Monday, December 17, 2012


ANOTHER MOTHER’S STORY

I read the blog written by Liza Long with heartfelt sympathy and interest.   I too am a mother of a daughter who suffered from mental illness.  No, she was not a murderer, a criminal or an evil person.  She was a loving devoted daughter, sister, friend and clinical therapist holding both a LCSW (Licensed Clinical Social Worker) and Ph.D. in psychology.  She loved life, her work, her patients, her family and her friends.   She was sick and suffered from Bipolar I Disorder for ten years before she leaped to her death on July 2, 1998.  She was thirty-four years old. 

Pam fought her illness tenaciously.  To her, they were demons brought to her by a demonic force she referred to as the devil.  They took up residency in her mind, and as the years progressed they slowly devoured her mind, her spirit and her life.  Pam did not choose to jump; the demons pushed her out the window.  

Mental illness takes many forms and many diagnosis, most of which take a skilled psychiatrist to determine, as many mental disorders have co-morbidity, (symptoms that resemble other diagnosis’, such as schizophrenia and Bi-polar Disorder.)  It takes time to obtain a differential diagnosis.  Until a diagnosis is made, a treatment plan cannot be implemented, not unlike any other illness.

Pam was the eldest of my five children.  She never revealed any symptoms of mental illness until she had her first break when she was twenty-four years old.  By this time, she was half way through her doctorate, working at the John Bradshaw Center in Hollywood, California as a therapist and was considered to be a “wizard” therapist.  The center was an in-patient treatment facility for recovering addicts and mood disorders caused primarily from abuse, neglect, and/or abandonment during their childhood.  Pam was a leading therapist, running groups and seeing the patients in individual sessions.  Her work was heralded by the staff, the patients and John Bradshaw. 

The illness insidiously crept in upon her slowly, steadfastly and with a force that ripped away all reason and rationality while it wove a delusionary system that was unshakable.  As the years passed, Pam was no longer the same vivacious, charming, charismatic young woman that made everyone who knew her fall in love with her.  As the invasion of this illness progressed, all that was before was no more.  Instead only a shell of a woman who had seemingly lost her mind and spirit remained as my daughter.  Her soul passed before her body.

In my book, WHY DID SHE JUMP: An Angel to Remember that will be released in the fall of 2013, I describe how this illness became her cancer; resistant to all treatment as her belief system prevented her from taking the medicine prescribed.  However, when she did, she turned into a zombie, unable to function and barely get out of bed.  In her twisted mind she concluded that the medications were agents of the devil and managed to avoid taking them.  As a result her illness gained strength and her mind lost contact with reality.  Oh, there were lucid moments, but the prevailing theme was insanity by loss of reality.  The examples will be revealed in the book as well as the torture we, her family were all subjected to.  The worst of it was that there was no place for her to get the treatment she needed. 

I wrote a letter to Oprah that became the introduction to my book.  I described the trials and tribulations in depth, blaming the health system in our country as one of the leading causes of her death, claiming that my daughter was unable to obtain treatment that could have easily saved her life.    I urged Oprah to do a program on this issue stating that this was not just my child, but everyone’s child who has been stricken with this hideous disease.  I copied it to Hillary Clinton, our congresswoman Elaine Bloom at that time, Senators Bob Graham and Connie Mack.  None responded.  The Miami Herald published my letter, thanks to Sue Reisinger who felt a need to share this tragedy with her readers.

This was fourteen years ago.  Now we are facing a nation who has the worst record for healing our mentally ill citizens.  We had to wait for one tragedy after another to occur for people to start screaming about guns and the atrocities committed on innocent people, worst of all little children as well as the atrocious care of the mentally ill.  My beautiful daughter fell through the cracks because there was no facility that she could be given proper treatment.  How many lives to we have to lose before we get it?  What price do we have to pay to have our voices heard?  My daughter was not rich, nor was she poor.  She worked for a living, was raised in a home with a father who is a physician and a mother, a clinical social worker.  Yet with the vast network of friends and colleagues we both had, we were rendered helpless, powerless and finally hopeless in securing the help she needed. 

