This is a collective blog by Lisa Ball, Sarah Kerns, Jessica Johnson, and Erika Walker for our BYU Idaho FAML~460 Child and Family Advocacy course. It is designed to provide information concerning the effects of divorce on families and how others have discovered and implemented significant ways to preserve families through the act of saving marriages. We hope you are inspired to help us fight against divorce and advocate for happy families!
Saturday, July 12, 2014
Starting Marriage Right
Since I think Michael William's experience and advice is superb, I have added another article from him. This is about how you can start your marriage off right, and if you've already started your marriage how to keep it strong. It can even help those who are struggling in their marriage.
http://www.michaelwilliamscounseling.com/?p=168
Reinvesting in your Relationship
A therapist here in Rexburg that I greatly admire, wrote an article about how to kindle a relationship when you are a couple and how to reinvest in your marriage.
http://www.michaelwilliamscounseling.com/?p=319
People will change... and that's okay.
If you happen to have come across this blog and think that maybe divorce is an option for you, I would encourage you to read this article.
http://themattwalshblog.com/2014/05/29/wife-person-married/
Divorce
Research has shown that second marriages can end in divorce quicker than first marriages. “Thus, a substantial fraction of newly formed marriages involve individuals who are at risk of a second marital disruption, and the rate at which these marriages dissolve is even higher than for first marriages.” (Teachman, 2008).
This article is a life experience by someone who was dealing with the thought of her husband wanting a divorce, and the fact that she wouldn't let it happen. Divorce doesn't always have to happen, even if it's your significant other wanting it.
http://m.theweek.com/article/index/99512/he-said-he-was-leaving-she-ignored-him
Teachman, J. (2008). Complex life course patterns and the risk of divorce in second marriages.
Eternal Marriage
Eternal Marriage is like silverware
"If you want something to last forever, you treat it differently. You shield it and protect it. You never abuse it. You don’t expose it to the elements. You don’t make it common or ordinary. If it ever becomes tarnished, you lovingly polish it until it gleams like new. It becomes special because you have made it so, and it grows more beautiful and precious as time goes by." --F. Burton Howard
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ErAgsW3-eGQBook recommendations for those struggling in marraige
John Gottman, Ph.D.
Why Marriages Succeed or Fail and How You Can Make Your Last
John Gottman, Ph.D.
Love and Respect Workbook: The Love She Most Desires; The Respect He Desperately Needs
Emerson Eggerichs
The Five Love Languages: How to Express Heartfelt Commitment to Your Mate
Gary Chapman
Hold Me Tight: Seven Conversations for a Lifetime of Love
Sue Johnson
Getting the Love You Want: A Guide for Couples
Harville Hendrix
Find more recommendations at:
http://www.mastersincounseling.com/love-on-the-rocks-top-12-books-for-troubled-marriages
Divorce tears a family apart
My husband's parents were divorced when he was not yet a teen and it had a large impact on his life. It seems that his perspective of marriage and family was altered because of the divorce. He has shared personal feelings with me and I know that the divorce had some negative effects on him. Divorce can be a blessing to those who are in an abusive or violent relationship! We do not ignore that divorce can be a saving grace in these types of homes. However, we believe that when a husband and wife work together, forgive, and develop positive attributes, they can learn to overcome their struggles and work through issues that may lead to divorce. We do not deny that marriage takes work and effort, however we know that when that work and effort is put forth, marriage can be a wonderful blessing!
A Call To Action: How to Prevent a Divorce
According to Susan Heitler, Ph.D.
(http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/resolution-not-conflict/201311/7-strong-steps-stop-divorce)
1. Prepare for action
If you are serious about wanting to stop a divorce, as soon as posisble, soothe the panic, skip the moping, and make an action plan. The steps below will guide you to a strong start.
2. Smother the urge to play victim
“How could you do this to me?” may express how you feel, but it’s likely to be a loser strategy for regaining your spouse’s affection. Guilting your partner into returning will just win back, if it wins anything, a depressed “I hate being here again” spouse. Not a good way to stop a divorce.
To skip the “poor me,” flip to “proud me.” Remind yourself of the positive qualities you can bring to a marriage, and figure out how to show them in their full colors. Pretty soon you’ll start believing in yourself more, and then
Notice that I said “show,” not “show and tell.” Let your actions speak louder than words. Save your words for appreciation of him, not for comments about yourself. Flattery will get you everywhere. Self-praise is a turn-off.
Speaking of appreciation, strong people give out lots of positivity. Smile at your almost-e. Laugh at the almost-e’s jokes. Express affection. Share your gratitude for good things your spouse has done.
