From: National Center for Family & Marriage Research <ncfmr@bgsu.edu>
Date: Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 10:25 AM
Subject: News and Notes
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com
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From: Carolyn Rich Curtis <info@skills4us.org>
Date: Fri, Apr 27, 2012 at 11:37 AM
Subject: Generosity in Relationships
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com
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From: Live Simply Love <support@livesimplylove.com>
Date: Sat, Apr 21, 2012 at 2:29 PM
Subject: Live Simply Love Serving
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com
Posted: 21 Apr 2012 09:28 AM PDT
The letter “S” provided several options for today’s A to Z Challenge post: sharing, selflessness, sacrifice, support…but I decided to go with Serving, because it encompasses a little of all of those things. “What do you do to serve him?” a friend asked me a few years ago when I was dating a new boyfriend. “Um. What do you mean?” I really had no clue. Should I be making him cookies once a week? She explained her thoughts about relationships {especially marriage} being about “out-serving” each other. I’d always done nice things for boyfriends like making sentimental gifts, cooking and for some, I even did laundry. But now that I think about it, I probably did those things for ME rather than to serve him. {I mean, what guy really wants a homemade frame decorated with red and pink hearts!} You see, my focus was all about me and my happiness. That’s how I gauged if a relationship was successful. Now that I’m married, I think I understand a little better what my friend was trying to communicate. She was focused on the concept of being his “helpmate,” which makes a whole lot more sense to me in marriage than it does in dating. It’s not always about doing a bunch of stuff for him. Even though sometimes that’s what it looks like: cooking, laundry, cleaning {kind of} – but those are daily tasks we try to share so that one person doesn’t always carry the whole load. Really, what serving looks like today involves asking the question, Am I putting him first? Or am I more concerned about my needs? Do I notice his weariness at the end of the day, when all I want to do is tell him how my day went? Am I aware of his love-language-need for physical touch, and am I responding in a loving, welcoming way? Have we recently had “shoulder-to-shoulder” time engaged in an activity he enjoys? What am I doing to encourage him and affirm all the ways he serves and cares for me? Serving is not about balance, doing your equal share or even fairness…because that perspective is still self-focused. I think my friend was right. It’s about both of us doing whatever we can every day to care for the other. How are you serving your spouse?Photo credit: © Mark Aplet – Fotolia.com © Editor for Live Simply Love, 2012. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us |
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The M.Guy Tweet « Family Scholars How to Maintain a Healthy Marriage (in Good Times and Bad), heallovebe. A reporter asked the couple, “How did you manage to stay together for 65 years? familyscholars.org/2012/04/14/the-m-guy-tweet-40/ |
Pennsylvania Fatherhood Initiative Fatherhood Initiatives, in Pennsylvania and nationally, are designed to motivate and challenge fathers to become involved in their children's lives by focusing on ... www.pacwrc.pitt.edu/FamilyCenters/FatherhoodOverview.pdf |
From: Michael J. McManus <mike@marriagesavers.org>
Date: Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 9:19 PM
April 18, 2012
Column #1,599
Adulterers Advise How To Protect Your Marriage
By Mike McManus
ORLANDO -The Secret Service sex scandal is the tip of America’s adultery iceberg. Studies report that infidelity is on the rise, particularly among older men and women and young couples.
Good news! Adulterers have advice on how you can protect your marriage!
First, the data. According to a National Science Foundation survey at the University of Chicago, in any given year about 12 percent of men and 7 percent of women say they had sex outside marriage. That’s no epidemic.
However, the lifetime rate of infidelity for men over 60 has increased from 20 percent in 1991 to 28 percent in 2006. For women over 60, adultery has tripled from 5 percent in 1991 to 15 percent over a lifetime.
It’s also growing among new marriages. One-fifth of men and 15 percent of women under35 say they have ever been unfaithful, up from about 15 and 12 percent.
At the American Association of Christian Counselors meeting in Orlando, David Carder spoke about “Close Calls: What Adulterers Want You To Know About Protecting Your Marriage.”
First, the culture has become more permissive. For example, a generation of divorce has spawned “children of divorce,” who are particularly vulnerable. Half of adulterers suffered through a parental divorce.
Secondly, nowadays marriage is postponed so long that by the time people marry, they have had several serious relationships. If their spouse does not turn out to be their dreamed SOUL MATE, people remember that former friend as a person to “talk to.” If they meet, and have a drink or two together, the adultery temptation becomes very real very quickly.
Two-thirds of men and 51 percent of women would have an affair with an old flame if they don’t think they will get caught!