I don’t own a gun and no nothing about them.  Frankly I would be terrified to have one in my home.  I live alone and cannot imagine ever using one, fearing that my life would be more at risk having one in my hand, than not.  Perhaps I am gullible, but owning a gun does not make me feel safe.  In fact, I would feel more vulnerable because the gunman would most probably be a better marksman than I.  Guns are only part of the problem.  We need to change our culture and cultivate more loving, caring and sensitive communities exhibiting kindheartedness to our fellow man.  We must provide a safe environment where our loved ones stricken with mental illness can go to get help.  Psychotropic drugs and therapy do help, but in order to maintain treatment, patients have to be in a long term treatment center as opposed to being admitted for 24-48 hours in a psychiatric ward In some hospital only to be released within a day or two, which by the way, makes them worse. 

My story is not just about my loss, sorrow, grief and despair.  It is the story of our country, which loses thousands of loved ones every year either by suicide or homicide because they were not cared for in an environment that could support their healing.  It’s time for real change; change in our health system, change in our gun laws, and most of all change in our culture.         

Sunday, December 2, 2012


BEING DUDELESS?

Just got dumped?  Filed for divorce?  Your fiancĂ© got cold feet and cancelled the wedding? Ex-wife wants to reconcile? Found out your honey had another on the side?  No good guys in sight?  Don’t worry!  Being dudeless for a while might be a refreshing surprise; that is if you know what to do.

Staying sane and single can be a challenge, but can offer some pleasant surprises.  Here are 7 tips to make the ride a pleasant journey.

#1 Begin to think of you first.  Start making plans that include activities that you love to do.  Sign up for a ski class, tennis class, yoga class, dance class, Spanish class, computer class, etc.  Choose anything that you have wanted to do but your relationship swallowed up your time and didn’t allow for personal stuff to take center stage. 

#2 Think vacation! Travel alone on a single’s cruise or a Club Med, or ask a friend or family member to get away for a few days.  Sometimes, just a change of pace and scenery, can be liberating and help your healing.

#3 Take some time to discover you.  Spend some nights alone and find that waking in the morning without a man can be tolerable; perhaps even pleasant.  For sure you won’t die! Try using meditation, say positive affirmations to yourself, (i.e.: I am a worthy person; I deserve happiness and joy; I am complete and lovable.) Take baths, read a book and watch old movies to entertain yourself instead of spending time choosing an outfit, primping, applying make-up, and wearing shoes that kill your feet and your pocketbook. Go ahead: Veg out, chill out, zone out and have a good cry.    Journaling is a wonderful way to discharge your feelings. 

#4.  Exercise!  It worked for Forest Gump and it will work for you.  Bike, run, walk, work out, swim or participate in a sport.  Exercising is like exorcising.  Revving up those endomorphins is a great release to rid you of bad feelings.  Masturbation is not a bad idea either!  You’ll meet a better class of people!

#5. Spend some quality time with your girlfriends.  In the end, you’ll discover they matter the most anyway.  Boyfriends come and go; husbands do the same; kids grow up and start their own lives, but girlfriends are forever.  Furthermore, no one understands a chick’s pain better than another chick.  Maybe you’ll have to pay for your own dinner, but the nurturing, empathy, understanding, support and friendship is well worth it. Dudes simply don’t have the programming in their brains to do what your girlfriends can do.  A champion fight or basketball game will take precedent over  a“let’s talk” every time.

#6. Pamper yourself.  Get a massage; change your hair color or style, sign up for a spa day, relax!  Nothing works like treating yourself like a princess. 

#7 Check out some dating sites.  See what’s out on the market.  Most therapists would agree that spending alone time for a while is the best medicine, but nothing works better for enhancing self esteem than finding a dude who thinks you’re gorgeous and wants to get into yours pants.  Remember, you are vulnerable, so you don’t want to put all your emotional eggs in a new basket, but it sure feels good to know that there’s a dude with a hard on just waiting for a response from you.  One word of advice: Don’t let hot sex replace a good solid healthy adult relationship.  Too often women make the mistake of confusing sex with love once they go between the sheets.  If you have this problem, be aware.  Chicks tend to project what they want to see on a dude when it’s not really who they are.  So beware!