3. Clarify what you need to change
Make a list of all the negative comments that your spouse has made to you that now, with hindsight, you can see were attempts to stop a divorce. LIst all the complaints, criticisms and angry comments you can recall that you probably see now were about causes for the current divorce attempt.
Check out the list with your almost-ex. Be sure you left no criticisms out. At the same time, keep your tone strong, as if you are just checking the list you are bringing to the grocery store. “No big deal; I’m just beings certain my list is complete.” No victim and no groveling either.
Once you have your list, think back to your family of origin. From your Mom? Your Dad? An older sibling?
The more effectively you can identify where in growing up you might have learned that mistake, the more effectively you will be able to let go of the mistake and replace that habit with a far better one.
Then map a plan of action for fixing each and every item on your list.
4. Look your best
Appearance can be a huge factor in the odds of success in stopping a divorce.
Lose weight. Rethink your hairstyle. Pay attention to the clothes you’ve been wearing: throw out those baggy sweat pants and outdated shoes. Picture how you would look if you were to look strikingly attractive. If the image isn’t clear, pay attention to attractive people in a clothing store or to newscasters or other well-dressed folks on TV.
Then figure out how to make that your new personal style.
5. Clean up all the old hurts
Find out what resentments and hurt feelings your spouse carries that may have been factors that led to filing for a divorce. Write out a list of all the moments that your ex recalls with anger or bitterness. Create your own list as well.
Then go through each item on the list together, one by one, to “find the mis.” That means each of you needs to look for your own part in the misunderstanding, misperceptions, mistakes etc. No one gets to comment on what the other did that was problematic.
Just aim to understand what you did that inadvertently contributed to the problem. Apologize for it. Then figure out what in the future you can do differently to prevent any repeats.
Mistakes are for learning. If your marriage is rocky now, probably you haven't been doing enough earning from your mistakes.
6. Believe in yourself
To keep up your morale as you plow ahead with your steps to stop a divorce, think about the proverbial little engine that could, whose mantra became “I think I can, I think I can.” Treasure this mantra, and say it to yourself multiple times a day.
If deep down you believe that you don’t deserve to be loved, you need to change that. Use “temporal tapping,” a technique for changing self-defeating beliefs. With the three longest fingers of your right hand, tap in a circle around your right ear. Tap from front to back, down and around back up, completing a circle, for as many as 10 circles. As you tap, say aloud, “I deserve to be loved. I am lovable. I deserve to be loved. I am lovable. etc….”
Temporal tapping reprograms your brain, replacing negative beliefs about yourself with positive ones.
Recite your mantra and do you tapping multiple times with your new self-belief multiple times each day, as often as possible until your determination and self-confidence feels strong enough to rely on them.
7. Learn the skills that everyone needs if they want to be good at marriage partnership
You wouldn’t expect to walk into a courtroom to conduct a trial without first learning the skills of a lawyer. Yet how much training did you get for the job of spouse? Probably very little, even though the skills you need to succeed at the job take most people significant training to do successfully.
Learn the four skill sets essential for sustaining a loving relationship: 1)talking together cooperatively 2) making win-win decisions together 3) preventing anger from spoiling your relationship and 4) pumping up thepositivity you emanate to each other. Self-help blog-posts and books oran online course can get you there; sometimes a couples counselor can also be a reliable mentor, but pick carefully to be sure the one you choose can teach you the skills you need.
1. Be kind (not nice).
Niceness is often insincere—it is a coping mechanism taught to us as children to help us deal with people we don’t really like. True kindness, by contrast, doesn’t condescend or pretend. Kindness looks to the core worth of another person and responds accordingly. Kindness doesn’t mean avoiding conflict or even always “playing nice”—it just means processing through issues with a sincere respect for your spouse’s feelings and humanity.
2. Be sexually generous.
Marriage is not an excuse to be a sexual slacker. When you put your spouse’s sexual needs first, your own are likely to be satisfied as well. If for some reason your needs continue to be unmet, don’t just seethe about it—communicate with your spouse. Affirm your love for him or her while helping them understand what makes you feel loved.
3. Be there.
Your presence, both physical and emotional, is critical to the survival of your relationship. Try to be present in the moment and to be sensitive to your spouse’s emotional state. Really listen when your spouse speaks. If your job or other obligations routinely keep you away from your spouse, take a hard look at your options and determine what is best for the overall health of your marriage.
4. Be grateful.
Before you rush to judge, take a step back and remember what you have in your spouse. Is he or she loyal, considerate or kind? What flaws of yours does your spouse patiently endure?
