Marriage Builders
OK...I must admit I am a marshmellow in many ways. I try to accomodate everybody all the time. One factor in my own case is I really am pretty flexible, a go with the flow type person, so it is easier for me to adapt than many other more structured people. The exception is no one can get me to compromise a value. When I do take a strong stand, it surpises people. Many times, however, strong willed people have taken advantage of my good nature and I end up feeling used. <P>In my marriage, I have been in Plan A mode since the beginning. My H has no idea how nice I am to him...since he is clueless he thinks a persons public side is the only side and most are pretty well behaved in public. He is getting better about being discerning about people. But he has tended to railroad me because he has the more forceful personality and being the Queen of Conflict Avoidance, I accomodate rather than negotiate or plan old say no. I can see that this is partly my own fault because my bounderies are blury. He would expect me to disagree if that is how I felt, but when I do, he agrues his point and I scidattle once again to avoid conflict. Good plan in short term, but the long term effect takes its toll on any relationship.<P>We must establish good personal bounderies to maintain a forgiving spirit. Otherwise you will revisit your anger and resentment as the other person continues to violate your relationship. So what are some signs that you may have a problem with assertiveness or bounderies?<BR> <BR> Are you too cooperative and do not communicate your feelings of displeasure or disagreement?<P>Strong-willed people seem to be able to wear down your resistance?<P>Do you state your opinions and preferences but that doesn't mean others listen?<P>Are you a conflict avoider?<P>Do you put more effort into relationships than the other person?<P>Would people be surprised to learn that you are really not as upbeat as you appear?<P>You say yes when you'd like to say no?<P>Even in close relationships you do not say what you feel?<P>Does it seem others do not take you seriously?<P>Do people take advantage of your good nature? <P>Do you feel manipulated?<P>Do you feel frustrated that people don't consider my needs as well as they should?<P>If you agree with 7 or more, you may feel disillusioned with your relationships. Although you can not always changes peoples attitudes and feelings, you can monitor your own behavior if you are unwittingly enabling others to persist in their insensitivity.<P>The bible instructs us to be angry without sin and to speak the truth in love. With that in mind, forgiveness is possible as long as you correctly manage your anger and take measures to minimize mistreatment.<P>This comes back to the healthy legitimate anger idea that we studied which preserves your personal worth, needs and convictions. Without healthy anger you will be imbalanced in your relationships. The communication of healthy anger leads to the establishment of healthy boundaries. You declare yourself a valuable person who should be taken seriously. Unlike aggressive or resentful anger, however, you need to communicate your bounderies without condescension or harshness so you do not become mean spirited, but you can be firm or even unbending if necessary. How?<P>1. Learn to say no. While a cooperative spirit is desirable, it should not conflict with inner peace.<P>When you say no, be prepared for a negative reaction, but do not lose your resolve. If you don't like "being the bad guy" rephrase it like you do not appreciate other people labeling you the bad guy when their manipulation fails to work on you anymore.<P>2. Do what is right, even if others do not agree. You may need to show that you are committed to fair play, healthy living, honesty and integrity, and that may mean choosing your own path. You can not count on others to hold the same priorities or too have the same understanding of situation. It is your responsibility to remain true to solid convictions to ultimately communicate the truth in ways that words alone may not accomplish.<P>3. Know when to admit your limits, asking for help when necessary. It is common for people that try to meet the needs of others that you can be so nice you overlook the fact that you are limited in what you can actually do. Sometimes we also believe no one knows or cares about our needs, when we do not express them or the violation of them. This of course hinders forgiveness. Most people will not take the time to contemplate your feelings or how they can help you. To educate them may require unapologetic speech and it may require that you choose not to backpedal once you've expressed yourself. <P>4. Confront problems as they arise. Usually the inability to forgive is heightened with the passing of time. The longer you go without standing up for your convictions, the more difficult it will be to address. <P>5. Establish consequences when Necessary. Remember that you will have to back up your words with action because you are probibly dealing with people that are not understanding. It is not pleasant, but it may be the only way to be taken seriously. Words will go right past manipulative or insensitive people. Your firmness may bring flack, but if to move forward in forgiveness it in necessary.