In reality, there really is no quick fix to get over a broken heart.  Time, talking out your feelings, and having faith that things happen the way they are meant to be, are your best resources.  Learning to let go, forgiving your dude and most of all, forgiving yourself for anything you might blame yourself for.  Never look back with regrets.  Shit happens, we go on to something that may be better than what we lost and we hold our heads high with dignity and the knowledge that we are too good to feel this bad!

When I went through a heartfelt break-up, it was my inner adult voice that I kept hearing.  She spoke to me like a Wise Old Women residing in my soul.  I know this archetypal energy exists in all of us.  It was she who told me to write.  So writing became my release, my nocturnal companion.  It was writing that nurtured my wounds and discharged my pain.  When my last lover chose to close the door to what I thought would be my last chance at love, I took to writing to a book.  Still in process, it gives me a vehicle to let go and accept what I thought would be impossible.

Whether you write, paint, play an instrument, sing, dance or act, find your bliss, use it and I promise it will bring you the relief and transformation you yearn for.  Trust that you have all the resources within you.  Just look inside and give yourself permission to use what you already have.  We already know what we don’t know that we know!

Tuesday, November 27, 2012


GETTING EVEN: a common response to cheating


 

“Hell hath no fury like a women’s scorn!”

William Shakespeare

And….”hell hath no fury like a man’s either!

Joan E. Childs, LCSW

 

 

 

When it comes to cheating, men and women respond very similarly, despite what they may tell you.  It’s difficult for them to let go of the mental video that replays over and over, imagining their spouse with another partner.  The gut wrenching feeling that pierces their hearts also shatters their trust, belief system, self-esteem, relationship/marriage and quite often, their lives.  This is where the genders merge.  It is where the human element super-cedes gender.  When a heart is broken, gender is irrelevant.  The response is more connected to the individual than the gender.  Both men and women feel the hurt and pain.  The most common response to hurt is anger.  Getting even becomes a personal choice, and__ it’s a poor one.

 

THE DISCOVERY


 

Carol called me early one morning on my way to my office in tears, nearly gasping between her words.  “I need to see you.  Do you have any time today?”

 She discovered her husband of nineteen years had been having an affair with his secretary.  When she confronted him, he had no way out because the secretary’s husband called Carol after he discovered them dead to rites.  Carol’s vitriolic response was to “get even.”  Her boss had been flirting with her for years, and her revenge was to have an affair with him.

 

When Carol came into my office that afternoon and spilled her guts, literally and figuratively, (she vomited), I asked her if she had one wish, what would it be.  Her first response was murderous rage, “To cut off his b____”, she screeched. (ala Loretta Babbit) After the rage, came the tears, the disbelief, the “What am I going to dos?” and “how will I ever get passed this?”

 

Ted learned from a co-worker that his wife was having an affair with her fitness trainer.  What made matters worse, was that the fitness trainer, was shared by both Ted and his wife for nearly nine years.  Ted was devastated and felt betrayed by both of them.

When Ted came in to see me he could hardly speak.  His tears were endless.  He howled like a wounded animal when he tried to tell me what happened.  Clutching his chest and shifting to holding his head in his hands, bending over in despair, I thought he might collapse.  He was speechless for the first fifteen minutes. Every time he tried to speak, the sobbing swallowed his words.  After he collected his emotions, having used his handkerchief until it was soaked and at least half a box of tissues, he mumbled, “I ‘m going to kill that bastard!  He deserves to die!” (ala UNFAITHFUL, the movie)  I gave her everything, never denied her anything and this is how she pays me back?”  The profanity followed the tears, and then the tears returned.  After asking him the same question I asked Carol, he said, “I want my wife back, but I want to f—k his first!

 

Carol and Ted’s response reflects most of the feelings my clients have when they learn about “the affair”.  No matter male or female, the shock and grief is pervasive, progressive and feels permanent.  It disrupts their sleep, their work and ability to stay focused.  The betrayal becomes omnipresent interfering with the quality of their lives.  Men more often want to kill the other man; women more often want to kill their spouse.  The next best thing to committing murder is to have a “get even” affair. 

