Archive for September, 2010

Should You Have a Guest Room?

That is a question I ask myself whenever I start redecorating or moving things around in my house. For some it may make perfect sense and for others clearly not. These are some of the questions that you can ask yourself to determine if it makes sense for you?

1. How often do I have guests? If it’s once or twice years than it may make sense to just have an air mattress or a pull out couch. If your parents or siblings visit you every weekend or every month than you may want to have a dedicated guest room.
2. Who comes to visit? When my brother comes to visit he will literally sleep anywhere and be thankful that he’s in a house. On the other hand, if my other brother and sister and law come they will want more comfortable accommodation for him and his wife. His days of air mattresses are over as compared to my younger brother which doesn’t mind.
3. If you find that dedicating an entire room for an occasional guest is too much then I would suggest make it a room that you use. Make it a smaller family room or put your exercise equipment into that room. It’s better to use a room that you’re ultimately paying for daily then have it sitting around collecting dust for the occasional guest.
4. Futon, air mattresses and sofas make great sleeping areas for those that come once in a while. Most times family is just happy to be with family so it’s not that important where they are sleeping. If the person has a spouse, children or if the person is elderly that may be a different story. They will need different accommodations and you will have to give them a more comfortable place to stay.

Once you ask yourself these questions and are really honest with yourself about how long someone is staying and how often they visit you will undoubtedly know whether a guest room is necessary or just a temporary sleeping solution.
By Tracy McLaughlin


The Kitchen – A Room For All Reasons

Through the years, the kitchen has been a gathering place for family and friends alike. Two, three, and four centuries ago, the home had only one or two rooms – the kitchen/living area and one or two sleeping areas. So, the kitchen was quite naturally the place where everyone ate, studied, talked, visited with friends, played, celebrated, sewed, spun wool into yarn and made clothing.

As homes became larger and rooms more specialized, the kitchen also became its own room. However, that did not prevent it from being a gathering place. It remained a place for a mother and daughter to confide over a cup of tea; a father and son to discuss a problem or a victory over ice cream at midnight; or a husband and wife to share a glass of wine at the end of the day as they reminisced about the day’s activities and discussed the coming day. The kitchen has also served as a place for card games, board games, crafts, homework, school projects, birthday parties, canning, making jams and jellies, and the list goes on and on.

The wonderful aroma of cinnamon buns or apple pie baking; the enticing smell of a turkey roasting; or the mouth-watering aroma of chili wafting through the house on game day naturally draws people to the kitchen for pleas of, “Is it ready yet”? The banging of pots and pans, the clinking of flatware, the gentle ring of china touching china can all be heard as preparations progress for a holiday meal. The anticipation builds as the aromas reach their peak and awareness heightens that food is moving from the kitchen to the dining table. At last, the feast is ready and everyone takes their place. Suddenly, the sounds of people talking earnestly, laughing heartily, and enjoying each other’s company as they dive into the meal with gusto take over and the kitchen is allowed to rest for a time.

The wonderful sounds of laughing and talking, the aroma of wonderful food so lovingly prepared, and the mental picture of all those people sitting around the table enjoying each other and the prepared meal is incredibly satisfying. And, in the background, the kitchen where the meal preparation began, stands quietly, ready to go into action again when the meal has ended and the focus reverts back to the kitchen for cleanup where, once again, it will become the gathering place.

By Jo Ann Hancock


Why Doesn’t My Husband Treat Me Or His Children With Love?

“I thought marriage and having a family would really be more about sharing and having fun together”  “What I am finding is that it feels like all the light and energy have been sucked out of me, and I am miserable and feeling hopeless!”  So spoke a mother of four struggling with depression and intense feelings of inadequacy.  She then recounted her belief system about marriages that they “should” be a joining where both husband and wife feel seen, understood, giving and receiving of attention and love, and her disappointment at feeling like her relationship with her husband of eleven years was one-sided, where she was constantly ignored and treated as being unimportant.

“Why does it always have to be only about him?” “When do I get to have my needs consider?”  In work done by Jeffery Young PhD he discusses how skewed thinking can emerge when people become overly self-referenced or self-absorbed.  The partner or parent that is self-absorbed certainly does not adequately meet the psychological, emotional or social needs of their family members.  That one of the damaging effects of being involved with the self-absorbed is that it frequently feels as if they lack the ability to be consistently considerate, sensitive, empathic and caring.

This may actually be a resultant thinking and emotional pattern developed in childhood when social and emotional needs failed to be met and the individual learned to focus primarily on their own needs. The thought of others people’s wishes does not come instinctively to them, and without significant prompting they will likely not think of them and even when they do think of others feelings and needs they  may respond poorly. In the case above the woman’s own strategy to get her need met was to take care of others, and she frequently put other’s needs ahead of her own, but never felt that these efforts were reciprocated by her husband, or for that matter her children.