<P>It is not your job to make others like your boundaries. You may find that others will continue inappropriate behaviors and attitudes. You have to let go of the fantasy is the assumption that you can change the thinking of the other person. <P>The chapter ends with the idea of delicately detaching from the person you are setting bounderies with. In marriage, I think this would be difficult. Actually I just ordered a book about Bounderies in Marriage, so maybe I'll gain more insight. I get disconnecting your sense of contentment from the person's response to you. That means not letting someone else control your emotions. I know I have the tendancy to hope that my H would one day wake up and see my cooperative spirit as a cherished asset instead of a given...but you can never make another person think anything.<P>So there it is...does this make sense? How can we walk that delicate line in marriage? Not to be sexist, but is generally harder for woman? <P>If you want to look up steps 1-3, they may be over 10 days old, but they are under Forgiveness Workbook discussion, Legitimate Anger and #3 Uprooting Bitterness.<P><P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
Posted By: tamis Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/08/99 03:34 PM
I appreciate all the time you are taking, posting these forgiveness workbooks. They are truly enlightening, and although I haven't added anything to your posts, I have read them enthusiastically.<P>This one I am going to print for my H. He has always had a hard time disagreeing with me or taking a stand on different issues, because he does not like to have conflict. However, I would like him to learn these skills because it is so stressful for me to make all decisions in our lives! It also makes me feel that he doesn't love me enough to tell me his true feelings. The difference between me and your H, maybe, is that I know my H has these thoughts and I do care to hear them, he is just afraid to speak up. <P> thanks again for bringing these issues out for all of us to learn from!<BR> tamis
FHL, FHL!!!<BR>Sent you a note. I'll be back. I have to go paint the trim on the house.
FHL - Very interesting. A year ago, when my marriage was starting to unravel, i would have answered mostly "no" to these questions. Now, I find myself mostly answering with a "yes". I'm trying to figure out what that means. I think a good Plan Aer will probably answer 'yes' to most of these. As progress becomes noticable from the wayward spouse, you can start placing negoitated limits in your relationship. Maybe I'm just rambling.<P>Thank you for these questions.<P>SHA
FHL<BR>I just have a minute. Waiting for the first coat to dry.<BR>Now the title of this chapter is "Assertiveness helps Forgiveness"<BR>So I think the key is to be assertive rather than agressive.<BR>Unresolved anger stops us from forgiving as the Bible wants us to. So we need to resolve our feelings. We have to see the good that comes out of anger when it preserves our legitimate needs and convictions. <BR>Self preservation! Not being a doormat.<BR>That is the type of boundaries we must develop?
Yes, I think you said it nicely.<P>Now how can we go about setting up those bounderies and being assertive in a positive progressive way in an marriage with either a clueless partner or an uncooperative partner or a strong willed partner?<P>Is it a "lovebuster" when we assert? Does it matter if the boundry we set is healthy?<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
FHL, are we the same person?<P>Oh, yeah, right...I'm the lapsed Jew. I forgot. [sound of hand slapping forehead.] [Linked Image from marriagebuilders.com]<P>Yeah, this sounds right on the money...particularly the stuff about disconnecting one's satisfaction from the person's response to you. That's kind of what I have to do. Problem is, being assertive with my H doesn't work, because he responds to conflict with anger and shutdown...and nothing gets accomplished.<P>I gave him that very good letter I wrote last week about what made me uncomfortable about his friendship with OW/"friend" -- and the net result was he got angry with me, said he thought it had all been resolved, refused to acknowledge any role he could play in putting me at ease, then said, "In the interests of domestic harmony, let's just drop it." End of discussion.<P>Makes it hard to improve communication, eh?
FHL, Dazed<BR>A thought between coats again. (Do you think setting up the scaffold for your wife is part of caring for her after surgery?)<BR> That wasn't the thought.<BR>The two of you are natural nice guys. So you enable others to be insensitive and mistreat you because of the lack of boundaries?<BR>I, on the other hand am far too assertive so my main struggle is to tone that down and be a nice guy like the Bible instructs.<BR>By doing this I enable others to mistreat me because I am concentrating too hard on trying to be a nice guy?<P>I think to create the boundaries we must first admit our limits as to how much we can influence others. Then we decide how much we will allow. <BR>We must develop consequences if someone oversteps our boundaries and use assertiveness to stick with the consequences?
