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33 posts from 2009

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Excuse Me Mr.

  • Yesterday
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I'm sure you've all met people who have an "good reason" for why something is the way it is. Whether it is because their house is a mess, they haven't followed through on something they said they would, expectations were not met or just not showing up. We all have them. A reason why we aren't giving our best at work. Why we don't seek to build relationships with others. A cause for our mood. Blaming something or someone for the reason our lives aren't what we want them to be. 


We have been the recipient and deliver of each of these justifications or rationalizations at some point in our lives, usually the low points, the self-pity points. So and so didn't do this. I don't feel like it. I was too busy. Someone hurt me so I don't want to risk it. I don't feel important enough. I can't do it perfect, so I won't do it at all. I'm not good enough. Nobody cares. It doesn't matter to anyone else, so why should it matter to me? I work really hard, but nobody else does so I get discouraged.

I will admit, I fall victim to these as well at times. I'm used to a full-steam-ahead lifestyle. I'm a work/school/church/social life on a full-time level for each, kind of person. If I don't use the energy then I lose it. It's gone and fading fast. I recognize that. I'm also an all-or-nothing kind of person in my mentality which kills my productivity in every aspect. Then it just becomes recursive. I have a day, especially during the holidays, when I don't have any clients, so I don't get anything done, so I get home and feel like a failure so I don't get into gear and do dishes, cook meals, or do anything that I enjoy like thinking, reading, baking, etc.

I think this is the first holiday that I haven't baked in years. No pie. No cookies. Nothing. I bought the stuff, in an optimistic effort, but the optimist left me almost as soon as I looked at the kitchen, or something like that. Maybe it's the infamous burnout that all wide-eyed graduates deny will ever get to them hitting me like a brick wall. I think I have just gotten so occupied with the little things, which are the big things, that I'm not doing the "me" things that fulfill and rejuvenate me. But where does a girl find the time or the resources in a small town? There is no going out. There is no craft store to buy supplies to be creative. Baking just leads to eating and that doesn't help the situation. I've got to come up with something or my own life will become a life of excuses and justifications which pretty much equals emptiness and misery. Good thing I'm catching it early, right?

Post a comment Tags: excuses, misery, justification

Happy Children

  • 5 days ago
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I get an email about once a week with tips of what to expect from the baby developmentally and parenting tips, etc. This week I got one with an article titled "How to raise a happy baby and child." As I was reading through the tips I found myself a little amused. Not that they are funny, but more that God figured these out a long time ago. You tell me if He doesn't do this for you.

1) Learn to read the signs. Pretty much this means to pay attention. To know what's going on and how to read the expressions of your child.

2) Make room for fun. This not only talks about encouraging your child to have fun, but also for YOU to have time that you spend with the child which is fun. Unstructured play.

3) Help them develop their talents. Help them find things they like and encourage them to develop these.

4) Healthy bodies, happy children. Exercise, healthy food, keeping bad substances away, etc. Caring for your child's physical health.

5) Let them struggle with problems. So often we want to save our kids from pain or difficulty, but this actually harms them. Let them problem solve. This eventually leads to letting them succeed and feel that you are confident in their abilities.

6) Allow them to be sad or mad. They are allowed to feel what they feel and don't overreact to those feelings or make them feel like those are not appropriate.

7) Be a role model. Be the example of feelings, behaviors and attitudes you want your child to have.

8) Teach them to do meaningful things. You can teach your child to serve others and be fulfilled through that service. Allowing your child to serve you will help them feel they are an important contribution to the family.

I know that each of these things are things that I have recognized my Heavenly Father allows me to do on a rather regular basis, whether I notice or not. I think these are still things that we each need as adults as well as do for our children, regardless of age.

Post a comment Tags: happy children

Green Eggs and Ham

  • Dec 14, 2009
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My mom used to buy cases of oranges. Because there were so many it was almost always free reign when it came to the volume we were allowed to eat. Most often I would eat one and it would be amazing, quickly grab another only to soon realize that all the oranges in the batch were not of the same quality. Since that time I "don't eat oranges". I only had to have this experience a few times before I stopped eating oranges. Poor, innocent oranges. I'll drink orange juice and eat orange flavored foods, but fresh oranges don't get a second chance.