5. Be helpful.
You shouldn’t be helpful just for the sake of getting what you want. But you’d be surprised at how often helping your spouse—especially when he or she is stressed—can yield the kind of response you crave most. If you feel shortchanged on affection, communication or time, try being more helpful. It’s not a magic formula guaranteed to bring results, but it can help improve your spouse’s mood, and by extension, your relationship.
6. Don’t over-romanticize.
Drop your delusions and see how much room it frees up for real love.
7. Don’t over-dramatize.
Some people thrive on drama. If you are one of those people, you are bound to be disappointed by any healthy relationship. Where no drama exists, drama-addicts will find ways to provoke or manufacture it.
8. Don’t nag or nitpick.
You may think your “constructive” criticism or helpful reminders will help mold your spouse into your idealized man or woman. More likely, it will just wear them out. You may or may not get what you want … and you are likely to something you didn’t want: resentment.
9. Don’t lose focus.
We live in a hyper-saturated, hyper-stimulated world. Beauty is distorted, augmented and airbrushed. Willing sexual partners are around every dance club corner. Pornography is ubiquitous. Destructive behaviors are exaggerated (and glamorized) by “reality” shows. It seems like everyone is misbehaving and if you aren’t, you must be missing out. But the desire for meaningful relationships is at the core of the human heart. You can try to take the shortcut to this kind of happiness by responding to every enticement that comes your way. Or you can choose to focus on a real relationship, and enjoy the enduring pleasures such a relationship provides.
10. Don’t be selfish.
It sounds simple enough. But selfishness underlies most of our broken relationships—and it is a hard habit to break. Selfishness can take many forms: financial, behavioral, emotional or sexual. We all fall victim to selfishness from time to time, but chronic selfishness can do lasting damage to a relationship. Selfishness presents itself as a way to secure your own happiness, but most of the time, it actually erodes it.
For more information go to: http://www.twoofus.org/educational-content/articles/10-simple-ways-to-make-a-marriage-last/index.aspx
Niceness is often insincere—it is a coping mechanism taught to us as children to help us deal with people we don’t really like. True kindness, by contrast, doesn’t condescend or pretend. Kindness looks to the core worth of another person and responds accordingly. Kindness doesn’t mean avoiding conflict or even always “playing nice”—it just means processing through issues with a sincere respect for your spouse’s feelings and humanity.
2. Be sexually generous.
Marriage is not an excuse to be a sexual slacker. When you put your spouse’s sexual needs first, your own are likely to be satisfied as well. If for some reason your needs continue to be unmet, don’t just seethe about it—communicate with your spouse. Affirm your love for him or her while helping them understand what makes you feel loved.
3. Be there.
Your presence, both physical and emotional, is critical to the survival of your relationship. Try to be present in the moment and to be sensitive to your spouse’s emotional state. Really listen when your spouse speaks. If your job or other obligations routinely keep you away from your spouse, take a hard look at your options and determine what is best for the overall health of your marriage.
4. Be grateful.
Before you rush to judge, take a step back and remember what you have in your spouse. Is he or she loyal, considerate or kind? What flaws of yours does your spouse patiently endure?
5. Be helpful.
You shouldn’t be helpful just for the sake of getting what you want. But you’d be surprised at how often helping your spouse—especially when he or she is stressed—can yield the kind of response you crave most. If you feel shortchanged on affection, communication or time, try being more helpful. It’s not a magic formula guaranteed to bring results, but it can help improve your spouse’s mood, and by extension, your relationship.
6. Don’t over-romanticize.
Drop your delusions and see how much room it frees up for real love.
7. Don’t over-dramatize.
Some people thrive on drama. If you are one of those people, you are bound to be disappointed by any healthy relationship. Where no drama exists, drama-addicts will find ways to provoke or manufacture it.
8. Don’t nag or nitpick.
You may think your “constructive” criticism or helpful reminders will help mold your spouse into your idealized man or woman. More likely, it will just wear them out. You may or may not get what you want … and you are likely to something you didn’t want: resentment.
9. Don’t lose focus.
We live in a hyper-saturated, hyper-stimulated world. Beauty is distorted, augmented and airbrushed. Willing sexual partners are around every dance club corner. Pornography is ubiquitous. Destructive behaviors are exaggerated (and glamorized) by “reality” shows. It seems like everyone is misbehaving and if you aren’t, you must be missing out. But the desire for meaningful relationships is at the core of the human heart. You can try to take the shortcut to this kind of happiness by responding to every enticement that comes your way. Or you can choose to focus on a real relationship, and enjoy the enduring pleasures such a relationship provides.