WS...I don't believe for a moment you aren't a nice guy. I do think you think your bravada and extreme self sufficiency shields people from knowing the real you.<P>Dazed...yes we have much the same issue. For instance if I had a problem with my mom, I could distance myself as long as I took care of her physical needs and wasn't emotionally abusive. It is not so easy with a spouse you pledged to love and honor, whose life is entwined with your own and who you are supposed to be "as one" with.<P>It is easier to live in joyful service to one another if the other is on the same page. I have mulled this tightrope many times. And just what are the consequences. Emotional abuse and physical abuse is easy...you're out of there. Infidelity...a case by case issue. But what is the consequence for cluelessness or selfishness. My H knows I would do anything to raise my kids in a loving two parent house and he also knows I would never cheat. So where's my stick? I do not see that I have one.<P>Now we are getting along great and he is really trying...and he is responding to changes in me positively by changing himself somewhat. But what if he didn't?<P>This is my uneasiness. Of course you can assert in little ways, I have and have had good results...but major issues? Where's the line and how do you walk it?<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
Posted By: Sheba Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/08/99 06:59 PM
Hi FHL!!!!!<P>THIS IS ME!!!!! <P>Boy - do I need this one!!!!!<P>Have to go back and read the rest - just got as far as the symptoms not the cures!!!! You do have cures, right?<P>Just letting you know that I'm going to need a lot of help with this one!!!!!<P>FHL -you made me laugh with the skedaddle reference - that's me to a 'T'!!!!<P>Hugs,<P>Sheba
Sheba...oh no...I thought YOU had the answers...now what are we going to do?<P>Reread carefully, I have lots a questions about this.<P>Good to hear from you...wish I could show you my pictures from vacation!<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
Posted By: Sheba Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/08/99 07:09 PM
Ask Chris how!!!!! He posted his pix!!<P>You have to tell me all about it and I am going to make a thread for us to do just that!!!! <P>I told you that I was a thinker - like you!!! Not the doer of routine chores or the sparring partner to keep a bout going!!!! I like to end arguments with solutions - not just yell and scream - YUCK!!!!<P>We will help each other - don't forget we have WS, CL, SHA and all the others to help us!!!!<P>Hugs,<P>Sheba
Chris undoubtedly has a scanner and/or a digital camera. I am behind in the tech dept.<P>We were the last on block to have microwave, VCR, CD, computer and we still don't have a cell phone.<P>We did have a great time...e-mail me at faithhopelove2@go.com for more details. They are interesting...no not personal or provocative.<P>Scanned what I have missed and didn't see any really new with you? Is there?<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
Chris does undoubtedly have a scanner & a digital camera!<P>Glad to hear you had a good vacation FHL.<P>------------------<BR>Prayers & God Bless!<BR>Chris<BR>For relationship info check out <A HREF="http://www.pcisys.net/~chriscal1/resources.html" TARGET=_blank>www.pcisys.net/~chriscal1/resources.html</A> <BR>
Okay<BR>Now I'm serious. Watch closely it doesn't happen often!<P>Boundaries!<BR>We need to create boundaries in order to forgive. If we are doormats we enable others to mistreat us.<BR>So we decide what we are capable of enduring. We stop trying to be the better person just long enough to realize that we are interfering with the act of forgiving by trying too hard to do it.<BR>We start to step up and say what we feel. This keeps the anger healthy instead of bitter.<BR>We have morals. We state them. Whether or not others agree with them is unimportant. What is important is that we know what we believe. And that we stick to it. We cannot make others stick to our values. But by making them known instead of just following them we are taking steps forward.
