Archive for May 1, 2009

Secrets of Endless Love

(thoughtful) 25 Secrets of Endless Love

  1. We remember the moments in life, not the days.
  2. Face-to-face conversations don’t work by phone.
  3. Gifts are not a substitute for caring.
  4. People are not yo-yos. Drop them, and they may not return.
  5. When kids are ready to talk, be ready to listen.
  6. An ounce of love outweighs a pound of promises.
  7. You can prepare your children for life, but you can’t live it for them.
  8. Uncles and aunts are the parents who didn’t give birth to you.
  9. A strong marriage is the union of two staunch individualists.
  10. Turning your back and walking away ends more than just a conversation.
  11. Marrying for money is a high price to pay.
  12. Yell at your children and get the same in return.
  13. If you take things for granted, you won’t have them for very long.
  14. Caring should be demonstrated 365 days a year, not just on holidays.
  15. A well-fed child can still be starved for affection.
  16. The most important things a child can inherit are fond memories.
  17. Sharing an hour of memories with an elder is often better than a week’s worth of medicine.
  18. The two greatest time savers are saying, “I don’t know” and “I was wrong.”
  19. Watch your children grow, and they will teach you what you’ve taught them.
  20. Never go to bed before settling an argument.
  21. There’s a difference between nurturing your children and smothering them.
  22. Relationships are built on the little things.
  23. If we give our children everything, we deprive them of aspirations.
  24. Celebrate holidays as a family.
  25. Never stop courting your spouse.

 

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“MAN AND WIFE PALS”

(relationship) By Rev. Patrick Fountaine,Little Talks About Life (excerpts)

The high calling and the one great duty of woman is to light the flame and keep burning the altar-fires of love. That is her one, I might say, her only calling,since upon that depends her own happiness of those entrusted to her care, and thus ultimately she contributes her greatest share to the happiness of the community in which she lives.

The wise woman will concentrate on her hubby’s leisure. She knows what he likes,and she gives it to him. She plays with him. In a word, she is a pal to him. She, having singled him out of the entire world as worthy of her heart and hand– he by that fact is worthy. Of course, the same duty revolves on the husband.

It is his duty as well as hers, to make matrimony one grand song of harmony. Every man should feel it to be his obligation, as it is the obligation of the wife toward husband, to enter into her pursuits and dreams. Even though a man gets all the society he wants at his work and finds other society at his club or at the corner — he should never forget that the one who has the paramount rights, not only to his love but to his society is the mate whom he has chosen as his life-companion.

Men never seem to realize that the most painful heartache that matrimony brings to the majority of women is spiritual loneliness. Women look upon marriage as a perpetual companionship with the one they love best. The ache for such “pal-ship”, if I may coin a word—they look for perpetual sunshine, and alas! discover it to be mostly moonshine.

You married your wife not to lock her up in an indolent atmosphere, but to be with you and help your life when you most need help, by word, thought, and deed,to be always your pal, your chum. To be a pal means to be sincere, to be affectionate, to be considerate, to have understanding, to overlook frailties,to give mutual aid — in a word, to give and receive happiness.

Marriage resembles a pair of shears, so joined that they cannot be separated,often moving in opposite directions yet always punishing anyone who comes between them.

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“Making Healthy Choices in your Relationships…”

(relationship) by Susie and Otto Collins

Recently, a man wrote to us and asked us to give some tips about how to successfully start a new relationship. As we thought about his question, we remembered how we began our relationship and how dramatically different it was from others we had been in.

We also realized that the things that allowed us to start our relationship in a healthy way are also the things that continue to keep our relationship healthy, strong, vital and alive today. What we’ve discovered is that a great relationship isn’t created by one, singular event but is instead made up of a series of choices.

Whether you’re trying to decide to go on a date with someone,to get married, to have a child, or whether to watch television or talk to your partner, two great questions to ask yourself are:

  • “Will this choice bring me closer to what I want?” and “is this in alignment with who I really am?”

One of our coaching clients is starting a new relationship with a man whom she’s known as a casual friend for a couple of years. In the past few years, she’s has chosen partners who weren’t right for her in one way or another.

In this relationship that’s recently evolved from friendship into a “dating” relationship, she’s making conscious, healthy choices about what she wants and doesn’t want. In previous intimate relationships, she didn’t do that.

She tended to try to be the pleaser in her past relationships. She would create stories in her mind about how she thought her partner at the time wanted her to be and she would try to be that person. She would try to be someone she wasn’t so that she could make a “good” impression on the other person.

In this relationship, she’s asking herself in every moment if she’s acting and speaking from who she truly is and what she wants or if she is repeating the same behavior that helped to create unhealthy relationships in the past.

When we began our relationship, we decided that we wanted to do things differently than we had in the past. What we wanted was a close, connected relationship of two people who were coming together as equals.

One decision we made very early in our relationship that make a significant difference in our lives was the agreement to tell the truth to each other as soon as we realized what our “truth” was. And we continue to make this choice every day.

This means that whenever we feel a disconnection between us or we feel angry about something, we take some time to first realize that there’s a problem and then we talk about it.

We call this “killing the monster while it’s little.” In our relationship, we understand that if small things go unattended they can become giant problems that can get out of control pretty quickly. Even if it’s hard sometimes, we’ve agreed to listen without interrupting and allow each other to say what is in his or her heart.

The point is that we made this agreement from the start of our relationship and we feel that this is one of the healthy choices we made early on that has helped us to create the relationship that we both enjoy. So how do you want your relationships to be?

This is a very simple question but don’t discard it because there is great power in it’s simplicity. In order to create the kind of relationships that you really want, it’s important to create them based on your answers to that question.

It’s a radical idea to a lot of people but the reason that we don’t make healthy choices in our relationships is because many of us don’t take the time to stop and figure out what “we” want from our relationships and our lives.

For example, if you say you want a close, connected relationship then be open to exploring with your partner what that means to both of you. If you want a relationship with a lot of “space” for each of you to grow, then get that out in the open.

When you discover what you want in your relationships and make the commitment to live from those discoveries, the healthy choices will naturally follow.

Be more concerned with your character than your reputation,
because your character is what you really are,
while your reputation is merely what others think you are
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