 

THE PAST AND HOW IT AFFECTS THE PRESENT


 

This is the time to see a therapist.  Tit for tat is not a solution.  Believe it or not, relationships that have suffered infidelity can be repaired and often are better as a result of working through the issues that had never been addressed.  .

 

There is usually a reason for an affair.  Sometimes it is conscious, but more often it is the unconscious that dictates our behavior.  Nature abhors a vacuum, so we tend to fill the emptiness with something that feels good.  Sometimes it is a substance, like food, alcohol, or drugs.  Sometimes it can be an activity, but more often, the choice is another mate to take away the pain of loneliness, boredom, anger or whatever might have been lost. The writing is often on the wall before we want to see it.  Denial is the most common defense mechanism humans have.  It’s too painful to face, so we avoid.  Avoidance makes our relationships become contaminated over time.  A common response to an issue is to sweep it under the rug until the rug resembles the Swiss Alps.  Most couples don’t know how to effect change in their relationship, so they act out their feelings, and too often there arises a crisis that forces them to look at the issue. So, an affair can be a blessing in disguise if it is addressed with a professional.  It can become the catalyst for understanding and change.

 

Most of us grew up in dysfunctional families to a greater or lesser degree.  We had poor role models for communication.  The two most important roles we have in life, that of being a husband/wife and a parent is something we know least about, and are least prepared to do.  Some of us were intentionally or unintentionally abused, neglected or abandoned, leaving us to adapt in order to survive.  We unconsciously bring this survival roles and wounds into our adult relationships, hoping to heal the past.  We unwittingly choose the worst nightmarish partners to help us work through our issues.  In a way, this is supposed to happen.  It is that partner that we chose, that can teach us what we need to know about ourselves. In most cases, divorce or break-ups occur before we have a chance to mend our past and save our relationships.  It is the therapy that can help heal these wounds and find new pathways to save what might have been destroyed.

 

THE SOLUTION

 

The goal is to find our authenticity and abandon our survival/adaptive roles.  Intimacy requires authenticity.  There is no intimacy without conflict, and unless you are in your true essence, conflict cannot be resolved.  When you are in your essence, connection is created and time is eternal.  When you are in your survival roles, those roles will hi-jack your relationship, and the connection will be lost.

 

 Advancing technology in couple’s counseling has paved the way to perpetual possibilities and hope for healthier relationships.  We now know ways to teach couples to reconnect and reach levels of intimacy never before realized.  We understand that human beings are wired for connection and when we disconnect, we go into crisis.  The goal is to help couples become authentic; to relinquish their survival roles so they can discover each other, perhaps for the first time, thus allowing them to fall in love again.  When the relational space between them becomes polluted, a “disconnect” is certain to happen.  When we clean up the contaminated space, we reconnect with a more meaningful, honest and mature relationship than ever thought possible 

 

 We clean up the space by having the couples cross the bridge to the world of their partner, leaving behind their perceptions, opinions, and judgments while they visit their partner’s world.  They learn how to be present to one another; they learn the language of the other.  They learn about their partner’s past, their fears, and childhood experiences that they may never have known before.  And___. they learn to listen with a third ear, an open mind and an open heart.  Together, they build new neuro-pathways to the future.  They learn new ways of communicating.  They have a new set of tools for conflict resolution.  They learn how to be in attunement with each other.  The space between them becomes sacred once more.

 

SUMMARY:  GET BETTER; NOT EVEN!


 

What to do if this happens to you

 

1, Recognize you have a deeper problem than the affair.  Understand that the affair is the result of the deeper problem.

 

  1. Get professional help with a trained couple’s counselor who can help you understand the underlying causes of the affair and teach you how to express your feelings that may have been repressed until it could no longer stay contained.  Acting out is a feeling that gets translated into a behavior.

 

  1. Understand that not unlike an abscess, the only way to make it go away is to lance it.  It hurts like hell, but once the pus is out, healing begins and the pain disappears.  This is a metaphor for the therapeutic process.

 

  1. Don’t go for right or wrong.  Hang in there and go for resolution.  Be patient __this takes time.  But the results make it all worthwhile.  See the movie SPRING HOPE!!  It’s my first exercise for those of you who can relate to this article!