Posted By: Sheba Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/08/99 07:49 PM
Hiya WS!!!! How you feeling?<P>Is that the heart of what this means?<P>I can express myself pretty good just not during an "arguement"!! I have to come back and be calm and then say what I need to say. <P>I'm not a doormat in that context - I just have always hated fighting!! I will cry and not say what I want because I am too distraught about the descension. Has nothing to do with not being able to speak up for myself or my beliefs and opinions - it's the tension filled moment itself that I can't handle.<P>What can I do with that? If H would start and arguement and rant and rave I just sit there and let him go off then I would tell H that I would talk to him later when he was "more human" and would walk away without having my say. I would approach the subject later and try to get my view across without the tension.<P>Some things we never argued or fough about. Just made subtle references to and the other didn't want to discuss it in the correct detail.<P>What to do about that - when the other doesn't want to hear it.<P>FHL - I'm making that thread right now and by the way - I LIKE the personal and provacative kind!!!!! LOL!!!!<BR>Gonna EMail you also - but later!!<P>Hugs,<P>Sheba
Off the subject of the thread but...<P>WASSTUBBORN! WHAT ARE YOU DOING ON A LADDER PAINTING?<P>Okay, I've never had THAT surgery done before, but are you really suppose to be painting the trim already?<P>Take care of yourself lady! Or you are going to have to change your name to StillStubborn! LOL. [Linked Image from marriagebuilders.com]<P>------------------<BR>Shoni<P><BR>
Scaffold Shoni, Scaffold.<BR>I use the ladder to get to the top.<BR>H and I are having loads of fun bantering back and forth.<BR>I'm being careful don't worry.<BR>The post surgery instructions say gradually get back to normal activity. Is this not normal activity for me.<BR>thanks for caring!!!<P>Sheba<BR>It sounds to me like you have the right idea. You discuss the boundaries when calm. not in the middle of the fight.
Posted By: Sheba Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/08/99 08:59 PM
Hi SHA -<P>I just went back to read the "cures" and then saw your post. Very relevant!!!!<P>I think we have to have to separate sets of boundaries for now.....<P>For life in general - and a temporary set for the temporary situation that we are in now.<P>True - once our spouses start coming out of this "fantasy" or crisis they are having - we should set new boundaries to encompass every aspect of who we want to be and how we want to be.<P>Could be that our boundaries prior to this mess might change significantly as well as the current boundaries issued during the affair and early rebuilding.<BR>As long as the change for the better - it should be a good thing!!! I don't think our boundaries were working very well if we find ourselves in this situation so we need to change some of them or at the very least our way of looking at them.<P>Does that make sense?<P>Hugs,<P>Sheba
Posted By: cl Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/08/99 10:09 PM
Hello All,<BR>I am a bit behind today.....willcatch up tonight at some point. <BR>One of my favorite subjects is boundaries. Seems we all need them, we have them, but we often put them aside for other people. Why? Is it in the name of love? Or ???
cl...your viewpoint and insight are needed. This is a sticky area for me. I get it when it comes to my life outside my marriage, I am a little cloudy when I apply bounderies other than the most basic in my marriage.<P>WS..yes I agree, but give me a practical example of how you would accomplish this.<P>Sheba...you are a lot like me. My H is not a yeller, but he knows the look and the tone of voice that send me scedaddling. I think he uses it more to end the conflict or discussion more than he uses it out of anger.<P>And yes, I hate the discension, like you said. I hate tension in general or clamour. You are right, I do not have a problem sticking to my ideals as much as tension of the moment. Wow...thanks Sheba...that's insightful. So would that be more conflict avoidance than bounderies? I have to read the book I bought.<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
Posted By: Sheba Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/09/99 02:59 AM
I think it depends how you define conflict??? I also think that defining the word is confusing the heck out of me because :<P>I think that H is a conflict avoider but there are things that CONFLICT with that scenario!!!! Sometimes he Loves conflict - his family thrives on it!!!!<P>But they don't like to hear anything about themselves or how they could improve, etc.<P>As far as what we do? Is there a descension avoider catagory?
Posted By: cl Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/09/99 03:09 AM
Boundaries are tough....we all have this thing called integrity, and when one gets close to our boundaries our integrity gets threatened. Along with many other things mentioned above. <BR>Then we have these big decisions-compromise and see everyone around us be happy?