Offra Gerstein PhD has stated that the childhood of self-referenced individuals is often devoid of empathic and compassionate parenting. That a brilliant, if personally costly survival strategy is to become increasingly self-centered which is a preoccupation with attempting to meet those early attachment and bonding needs. Dr. Robert Rhoton of Psychological Health and Wellness suggests that attachment is about the degree that one feels emotionally connected to others, and the predictable nature of that connection.  When attachment is inconsistent or poor the predictable nature of the emotional connection is vague and ill-formed.  This appreciably reduces trust and the calm expectation of support that human beings rely on to feel a part of a community or family. Additionally, it is not uncommon to find individuals that grow to adulthood in this dynamic learn to react with aggression and hostility, or by withdrawal and victimization of self.

There are two courses of action to help this very sad woman to improve how she feels about the situation she finds herself.  First is to look her patterns of getting her own needs met and what she expects in relationship to others.  She has traditionally shown love by be focused on the wants and needs of others at the sacrifice of her own well being, this was a strategy to meet her own needs for attachment and bonding, but that strategy has put her at risk of finding friends, and a marriage partner that the equivalent of emotional black holes that are sucking the energy she offers in every increasing amounts. She began working on setting more balanced boundaries with others, articulating what she expected not waiting for them to intuitively “know” as she did what she might want, prefer or feel.

After working on the first part of dealing with her own patterns and needs, this very competent young mother and wife began to realize that she had to see things differently, and react differently to her husband.  The following are things she developed in therapy that worked for her, they are not being offered as a set of guidelines that will work for all, but simply as a review of what worked for her.

The actions she took to deal with a self-absorbed husband:

  1. She changed how she viewed her husband, rather than continue to see him as intentionally ignoring or hurting her, she decided that he was emotionally wired differently, and that his personality had been impacted, that he truly cared for her and his family, but did not know how to adequately express or show it.
  2. She began to see herself differently, rather than her tendency to see his self-absorbed ignoring behavior as a criticism of, or lack of feeling for her, she began to look for self-esteem and worth with in herself.
  3. Abstained from judging herself based on others inability to express love, devotion or caring.
  4. She began to express exactly what she expected in simple exchanges.  “smile when you see me walk into a room”; “greet me with a hug and a kiss”; “hold my hand as we walk into the store”
  5. Practiced gratitude that she is an empathic individual, capable of emotional connection with others.
  6. Focus on reaction to her husband’s underlying needs. She developed a belief that underneath her husband’s self-absorption is the need for attention and approval. She became very specific with compliments and expressions of merit

After six months of therapy, the woman felt much relief, had decided to stay in the marriage and was clear about what to expect from her husband.   This might not be everyone’s choice for how to deal with difficult and self-absorbed marital partners, but for this woman as she became stronger and truly compassionate toward her husband, the relationship improved and she felt worthwhile.

By Robert Rhoton


Don’t Follow the Crowd, Go Against The Grain

I’ve never been one to follow the crowd. Perhaps that is based on my belief that the crowd tends to go in the wrong direction. “Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat: Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it.” Matthew 7:13 – 14

The average American family consists of 2.5 children. I have six, five sons and one daughter all fathered by the same dad and all conceived in the marriage relationship. I remember one particular day many years ago. When I was shopping with a toddler child in the shopping cart, a younger child in the restraint seat, one walking beside me and I was quite pregnant. A woman looked at the obvious spectacle in her eyes and asked, “What are you doing? Making a career out of this?” I was very offended by her sarcasm and answered her back with a very confident and proud answer, “Yes, as a matter of fact I am!” And I went on my way without any further recognition of that woman. My declaration only fired me on to continue my pursuit to have even more babies. I determined that I don’t care what other people think of me. I make my own path, my own way. I don’t follow the common direction of others.

What should it matter to anyone how many children I have? I am not a welfare case sponging off the U.S. tax payers. We have fed and clothed our children with our own heard earned money. In fact we have paid taxes to help fund the failing public school system while putting out our own cash to buy books, computers, equipment and supplies to educate all our children at home for a total of nineteen years. I didn’t even get a tax break for not being a burden on the public system. I determined early on that nobody would influence my children but me, my husband, and my church in those early formative years. I didn’t want my children to be brain washed with all the political junk such as political correctness, exalting the animal kingdom above that of the human population with “save the whale” nonsense, nor distorted history to form heads of mush that would vote for such a disastrous President as we now have. I strongly believe in individualism. I feel that the “school system” whether public or private forces children to be nothing more than cookie cuts, all formed to the same image or model as is determined by the teacher. I want my children to think for themselves, to be themselves, as independent thinkers. So, that was the foundation of my homeschooling for nineteen years.

Soon, I became deaf to the nay sayers with their little comments, “Boy, you got your hands full!” I will admit there were times when I thought the same thing but nevertheless I persevered. I was not raised a quitter. I watched my father build his own business, and build our house out of the trees that he cut down himself. I remember going to the saw mill with that truck load of trees and watching them sawed into boards that would become the new house that we moved into when I was in the 4th grade. I was privileged to have a strong example before me in my hard working father as he labored on building the house. It was an inspiring example to see this blank field of grass turn into a home site where we grew up. I learned a great deal from my father’s example. He was a do-it-yourself kind of man. I guess I am the same.

By Deborah Carmona


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