 

 

 

Monday, November 26, 2012


THE HYPER-ADDICTIVE, TIME-SUCKING, RELATIONSHIP-BUSTING, MIND AND HEART-CRUSHING POWER AND ALLURE OF A DYSFUNCTIONAL, CODEPENDENT RELATIONSHIP (a title borrowed and adapted from the New York Times Magazine, 04/08/12 by Sam Anderson)

 

By now everyone has heard of the term, “codependent”.  Since the 80’s this word has been passed down for nearly 3 decades since Melody Beattie coined the word for those folks who were addicted to the addict.  (Codependent No More)  Since its original coining, that word has morphed into many meanings, until today, when it signifies those who are involved with partners in dysfunctional relationships that are ruining their lives.  If you are in a relationship that brings you down, that causes you to feel drained, pained, anxious, worried, have a fear of abandonment, fear of being consumed, and other panic driven disorders, and feeling you can’t live with him/her or without him/her, can’t let go, but don’t want to stay, then chances are, you are in an addictive, codependent relationship. 

Hundreds of books have been written on the subject.  television shows and movies provide our world of entertainment with relationships that exemplify these pathetic love addicted relationships.  Twelve step program groups are filled with members who attend regular meetings to fight the addiction, yet countless people plunge in everyday, stay for years and suffer enormous consequences that cause pain, illness, financial disaster, loss of control and sometimes, even death.  Without treatment, codependency  rarely gets better.

So what is the answer?  We have to look inside and try to understand why we think so little of ourselves to allow another human being to have so much power over us, that we jeopardize and undermine our well being and quality of life.  We need to understand the dynamics that we are bringing from our childhood into our”here and now” relationships, trying desperately to work out old conflicts with our families of origin in our adult relationships. We need to learn why we subjugate our needs and desires to please another person  instead of ourselves. 

How do we do this?  By learning where the original pain began and how it manifested so we can undo the doing.  It requires a commitment of time, money and honest exploration as well as learning skills, techniques and resources to fight and win.  A good sense of self esteem is the most important ingredient that is needed to win the battle.  Those of you who are in these kind of relationships, twisting in the wind and unable to get out of the painful day to day feelings, need to examine how you got there in the first place.  The next thing you need to do is get help.  No one does this alone.  According to Neuro-biology, the brain is the only organ in the body that needs another brain to regulate itself.  All the other organs can self regulate; not the brain.  Seek out a qualified, trained therapist who specializes in Codependency and Family of Origin Work.  A therapist who has been trained in Inner Child Work can take you back to the beginning when you first felt the feeling that you weren’t good enough or that you didn’t matter.  It might have come from abuse, neglect, and /or abandonment that occurred before you had a chance to understand what was happening to you.  A child has stages of development to master and in each stage has a task to accomplish.  That stage can only be successful if the child has reached a level of maturity to understand what has happened or has not been inflicted with abuse, neglect or abandonment.  When these things occur, they leave deep wounds in the child that affect the outcome of these developmental tasks.  Having a successful outcome with a trained therapist can change the way we think about ourselves and give us the courage to let go of relationships that keep us frozen in our dysfunctional childhood states.  Many of the techniques that are employed are geared to breaking down adapted roles we had to learn as children in order to survive and finding our authentic selves.  Our authentic selves will shine the light to reveal our essence and protect us from behaviors that jeopardize our well being.  Our true selves will provide ways to fight this addiction and help us make healthy choices.  Choosing partners that cause us pain and grief come from the wounded inner child.  If that child is made to feel safe and lovable, it will allow the authentic adult in us to take care of that part of ourselves that got stuck in our source relationships when we did not have boundaries and ways to protect ourselves.  Now as adults, we have acquired knowledge, experience, information and maturity that we can use to take care of our wounded child and make them feel like they DO INDEED matter; perhaps for the first time in their life. 

Having been the first affiliate for the John Bradshaw Institute, I have been practicing Inner Child Work for more than twenty years in my thirty-five year practice.  We have come a long way from the first encounter with Codependency and our lost child.  We now have wonderful, state of the art techniques to re-engineer ourselves and become the master of our destiny.  No longer do we have to re-enact our lost childhood.  We can reclaim, heal and champion our inner child and make choices in our best interest.