Sheba...yes I think we belong in this new catagory.<P>cl...yes this is usually the decision. How can I keep everyone happy and meet everyone's needs without compromising our own integrity to a significant degree.<P>A tightrope.<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
Hi, boundaries are a tough subject! I usually don't have a problem saying no to things that are not good for me, I have a problem setting boundaries for "good projects." In my marriage, I am usually the agressor, so any ideas on how to approach my h who is a major conflict avoider would be greatly appreciated. I know that I make him go out of his comfort zone when I approach subjects and really want to learn how to approach him without all of the tension. So, you conflict avoiders need to share any thoughts [Linked Image from marriagebuilders.com]
OK...a fresh example. We have just gotten back from a trip and have been remodeling through summer.<P>Our house does not have a place for everything currently, and everything is not in its place.<P>My H in his coaching mode told us how we all need to work on this all weekend.<P>He might as well been screaming "I don't love you and I think you are incompetent to run a household."...because that's what I heard.<P>What he meant, when we talked about it, is we all need to focus our time on the house on the weekend when our schedule is free. Including him.<P>The difference is before I would not have broached the subject, just licked my wounds. Now I am better able to come back and resolve the issue.<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
Posted By: Sheba Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/09/99 04:01 AM
Oh, this thread is going to be so helpful!!!!<P>Ok - in that same scenario FHL, my reaction would have been internally like yours (defense - onslaught) but I would have stood at attention and saluted with a "Yes, Sir" - That is my avoiding argument by getting a point across and having done with it. <P>Or, depending on my mood, I might have thought " Thank God - just tell me what to do so I don't have to figure out where to start with this mess, and who should do what!!!!<P>Isn't this interesting?<P>
Posted By: cl Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/09/99 02:47 PM
to the top ladies and gents.
Hey I stumbled across a Christian radio program that is featuring forgiveness in marriage this week. I the first day, Sept. 6 was pretty interesting, I heard part of Sept. 7 and that was really good. It is based on a book by Chuck Lynch "I Know I Should Forgive, But..."<P>I'm not good at this link stuff, but if you follow this to Hear Today's Broadcast, then go to the archives and select your date. You can do other things while listening, but you need to stay on line. You may have to download real player if you do not have it. Tell me if you listen.<P>www.familylife.com<BR>click on listen to today's broadcast<BR>click on lower box for archives<BR>click Sept 6 or Sept 7<P>
Posted By: cl Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/09/99 09:11 PM
hi derby, long chain leash with spiked collar and pull him out of the avoidance with a sharp snap? <BR>I am not real familar with your avoider issue, but am wondering if he would respond to the simple straight forward request approach when there is an issue? I suppose that firwst he must realize and accept that he is an avoider. Then when there is an issue, he needs to try to respond with some level of openness, no matter how hard. I amy very well be taking a rather simplistic view of this problem. Maybe some of our conflict avoiders can share how they are overcoming this and how it has effected the ability to forgive?
FYI: I am reading the book by Chuck Lynch and it is a very good book. <P>CL: I do try to ask very direct questions, but at the moment, I get all tense before I ask because I know it makes h uncomfortable. Then we are both tense. I am a person that wants everything out in the open and h wants to pretend that nothing ever happened. It is awful always having to be the one to bring up "issues." <P>Avoiders, is there some way to bring up issues that doesn't totally blow you out of the water and become a major lovebuster. I am working on phrasing and listening to the whole answer and body language because if I push h will give me the answer I am looking for even if he wants no part of it. I know that I do have a control problem. Isn't admitting a problem half of the battle? [Linked Image from marriagebuilders.com] If only!