Add to that the Internet, where people say things they’d never say in person. In fact, eHarmony claims credit for 5 percent of all weddings, about 100,000 a year!
“Is it possible to be innocently prepared for adultery?” asked Carder. “Yes!”
Stress increases the likelihood of infidelity. He cited a study to prove it. Researchers asked men to walk over a bridge, and then describe an average-looking coed at the end of the bridge. A month later, they were asked to walk over the same bridge, and describe the same girl. But this time, the bridge shook, and appeared unstable.
Now their descriptions of the same co-ed reported her more attractive, even beautiful.
“When you go through elevated periods of stress or anxiety, the first person looks better than they are,” Carder asserted. “They appear to be the answer to your dilemma.”
Another study of pastors who committed adultery found that 90 percent felt bushwhacked or surprised and never saw it coming. “Very quick chemistry can shock you with its power, an infatuation explosion,” which can ruin a career for absolutely nothing.
Be forewarned and forearmed!
Here’s another danger adulterers want to warn you about: platonic relationships. A man and woman might share an interest or a passion at work or in volunteering. Half of adulteries begin with an innocent friendship with a person of the opposite sex. You enjoy the same music or serving the poor.
Or your might face a “dangerous partner profile.” You meet someone and think, “I will have an affair with this guy,” as soon as he walked in. It is not the wild person who instantly attracts you.
Adulterers want to warn you about other tempting dangers:
You find yourself saving topics of conversation for that colleague at work, rather than your spouse. You feed the friendship, but not with evil intentions.
Your friend asks you, “How can I get my husband to listen to me?”
You try to show you have a caring heart and try to be helpful.
You find yourself comparing your spouse to that friend, thinking, “If he respected me like Bill does.” You know he is not trying to seduce you, but are seduced!
You find yourself thinking, “How lucky he is to be married to her. He has such a great wife.”
You find yourself spending more alone time with a friend than with a spouse and rationalize, “We are serving Jesus.”
She listens to you, without flirting with you. That makes you want to spend more time with the friend. But you tell her, “When you see me at church with my wife, don’t smile at me.”
Adultery has many pleasant faces.
Beware…
Copyright © Michael J. McManus is President of Marriage Savers and a syndicated columnist.
My new email address is mike@marriagesavers.org
Michael J. McManus
syndicated columnist
"Ethics & Religion"
President & Co-Chair
Marriage Savers
9311 Harrington Dr.
Potomac, MD 20854
www.marriagesavers.org
301-469-5873
Data released by Healthy Relationships California (HRC) from the largest study ever conducted on the impact of Marriage Education classes showed that these programs help couples significantly improve their communication and levels of relationship satisfaction. Surveying 17,245 Californians who took one of several programs available for couples, HRC found a statewide average increase of more than 13% in relationship satisfaction immediately after taking a Marriage Education course, and that this improvement increased to 16% after [...] Read more »
From: Live Simply Love <support@livesimplylove.com>
Date: Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 2:41 PM
Subject: Live Simply Love Preferences
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com
Posted: 18 Apr 2012 05:38 AM PDT
In my 20s there was this simple list of things I heard people talk about related to marital compatibility–and it seemed they all were about personal preferences. Whether or not you put the cap back on the toothpaste {yes, you should}, which way the toilet paper should go {over, of course} and which side of the bed you sleep on {if lying down, I’m on the left}. It may have been these kinds of topics that made me think living with my boyfriend would help me determine if we’d be compatible for marriage. I mean if we could work those things out, what COULDN’T we do? Right? But with two different boyfriends, two living-togethers {yes, at two different times}, neither relationship resulted in marriage. And it had NOTHING to do with how well we managed toilet paper or toothpaste. I’m oh-so-much-the-wiser now. Playing marriage didn’t help me understand what it meant to be married. It took BEING married to help me with that. And I learned it’s about so much more than compatible preferences. Still, we’ve both definitely got our preferences. I’m slow to throw things away; he’s quick. I like to let the hand-washed dishes dry on the counter; he likes to grab a towel and dry them immediately. I don’t mind clutter; it drives him crazy. He could eat the same thing for lunch every day for a week; I like a little more variety. I make emotional decisions; he makes practical ones. He prefers a firm bed; the squishier the better for me. Despite our different preferences, we’ve got a pretty good marriage. Some of this stuff drives us crazy about each other, but that’s where learning to be patient and forgive often has made all the difference. What preference differences & similarities do you notice in your marriage?Photo Credit: © Adambooth | Stock Free Images & Dreamstime Stock Photos © Editor for Live Simply Love, 2012. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us |
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