10. Don’t be selfish.
It sounds simple enough. But selfishness underlies most of our broken relationships—and it is a hard habit to break. Selfishness can take many forms: financial, behavioral, emotional or sexual. We all fall victim to selfishness from time to time, but chronic selfishness can do lasting damage to a relationship. Selfishness presents itself as a way to secure your own happiness, but most of the time, it actually erodes it.
For more information go to: http://www.twoofus.org/educational-content/articles/10-simple-ways-to-make-a-marriage-last/index.aspx
Staggering Divorce Statistics
Divorce Has a Tremendous Impact on Children, Adults, & Society as a Whole
- Drop in standard of living of females after divorce as of 2000: 45% (National Center of Health Statistics)
- In 1996, children of divorce were 50% more likely than their counterparts from intact families to divorce. (National Center of Health Statistics)
- Fatherless homes account for 63% of youth suicides, 90% of homeless/runaway children, 85% of children with behavior problems, 71% of high school dropouts, 85% of youths in prison, well over 50% of teen mothers. (National Center of Health Statistics)
- (Journal of Marital and Family Therapy) Marital problems are associated with decreased work productivity, especially for men.
Find more statistics at: http://www.meninmarriage.com/article05.htm
Divorce rates have rapidly increased since the early 1970s. Have you ever wondered why? That was about the same time that No-Fault Divorce laws were instituted in and adopted by over 40 states in the U.S. Just look at the upward spike!
Read more about No-Fault Divorce in our post on No-Fault Divorce Reform by Maggie Gallagher.
How Can Marriage Work & What's the Secret to a Good Marriage?
Ask the experts!
Peggy Zampetti Frederick has been married for more than 35 years. She
says she and her husband's
longevity secret actually isn't a secret at
all.
"We make a conscious effort to remember that it's not
about 'me' . . . it's about 'us.' With this philosophy and the ability
to laugh at our many foibles, we have weathered many a storm."
"Scientific Marriage Principles" From The Marriage Foundation
“Marriage is the contractual spiritual union
between two soul friends, manifested
and supported by selfless behaviors,
that naturally lead to material and
psychological harmony and prosperity.”
-Paul Friedman
Marriage relationships have 3 inseparable aspects-
- Mundane- Day to day married life
- Psychological- Your interactions
- Spiritual - Experience of soul connection- love
The greatest achievement of marriage is the experience of unconditional love
The greatest achievement in life is to experience unconditional love.
Marriage is a perfectly constructed to achieve unconditional love and all other benefits
The construct of marriage is perfect to encourage the behaviors which naturally bring about unconditional love and the other desired goals of a perfect marriage.
Marriage
- Marriage was created by God to be a sacred space.
- Marriage is a sacred space separated and apart from the rest of the world.
- The greatest benefit of marriage is largely unknown by mankind - to experience soul connection.
- Marriage has two purposes:
2) Learn selfless, or unconditional, love
Children
- Children are God’s children. He is their true parent.
- We are responsible to be the best people we know how to be, to set examples for our children.
- It is our job to provide the protection and education our children will need to have productive and successful lives.
- Nobody should have a child without a thorough practical education so they know what they are getting into.
- Children suffer immeasurably from broken homes. Society has desensitized us to the realities of divorce.
Your “Self”
- We are, at our essence, (spiritual) consciousness. Each of us possesses a psychological mind, and physical body, but we are not a body, nor are we a mind.
- The common name for “what” we are is soul. We are souls.
- Over-identification with either the body or mind, thinking it is what you are, creates pain, suffering and hopelessness.
- We have the innate ability to know our self as a soul by withdrawing our consciousness from the body and mind.
The Mind
- The mind is an unseen two (major) part, invisible entity that “nests” within the physical brain.
- Beliefs about the mind that do not consider spirit are mostly useless, because they do not describe how the mind is controlled by you. The soul is the real you who is in charge of the mind.
- The mind is comprised of “upper” and “lower” parts. The upper mind is the soul. The lower mind is tied to creation. The combined mind, which we mistakenly think of as our “self” is temporary – not actually who we are.
The Body and Soul
- Our body is our possession, but most of us are slaves (to one degree or another) to its every whim.
- Bodies are biologically driven by two innate forces; survival and procreation, which when unattended, drives the psychology of those not self-trained to control the mind.
- The body requires proper diet, oxygen and exercise.
- Bodies send messages to the mind to give context to pain, pleasure, hunger, thirst etc. It is the mind that actually experiences the sensations of the body, so should be analyzed and interpreted by the mind.
- Biological functions designed for its survival and procreation are almost always misunderstood and often glorified.
- Race, color and other variations of bodies have no objective relevancy. All souls are perfect in the eyes of God.
