored…

by Rod Smith

“My mother left me some valuable furniture and my husband wants to sell it to pay his debts. I really don’t want him to do this. What can I do?”

“My boyfriend says he wants to marry me but he still wants to see other girls for a while. I have put up with this for two years and it never changes. Please help.”

“My sister is taking my mother for a ride. She doesn’t work and she doesn’t pay rent and she gets very cross if I say anything. Please help.”

I have juxtaposed these questions to illustrate that none of these situations happened to readers overnight. Each dilemma developed gradually. The husband already had no regard for his wife, or her belongings, long before furniture entered the picture. The woman who is willing to share a man with other women has already compromised so much and the man has little to lose if she leaves him. The dead-beat sister has been tolerated for so long she has no reason to alter her behavior. Big problems usually begin as smaller issues. The smaller issues should be addressed before they become overwhelming. Nothing ignored, when it comes to relationships, will disappear. What is ignored will only grow in power.

February 9, 2006

You could have said something to make them feel better…

by Rod Smith

In your response to the young man who can’t find an engineering job (You and Me, February 7, 2006) I see almost no sympathy on your part. Things are tough. A lot of people are jobless. Could you have said something to make this parent and young man feel just a little better?

Of course I could have and my identification with the dilemma would only serve to entrench the “victim feelings” in both parent and son. Neither empathy nor sympathy will get a young man an engineering job or a job of any kind.

Times are tough for many people and jobs are not easy to find. Yet, at the same time, many people are gainfully and wonderfully employed. So, if some are, and some are not, I’d suggest this young man do all he can to switch sides! Easy? Of course not! Life is tough. Feeling sorry for someone just makes life even tougher.

Do not be fooled by the power of empathy, for it is often quite useless, and avoid the debilitating virus of sympathy. Feeling for, or feeling with, someone (empathy) or feeling pity for someone (sympathy) might lead to warm feelings, but warm feelings, in themselves, are hardly likely to get an engineer a job.  

February 8, 2006

Ex husband has introduced my children to his new woman…

by Rod Smith

My husband left me a year ago for another woman. He has introduced my children (12, 14, 15) to her. She stays the night with them at his flat every second weekend like they are one happy family. My children come home very upset. They cannot tell him they do not like this arrangement. He says they have fun with her. I know they are being nice because they are nice children and don’t know how else to treat a grown woman. What can I do?

Rod Replies: Your children are walking the tightrope of divided loyalties. Children should be encouraged to tell their parents the truth about what they see and feel, even if what they see and feel does not please the parent. This is a very difficult situation (for all of you) over and above the inherent difficulties of divorce.

Try not to talk negatively about your ex-husband or his new woman as such talk will only serve to set the children against you. If you are able, pass no comment about his living arrangements. Your children are old enough to draw their own conclusions and make their own assessments about their father and his values.

February 8, 2006

Children and being “fair”

by Rod Smith

To the point of being ridiculous my family went to painstaking lengths to be fair. I recall our seeing our parents measuring soft drinks in a glass, weighing or counting candy, and going through lengthy exercises to make everything fair. Calculating how much money was spent on each child at Christmas was an argument I clearly remember overhearing. Of course we grew up thinking life was supposed to be fair. Don’t you think that we want life to be fair and so we try to create a world within childhood where it at least seems to be fair? Should we not try to be fair to children at least so we do not inflict unnecessary pain in an already painful world? (Content of a discussion)

Rod’s response: No parent intentionally exposes children to the unfairness of life. This would be unnecessarily confusing in a world that is sufficiently confusing. But, the healthy family does not promote fairness as an absolute. In a healthy family, children know that sometimes a person might get the short, or the long, end of the stick. Win or lose, getting more of something or less of something, has nothing to do with love.