I have received boxes of oranges as gifts and given them away. Even Clementines I've given away. One year my grandmother gave them out and I am pretty sure I gave that away too. My ordeal with fruit did not start with oranges. In thinking about it, I believe I've already talked about how bananas and I get along.

In the past week, I was accused of being "unforgiving". I totally didn't see it. Maybe if you asked fruit...they might agree. A couple weeks ago one of my case managers bought a box of Clementines for group. For some reason, they looked really good so I grabbed one and just couldn't stop! I just had to try them, give them a chance, and realize that they're not so bad.

It's interesting to think that holding a grudge kept me from enjoying something really good for years. Tonight, I bought a bag of Clementines. If someone doesn't stop me, they'll be gone by the end of the night. I guess I'm catching up on lost time. It's a shame so much of it was wasted. Going to go play some more catch up. :)

Post a comment Tags: oranges, bananas, forgiveness, grudges

Conditional Love

  • Dec 3, 2009
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I realized yesterday that there really is no such thing as unconditional love when it comes to relationships. I'm not sure why I never really grasped it before, but experience in my professional and personal realms has been very interesting in this aspect. Yesterday, it was as though a lightbulb came on and it was completely an epiphany. I mean, I knew it. All my classes in school regarding marriage and relationships discussed how people have certain needs, etc. and when they aren't being met...dissatisfaction grows.

I should mention that both myself and my husband are as flawed as the next couple. I still have trouble just spitting it out when I'm upset and he has his own flaws. Neither of us are the person we were a year and a half ago. Part of this is for the good. We have grown and learned more about ourselves as individuals and as a couple than we knew a year ago. I think we've both gotten a little too secure and forgotten that this unconditional love thing doesn't exist.

Each part of a relationship could do something that slowly makes it difficult to really be completely open to the other person. It could be a small or serious change, a disappointment, broken promises, annoying habits, etc. Actually, according to Willard Harley they are: selfish demands, annoying habits, angry outbursts, disrespectful judgments, independent behavior and dishonesty. Man, I think we could split those right down the middle and share them in regard to guilty parties.

The part of the realization was mostly for my own benefit. I'm not who my husband married on some days. I work all day, come home stressed, vent about people he's not allowed to know and that is different. Some habits I had last year are habits that are long gone now and other habits that I didn't have are now constant companions. Plus, I was single much longer than I have been married. Being independent is what I do. I have had to be independent to make it as far as I have. I know what's in the bank and in my  head can determine whether we can or cannot afford something...and he just has to trust it. Completely not fair! Hard habit to break.

In reality, a relationship is an agreement to be there for each other in ways that create security and safety in emotional, physical, and even financial ways. If I change my mood every five seconds, it isn't safe. If I decide that I need a new gadget every five minutes to make me "happy" then that affects financial security. If you scratch my back, I'll scratch yours. If you keep scratching someone's back and nobody's scratching yours then resentment, frustration and even betrayal begin to build and that affects love. Love is not unconditional.

I know I should get back to my old good habits and drop my new bad habits. There's a difference between being comfortable in a relationship and being "comfortable" and just letting yourself go with the illusion that your significant other will love you even if you are a different person. Heck, he should even weigh in on whether or not I get my hair seriously cut because, after all, he's the one who has to look at me every day. If I dyed my hair, got a few tattoos at the local tattoo parlor and started dressing inappropriately...I'm not who he married and why should he still love me?

I suppose I should also think of what the conditions are for me to love him. I think that would make life easier for both of us.

Post a comment Tags: conditional love

The Finish Line

  • Nov 20, 2009
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In my Abnormal Behavior class my very first semester in graduate school we were warned that we would start seeing these "disorders" in ourselves and decide that we were something when we most likely weren't. Today, I was sitting with the Doctor who prescribes all my kids' medications and listening to her talk about all the things that are "classic" ADHD in girls and could not help but think of the many things that run through my mind on a daily basis. Lists of the things I need to do. Work tasks. Chores. Organizing (a personal favorite, really) and then I just want to stop. So, I end up going home and catching some shows on hulu.com just so my mind will stop. I didn't realize this was the case until today.