Joan E. Childs is a practicing psychotherapist for thirty-five years with offices in two locations: 2500 E. Hallandale Beach Blvd. #503, and 1040 Bayview Dr. #408 Ft. Lauderdale, FL

She can be reached by email: joanec@aol.com; web site: www.joanechilds.com  or telephone: (954) 568-1004.

 

The Legend of The  Lost Libido

Everyone knows that over time relationships shift: sometimes for the better; sometimes for the worse.  This is a natural phenomenon with every couple.  In the beginning of all relationships, everyone puts their best foot forward.  When we enter the first stage, commonly known as “the falling in love” stage, all our boundaries collapse; we can’t wait to see each other and our sexual appetite is perennially aroused.  But then comes the next phase, when the newness wears off, and the authentic  person emerges.  This concludes the honeymoon stage.

  Usually, the first things that begin to evaporate are the barrage of multiple daily phone calls, the “I love you’s” along with our sexual desire.  What follows is usually a shift in the show of affection; those tender moments that we cherished from the beginning, when his arm was around her shoulder, hands were held and good night kisses were a ritual, now begin to fade.  It is replaced with discovering the deficits in our partner that were not visible in the first stage.  Finding fault with each other is the first level of pollution to enter the relational space in which the couple lives; faults that were not evident in the first stage.  Even if they were, we were not willing to see or acknowledge them.  It’s a strange phenomenon, but once we get between the sheets, we project what we want to see on each other; not necessarily what is there.  These projections are often the cause of disappointment, disillusion and bitterness.  What is worse is that most people avoid communicating their feelings, fearful that being honest may upset the homeostasis of the relationship. The unconscious or conscious fear is that if I express my anger or hurt him/her, my partner might end the relationship.  This is not true.  The truth is, that avoidance it worse.  Avoidance brews “the collecting of stamps”, and one day, the energy that gets lodged, breaks loose, and bites you in the ass.  We tend to act out what we don’t communicate.  Acting out is taking a feeling and translating it into a behavior. Our feelings are energy: e- motions,  energy in motion.  Stuffing them only makes them stronger until our container can no longer house them.  So what happens is they come out the side, worse than if we spoke our truth from the get go.  Our insecurities rule our behavior and cause us to make poor choices.

   One of the first things to lose its luster is our sexuality.  When we are hurt or angry, we simply lose our sexual interest.  Effective communication is crucial.  It will always make things better.  However, most folks don’t know how to communicate effectively.   That’s because we grew up in homes where healthy communication was never modeled.  Think about how your parents settled their conflicts and differences.  Our fathers usually chose one of two options, depending upon their disposition.  They entered their cave and shut down, or they carried a club.  Our mothers either cried or shopped.  Things didn’t change much from the good old days of Fred and Wilma.  We only know what we know; therefore, we tend to do what comes naturally.  Doing what comes naturally is not usually healthy.  There is a right and a wrong way to fight.  Fighting fair takes some learning.  Tools and skills to communicate with a desired outcome, needs to be taught, like driving a car, learning how to play golf, tennis, the piano, etc.

This is when couple’s/marriage counseling is vital in order to help the couple find resources to work through their issues and clean up the polluted relational space that if not corrected, can destroy the marriage/relationship.  And if the couple has children, this polluted relational space is their playground.  So imagine the impact this has on them.

The truth is that sexual dysfunction is a result of not having a safe place to express how we feel.  When our feelings are repressed, our sexuality is impaired.  Most people don’t need a sex therapist.  They need to learn how to communicate with each other.

Martin Buber, the Jewish philosopher said that human beings are wired for connection.  If we disconnect, we go into crisis.  It’s only in a relationship that we can know who we really are.  In his own words, he says, “Our relationships live in the space in between which is sacred.  The meaning is to be found neither in one of the two partners, nor in both together, but only in the “between” which they live in together. “

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Making Love Work

Advancing technology in couple’s counseling has paved the way to perpetual possibilities and hope for healthier relationships. We now know ways to teach couples to reconnect and reach levels of intimacy never before realized. We understand that human beings are wired for connection and when we disconnect, we go into crisis. The goal is the help couples become authentic so they can discover each other, perhaps for the first time, thus allowing them to fall in love again. When the relational space between them becomes polluted, the “disconnect” is certain to happen. When we clean up that contaminated space, we reconnect with a more meaningful, honest relationship than ever thought possible. When two individuals who are committed to move their relationship forward and become truly authentic, time is eternal, says the philosopher, Martin Buber.