Posted By: Sheba Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/10/99 02:37 AM
Ok - What's going on!!!!<P>I'm here waiting for my lesson!!!<P>HEEELLLLLLOOOOO!!!!<P>Future doormat here if no one helps me learn this stuff!!!!<P>Where is everyone?<P>
I'm with you, Sheeba...inquiring minds want to know...<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
Posted By: Sheba Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/10/99 04:57 AM
Oh FHL - I didn't know you had posted!! Shoot!! I have probably missed you!!<P>Oh well...you'll see this tomorrow then.<P>I printed this all out and in rereading have concluded that I have my biggest trouble with Cure # 3 and # 5 with maybe a tinge of # 1.......<P>The difficulty for me in understanding all of this is that I say sometimes or depends in stead of yes or no to a lot of the self analyzing questions (symptoms) at the beginning of your post.<P>For example :<P>Symptoms -<BR>#'s 1 and 2 - Too cooperative... & Resistance wear down.......<P>My response - sometimes and depends, respectively!!!<P>Sometimes I cooperate because it is better to do so in the long run for the overall purpose of the individual moment. (Does that make sense?) For example - say I don't want to do something and H really wants to. Although I really don't want it I can cooperate because it will add to love bank. If he wanted to ditch prearrange plans with somebody for no good reason than I would not cooperate - love bank be damned!!<P>See what I'm saying!!! I have scenarios for almost all of these symptoms that I can't really say yes or no to them.<P>With the "Cures" -<P>#3 - I will try and try to do as much as I can - constantly trying to widen my limits. Yes I go beyond the point where I should ask for help. This does not however, hinder my forgiveness capabilities. My struggle with my marriage is about the best example of this that I could give. Requiring unapologetic speech and no backpedaling cannot be used if following along with no lovebusters.....Right?<P>#5 Have a big problem with doling out consequences!!!! I feel like a punisher for a child. I look at it that people are adults and should patrol their own words and actions - who am I to punish because I don't agree with their choice.<BR>I feel that if I stand firm with what I have said or done I do not need to react to their inconsiderateness. They will know that I mean it by my standing firm.<P>#1 The problem with saying No comes in to play when my overwhelming need for cooperation and kindness towards others rules.<P>Ok - so what does all this say about me?<BR>Am I boundary - less!!!!<P>Hugs,<P>Sheba <BR>
You're asking ME?<P>I thought I had made it quite clear I needed help. Now I am feeling guilt because I am not helping you?<P>I'm thinking we need a person with one of those big stinky permanent markers to mark our bounderies for us....<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13<p>[This message has been edited by Faith Hope Love (edited September 10, 1999).]
Posted By: cl Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/10/99 05:41 AM
hi all, the enabling spirit is something that I find interesting! Maybe because of my age group and upbringing, but it was the classic pattern in my family of origin (and the gender stereotype was alive and well). I seem to have missed some of the lessons, but learned others very well!<BR>Like others taking advantage of my good nature. I must have been 30 before I realized that those that do this to me really were pissing my off, and I had little respect for them. But instead of telling them that kindness is not weakness, I practiced avoiding them. I did find that rather than confronting, I carried it around and whenever I thought about that person, this little barb of irritation would settle. this was a lesson I should have learned as a child, not when I was 30 yrs old!! <BR>For some strange reason I never had this issue with my H or with family or close friends-they always seemed to respect my boundaries ad limits. It was only with casual aquaintances and co-workers. <BR>I sure hope I have this area under control these days....I think I do!? <BR>I absolutely agree with fhl that while the chapter may suggest detachment, this does not sound pratical at all! I would think, unless you are dealing with one of our famous conflict avoiders, that a direct explanation of the boundaries and reasons would be appropriate. Yeah, mark off the area with a stinky magic marker, but iterate them to your h also! They need to know. <BR>I am not sure how I feel about the consequence part....I guess when I use that word, I tend to think of negative ugly things. Maybe it really does not have to be so negative? Such as, this is how I feel, and this is what I would like to feel, and what are you willing to do to help with this issue? To me, that is a much better way to get there than to say something like this is what I want, and if I don't get it, then this is what will happen! <BR>Of course I may be reading a lot into that number 5 "cure", and the word consequences has negative conotations that may go way back to childhood! <BR>
Posted By: Sheba Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/10/99 06:15 AM
Is this what you do - FHL?<P>Is it the same or are there differences from mine?<P>you made me laugh!!!!<P>Hugs,<P>Sheba<P>HI CL - be back tommorrow - have to think on what you said!!<P>Hey, where's WS?
OK...I'll get serious. I am seeing that conflict avoiding and not setting good bounderies go hand in hand at times. <P>The rule I hold myself to if I knowly go along with, do or not do something just to avoid a conflict or to be accomodating when it is not really what I want, is to clearly understand my reasoning. I then think of it as my choice (sometimes a wimpy one) I realize I do not have any right to feel put upon or resent the other person. <P>It works for me. Now if someone comes along and takes my good nature for stupidity...they are not likely to repeat. I give them a gentle warning.<P>About consequences. I guess I look at that like "actions have consequences" one of my favorite mom sayings to my kids. By that I usually mean natural consequences, some of which I can not even control. I don't see consequences as a punishment in this context. For instance if my child blows his allowance on something silly, when she sees something she really wants, she may not have enough money. That's a consequence, not a punishment. In setting bounderies outside marriage I think this is easier than within a marriage. Again, if my sister was, I don't know, using abusive language around my kids...I could tell her I loved her and wanted to remain close, but I would not let my kids be exposed to this...if she continued, then I would not invite her to my house, or go to hers until she agreed to abide by my wishes. If you want is healthy or reasonable, then the consequence is natural. You are not punishing by breaking contact, you are doing what is necessary to maintain your boundery. <P>Which brings me to my point how sticky this all is in marriage. Like I said, I have a new book on bounderies in marriage, so maybe I'll have more insight.<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
I've edited this post, and deleted it. It was too off topic, and that was selfish for me not to post it on a separate topic.<P><p>[This message has been edited by trustntruth (edited September 10, 1999).]