I don't really think I'm ADHD, I mean, it would have shown up by now, wouldn't it have? Maybe I'm just so...driven?...that I can't finish it because I want to do so many things. I want to keep a list, but I don't have a minute to stop and make the list. I buy planners and never use them longer than a week or two. (Oh that reminds me, I need to pick my refills so work will buy them!) You see what I mean, unfocused.

I love it when the doctor comes because I clean off my desk, or at least organize it a little more. Then I end up having stacks of papers to go through and I never get it done. Such as, I have printed out the information for my LPC testing a million times, but it keeps getting pushed aside and I've yet to send in the paperwork. If I don't finish something in that sitting, I rarely get back to it. This includes thank you cards, books, etc. I have three books in my other purse that I haven't finished and they are in my purse because I know if I put them on the shelf it will never happen. I miss reading. In any case, there are a million things I should be doing right now as I wait for my always-late client, but I needed to do something that I could FINISH so I decided to update instead.

Post a comment Tags: lists, adhd

Two-Face

  • Oct 30, 2009
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I deal with a lot of different kinds of people. Some of them will make a very big deal about very small things. I received an e-mail "reminder" about a meeting concerning one of my clients. This was not a reminder and my schedule was full. Instead, a representative from the place that scheduled the meeting called for my feedback. I reported the facts: the mother had an appointment with me and missed it. A week later, she called me back and left a message. I returned her call, but did not get an answer. I had heard nothing since (about two weeks ago). This particular mother wants to reunify with her children and have overnight visits. The problem is, she's not cooperating in therapy so I can determine if she is appropriate with her daughter and it's okay for the visits. I keep getting reports from outside sources that mom doesn't believe that her daughter was sexually abused by her step-father and is being inappropriate about it.

I say all this to say that she called this morning (the meeting was yesterday afternoon) and had a very tense conversation with one of the staff in the office. She then tells one of our receptionists that I didn't call her back and it's my fault she isn't with her kids. Because of my failure to call her, the receptionist also e-mailed me. I called her back, expecting a tirade of frustration only to be greeted by an understanding woman placing blame on the same support staff member. She claimed she called to see when her appointment was with me and she was told there was no appointment and I would be calling her when an appointment was needed.

I think it's interesting that people are angry and confrontational to people not involved, but when it comes down to it, they back down. Which side is the real side? I suppose that in the end she knew it wasn't my fault the appointment was missed and that just wasn't going to fly. Some people.

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Fitness

  • Oct 26, 2009
  • 1 comment

I meet with a variety of children and parents in my line of work. I have some parents that will admit all the things they are doing "wrong" and then correct these behaviors. There are others that will hide facts and even others that will claim to be doing things they are not. After working with them for a while, I tend to form an opinion about these families. About 25% of my clients are also involved in the state in regard to children's protective services.

I have one family that protective services has tried to remove the children, but there are arguments for each side. I returned to work about the middle of September. The dad did not keep their appointments and an order was filed. The dad was talking about "adult things" with the children, sending them to school without being clean (hair, clothes, etc.), and not keeping therapy appointments.

Last week I finally got in touch with him and set the appointments. His daughter arrives coughing, obviously with a severe fever, nausea, etc. I'm not thrilled. He had checked her out because she was sick, but didn't have the insight to think to cancel her appointment with me. She leaves and I tell the case manager that she will not be participating in the group activity that day.

I find out this morning that the girl, her brother, and dad all have swine flu. Great.

My main frustration is that this guy seems to be devoid of any common sense or consideration of his daughter feeling sick. She is a trooper and dragged herself out of bed to come to therapy, but really, should he have made her come? This is one of the families I find myself on the fence about. Neither parent is really capable of caring for these kids but they need their parents. I'm just glad it's not my decision.