- A body, by virtue of its finiteness, cannot have “ultimate” experiences, which are experienced by the soul.
You can read much more on their ideas at: themarriagefoundation.org
How Can the L.D.S. Church Help?
Nurturing Marriage - Russell M. Nelson -
April 2006 General Conference
Marriage and Divorce - Dallin H. Oaks -
Mormon Messages
Mormon Messages
For more information, visit: lds.org
You Can Help By Advocating an End to No-Fault Divorce!
End No-Fault Divorce?
By Maggie Gallagher & Barbara Dafoe Whitehead
Recently I proposed that states require a five-year waiting period for a contested no-fault divorce. If you want a quick, no-fault divorce, such a law would say to anyone contemplating divorce, you are going to have to negotiate with the man or woman you married in order to get it. The idea provoked quite a bit of mail that fell rather neatly into two categories: applause from spouses who had been abandoned, and outrage from spouses who had ended their marriages. This was not a gender divide. I received anguished letters from both men and women who felt their lives have been ripped apart by no-fault divorce. And I received at least as many letters from women as from men who simply could not understand the reasoning behind such a proposal. “What good excuse would keep a person in an unhappy, unrewarding relationship?” asked one respondent, a woman who left a twenty-five-year marriage because she was “tired of trying to please, gain love, do the ‘right thing.’“ “Would it be denial of a problem?” she asked. “Would it be financial gain, would it be ‘for the children,’ would it be for all the wrong reasons? My question”why would an unwanted spouse wish to stay in a marriage? What is, therefore, wrong with no-fault divorce?” This is a common sentiment among Americans, one strategy we employ to resolve the moral conflict between two spouses, one of whom wants a divorce and the other does not: You want to hold onto someone who doesn’t want you any more? What kind of loser are you? On the other side, another woman wrote to tell me of her husband’s decision to divorce her: “At age fifty-seven, he announced he would seek a divorce. All my dreams, hopes, and looking forward to some well-earned ‘golden time’ were dashed and smashed to smithereens. Our thirty-seven-year marriage was to be erased. My former standard of living was obliterated and can never be reached again.” “Our laws,” she complained, “do not differentiate between four months or forty years.” Nor do they differentiate between a woman who wants to leave an abusive husband and a man who wants to trade in an aging wife. Our laws make no distinctions at all, because no-fault’s primary purpose is to empower whichever party wants out, with the least possible fuss and the greatest possible speed, no questions asked. The right to leave ASAP is judged so compelling that it overwhelms the right to make (and be held responsible for) our commitments. For twenty-five years we have talked and written and legislated about no-fault divorce as if it represented an increase in personal choice. As the letters I received from divorcees suggest, this is a simplification and a falsification of our experience with no-fault divorce. For in most cases, divorce is not a mutual act, but the choice of one partner alone. “We might expect that both partners would be ready to end the relationship by the time one leaves,” note family scholars Frank F. Furstenberg, Jr. and Andrew J. Cherlin in their book Divided Family . “But the data suggest otherwise. Four out of five marriages ended unilaterally.” No-fault divorce does not expand everyone’s personal choice. It empowers the spouse who wishes to leave, and leaves the spouse who is being left helpless, overwhelmed, and weak. The spouse who chooses divorce has a liberating sense of mastery, which psychologists have identified as one of the key components of personal happiness. He or she is breaking free, embracing change, which, with its psychic echoes of the exhilarating original adolescent break from the family, can dramatically boost self-esteem. Being divorced, however (as the popularity of the movie The First Wives’ Club attests) reinforces exactly the opposite sense of life. Being divorced does not feel like an act of personal courage, or transform you into the hero of your own life story, because being divorced is not an act. It is something that happens to you, over which, thanks to no-fault divorce legislation, you have no say at all. The spouse who leaves learns that love dies. The spouse who is left learns that love betrays and that the courts and society side with the betrayers. In court, your marriage commitment means nothing. The only rule is: Whoever wants out, wins.
Read more from this article by clicking the following link: http://www.firstthings.com/article/1997/08/001-end-no-fault-divorce
We Can All Make A Difference - Recommended Reads
One way that we learned that we can make a difference and get the word out to others is through the use of The Dragonfly Effect, by Jennifer Aker.
The Dragonfly Effect is a guide for how individuals, organizations, and companies can use social media to propel social change.
______________________________________
How to Avoid Divorce, by Nicholas George
This book looks into the heart of what causes divorce, and provides easy to follow, step-by-step advice on what can be done to alleviate the need for divorce in the first place. If you are unsure of how your marriage got to where it is now, and are not sure that divorce is really what you want, then this book has some very useful and practical advice.
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