My recent work with Hedy Schleiffer, applying her methodology, combined with PAIRS, IMAGO THERAPY AND INNER CHILD WORK, has taken my work to heights I never knew possible. I have been able to synthesize these modalities to achieve these optimum results. Of course, the basic requirement is that both people in the relationship have a genuine sense of good will.

“There is a field beyond right thinking and beyond wrong thinking,

I will meet you there. RUMI

For couples to reach and maintain their potential as best friends, lovers and parents, they must be willing to have three major components.: committment, faith and patience.  With these essential ingredients, I am able to open up fields of understanding using communication models, listening techniques and fair fighting rules that allow each person time to be heard and to know that their partner has received the information imparted to them.  Hedy Schleiffer's THE BRIDGE allows each partner to take the other to the "tough neighborhoods" and be invited to the street of _________that they want the other partner to learn about.  In PAIRS, certain exercises allow for cleaning up the past and develop deeper respect and understanding for each other.  Using INNER CHILD WORK combined with IMAGO THERAPY (Harvilee Hendrix), potentiates closness and appreciation for the partners past and how it has impacted his/hers present.  Once this recognition is made, a new level of intimacy has been reached.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Women in Relationships

WOMAN AND RELATIONSHIPS
JOAN E. CHILDS, LCSW


From time memoriam, women have been the center of relationships, whether they are wives, sweethearts, lovers, mothers, daughters, sisters, friends, employees, employers, neighbors, professionals, etc. When we think of all the relationships women maintain over the course of their lives, we are reminded of women’s traditional and anthropological roles in the species; that of “keepers of the hearth” and “chatterers.” Women have been balancing, managing and maintaining relationships from the beginning of time. Relationships and women are the core of culture and can often determine or impact the nature of society and men.


We are born into a relationship; live in relationships, and form new relationships throughout our lives. As a practicing psychotherapist, I deal with relationships as the core of my practice. Even if I see just individuals at times, the root of my client’s issues begins in early relationships and manifests in their personal and present relationships. When working with couples, it is not uncommon to recognize that the existing problem they are experiencing is a manifestation of the original relationship they grew out of; namely their parents and family of origin. Relationships tend to mimic the patterns of behavior that were known to individuals in their early child development. Those patterns become the microcosm of the world to them. All behavior comes naturally, as if everyone had the same history and upbringing. It is only when we become involved in a relationship that we realize our differences... When we enter a relationship we bring in all our customs, beliefs, values, experiences and expectations. That is when our relationships get into trouble. Each member of the dyad is out to prove their way is the better way. Comfort zones are created over time, and then become integrated over the years... For instance, a simple issue can be originated in how each person enjoyed their Xmas celebration. Mary’s family may have opened the Xmas presents on Xmas eve and saved all the wrapping paper; whereas John’s family chose to open the presents on Xmas morning and throw away the paper. In their present relationship, Mary and John must work out a compromise and learn how to communicate and negotiate their differences in order to promote the welfare of their present relationship. These patterns of “doing what comes naturally”, becomes pervasive in all relationships including both personal and professional.



We are wired to be connected. When we lose connenction, we go into crisis. Therefore, many times we may think of our relationships as a problem to be solved, but instead, it is a struggle to reconnect. Once we reconnect, quite often the "problem" gets resolved. It is the space between the individuals in the relationship, known as the "relational space" that becomes polluted. The solution: clean up that space! And that's what I help couples do!


Women and relationships is such a common theme that I have chosen this topic as an umbrella for future blog articles to write on this website. Every article produced will continue to run the theme of women and relationships, each one providing specific information for every subject dealing with women and their relationships.


Look for WOMEN AND MEN: The Nature of the Beasts, in the next article.