1 comment Tags: swine flu

Talk To Me

  • Aug 7, 2009
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There have been a lot of thoughts this past week. I finished reading Facing Codependence while I was in the middle of reading Crucial Confrontations. Reports on both of these books at a different time. I hope to finish the Confrontations book this weekend.

It's quite interesting because I'm not very confronting at all. I have this habit of accomodating others and not standing up for myself, as justified as it may be at times. I didn't realize how much this really matters until a little while ago. Something was bothering me. I let it slide, decided to grin and bear it. It happened again, grin again. The third time I will have to say that I responded in all the "how not tos" in the book and it led to some serious tension between myself and the parties involved. Had I said it the first time, when I was less emotional about it, I have no doubt that the end would have been completely different. Had I finished that book a few weeks ago instead of letting it sit in my purse, it would have been different.

At the same time, I think confronting oneself is equally difficult. It is a pretty frequent occurence for me to call myself out on stuff. I know when I'm slacking and when I can do better, but making myself follow through with it is different. I wonder if the techniques used in the book can be used in a self-talk situation. I suppose I should finish the book and see if I agree or not.

Post a comment Tags: self as the client, facing codependence, crucial confrontations

Assumptions

  • Jul 23, 2009
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There is a case I've been working on for the past few months. At first it was two cases and now it is three because there is the one case, then the other case, and the fact that the two parents are dating. Not only are they dating, but the dad is not divorced yet and the mother of my other client moved in the minute they started dating. Needless to say, the kids involved are having trouble adjusting.

I've been wanting to talk to dad about doing family therapy, but haven't really had the chance. Today he came up wanting to talk about scheduling and it ended up being a 45-minute conversation. I invited him to attend family therapy with his two children. He suggested the entire "family" (the other woman and her kid) all meet together and I refused to see them together. There was definitely a different way for me to approach it, but for some reason I felt I needed to be very strong in voicing my concern for these kids. He became defensive when I offered guidance regarding step-families and the speed of this relationship and said "you're not a marriage counselor" to which I responded by pointing at my Marriage and Family Therapy degree and explaining that I, in fact, was trained in marital therapy.

Apparently, I should have told him. That was his only response. I'm not sure when I should have said it. Should I have said "my degree is MFT and so you should listen to every word I say"? In any case, this is not the first time I have had a parent of a client make assumptions about me. I have one mother who expressed to my case manager that I don't have a clue what she deals with because I have a "perfect husband and perfect life". Not to disparage my husband, but in reflecting upon my past and upon the things that all newlyweds struggle with, perfect is not the word I would use to describe either.

Then I wondered about the things that I assume about the parents of my clients. I should assume all parents have their child's best interest at heart. I sometimes forget this and feel the need to defend the kids instead of teaching the parents to defend. There are times that the town leaves me jaded and I assume the worst of the parents. If I get so upset when people act as though they know me when they don't, I'm sure that others feel the same way about my doing it to them.

Post a comment Tags: assumptions

Avoiding The Self

  • Jul 22, 2009
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In my work, I meet several people that appear, at best description, unmotivated for any positive thing in their lives. This is especially frustrating because my creativity in igniting that hope in others is dwindling, if it ever existed in the first place (my creativity, not their hope). I realized this week that much of loss of motivation/hope is within the Avoidance Pattern in the Negotiation Table.

We want/expect/hope/dream of something of a relationship or just something in life. When obstacles occur in getting that thing or reaching that goal we back out. We ignore that obstacle instead of confronting it and overcoming it. We then thoroughly convince ourselves that we don't really care about it, we numb it out. Next, we find something else to occupy our time. Maybe we get swallowed up in work, school, hobbies, etc. Each of these levels of avoidance affect whether we hope for something better, improvement of our situation, etc. and act to change our situation.

If we are not honest with ourselves about the things we want in life and we avoid hope because it protects us from pain then we are stuck, unhappy, and unfulfilled. I don't know many people who aspire to such a life, but I do know many who aspire to nothing and therefore gain such a life.

Post a comment Tags: hope, negotiation table, avoidance pattern
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weallneedtherapy

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