We are here for you!!!<P>You are valid problems and are filled with legitimate anger.<P>Your H is not honoring you, or does not appear to be. He is not requiring that his daughters honor you.<P>You are trying to protect your son.<P>I have a feeling you don't have total trust in your H right now. You haven't mentioned Hooters again.<P>Are these the problems? More? Feel free to mail me...you never did replace the lost one. I will be limited in time tonight, but I will try!<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
TNT,<BR>Perhaps his putting SD's in apt is his way of honoring your boundary of no drugs in home. I think the "problem" is much bigger and that move does not create a solution for the drug issue, but does, perhaps, speak to your boundary within your home. <P>I struggle w/boundaries also in my marriage and am closely following this thread for answers. H's friend "participated" in his last affair. Friend used his relationship w/me and close and personal knowledge of our marriage, family, schedules, etc. to HELP OW and H. I "invoked" my boundaries against friend and banned him from my home. But H is still friends w/him and will not dissolve this friendship. (many other issues w/friend to suggest that H do this, but too much to detail here)<P>So my question is, do one's boundaries get "muddied" when there are larger issues at hand? (I'm sooooooo confused! [Linked Image from marriagebuilders.com])
When I reread this thread, I think we are collectively confused on this one.<P>Hmmm...is it a tough topic or did our confusion or poor boundery making ability or our partners, in anyway make our marriages more suseptable to an affair?<P>Anyway, I am reading a book "Bounderies in Marriage" by Townsend and Cloud. It was just published in August. The first chapter was riveting....so I'll report a big further down the road and start the next chapter on the forgiveness workbook tomorrow or the next day if my friend wasstubborn is feeling up to it. OK everyone? Or does someone, anyone have something more to add?<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
Posted By: Sheba Re: Forgiveness Workbook Step #4...Bounderies - 09/12/99 08:06 PM
Can we continue with not having this one under our belts?<P>We will revisit with this when you have gotten more into your book right?<P>A lot of us are bad at this it seems!! Maybe bad is not the correct word - how about "clueless"!!!!<P>Hugs,<P>Sheba
Sheba,<P>Sometimes it may help if I remember how clueless I do feel about this issue. It may make me more understanding when I watch my H flounder in a another area.<P>Come to think of it, I think he has bounderies down pat, although a little bit on the side of using them to keep people from becoming too close. Even me, in some areas...like feelings and emotional intamacy.<P>I think guys are better at bounderies anyway, although control is overstepping bounderies...so there goes my confusion. How about I try to reread first chapter within a few days and make a few initial comments on this thread?<P>Sheba...I must have missed something...you OK?<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
One more to the top.<BR>cl I hope you are reading these.
The Student requested these, but everyone is welcome to revisit!<P>------------------<BR>Faith, Hope, Love Remain,<BR>but the greatest of these is Love.<BR>1 Corinthians 13:13
I saw myself in alot of those statements, especially during the period my ex and I were in "recovery". Any attempt to defend myself against his verbal attacks like "please stop", "you're hurting me", "sweetheart, we loved each other once, please don't do this" were met with either more attacks, or "ok, I want a divorce" with me subsequently begging him not to. I'm mad at myself for letting him violate my boundaries over, and over, and over again in order to save my marriage. Then our marriage ended anyway. So, I feel violated all the way around. I'm mad that I let the OM violate my boundaries too, but it doesn't hurt as much because I never really trusted him like my ex-H.<P>It is hard for me to stand up for myself. When women do that, they are labeled as *itches.
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