Marriages That Last
Newsletter Fall
2002
A newsletter from
Hope Family Services Marriage & Family Learning Center committed to helping
couples avoid divorce and to experience the best relationship
possible.
{This newsletter
is sent out by subscription-only members list.}
(Click to
subscribe). We hope that you enjoy this newsletter and receive value to
support your marriage.
"Love is a feeling, Marriage is a
contract, and a Relationship is work." - Lori Gordon Inside this newsletter:
- Anniversary-Shelia Rodgers
Borden, Clinical Director
- Divorce Doesn't Solve
Problems-Sandra Bender
- Support Group for People
Recovering from Cancer
- Prevention and Relationship
Enhancement (CPREP) Workshop
- Keeping Love Alive!
Workshop
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1.
Anniversary This September my husband Ron and I celebrated our 31st
Wedding Anniversary. We were married at 10:30 am on a Saturday morning in
Corvallis, Oregon. We missed most of our reception because the church staff
packed up early so they could get to an Oregon State football game.
This
past August 31st our youngest daughter Grace was married, her father performed
the ceremony. No one cut the reception short. A wedding is like giving birth to
a marriage. A marriage develops, grows, experiences the good, the bad, the ugly
and the wonderful. But it has to be valued, honored and driven by commitment,
as it becomes a marriage for a lifetime. As I watched my daughter walk
down the aisle I remembered my walk those 31 years before. I realized anew how
precious the marital relationship is. I look forward to celebrating more years
with the love of my life and pray my daughter will someday celebrate her 31st
anniversary. Blessings, Shelia
"My beloved is mine, and I am his."
Song of Solomon 2:16 2. For most people, divorce doesn't solve
problems Sally and Paul, married 45
years, are in Greece celebrating their 70th birthdays. They behave like young
lovers, caressing each other with little notice that others are
watching.
They have lived frugally and invested well for this stage of
their lives. They care tenderly for each other and for family and friends,
having learned to listen well. It was not always so. Forty years ago, Paul
spent most days and evenings in his lab, establishing himself as a research
scientist. Sally stayed in their small house with three energetic boys, feeling
as though her brain were turning to mush.
Both were desperately lonely.
Paul had affairs. Sally was bitterly angry. They invested a small fortune in
counseling. Their misery lasted 10 years until Sally went to graduate
school.
Was it worth staying together? Their answer is, "Without a
doubt, yes!" In fact, the lessons learned from their suffering have enhanced
their lives.
In my 31 years as a marriage counselor, many unhappy people
have asked, "Should I get divorced?" People usually get divorced because they
think they will be happier. Analyzing data from the National Survey of Families
and Households, Linda J. Waite, Don Browning and other researchers reported in
"Does Divorce Make People Happy?" that most people who get divorced are not
happier, even five years later. Age, race, education, income, parental status
and the person's normal happiness did not account for the results. The
exception is the 21 percent of people who divorce because of a physically
violent relationship; they felt relief after divorce.
Even more
startling, two-thirds of unhappily married adults who stayed married reported
that they were happily married five years later. And the couples who were the
most unhappy and stayed married had the most dramatic turnaround; 78 percent of
them went from very unhappy to happily married in five years.
The
researchers collected stories about why they stayed and how they turned their
marriages around. Many were motivated to stay because of commitment to
personal, practical and moral considerations, not marital happiness. People
were deterred by the high financial cost of divorce. Almost half of women with
children become poor after divorce. Many wives stayed for the benefit of the
children, but did not think marriage was necessary to being a mother. However,
many men saw marriage as essential to their participation in their children's
lives. Fathers were concerned about what might happen to their children with
other men coming into the home. They saw divorce as a worse alternative to an
unhappy marriage.
People found renewed marital happiness in three
ways:
They simply waited for time to pass. One wife said, "Just ride it
out, and try not to bitch so much." Eventually, jobs, children or situations
improved. They worked on their marriages, often with the help of family or
clergy. Helpers often pressured men to be more attentive and communicative.
Men, more reluctant to seek help, often preferred clergy to marriage counselors
because they did not trust that counselors would support the marriage. In fact,
unhappy wives and husbands wanted assistance from someone who believed in their
marriage, not a neutral party, as many counselors tend to be.
Unhappy
individuals changed their lives rather than the marriage. Happiness with the
marriage improved when spouses invested in a career or developed interests and
friendships outside the marriage. A psychologist cannot predict what will
happen to you if you divorce or stay married. However, here are the odds of
finding happiness in marriage:
Divorce can improve your situation if you
are in a physically violent marriage. If you are unhappily married, you have a
66 percent chance of becoming happy if you stick out that marital speed bump
compared to a 20 percent chance if you get divorced. If you were happily
married five years ago, as three quarters of divorcing people report, you may
be in for a dramatic decrease in well-being after divorce. Chances are that
staying married is more likely to make you happy than divorce. Article by:
Sandra G. Bender, executive director of the Marriage Coalition based in
Cleveland Heights.
4. Support
Group for People Recovering from Cancer(Free) This group is for cancer
patients, family and friends. Thursday, October 10, 7:00pm-9:00pm and Thursday,
November 14, 7:00pm-9:00pm at Courtyard Fountains, 1545 SE 223rd Ave, Gresham,
OR. For information call 503-667-1435.
5. Prevention and Relationship
Enhancement (PREP) Workshops are one-day courses where premarital and
marital couples explore their relationship in a safe environment. Topics
explored include: Relationship Danger Signs, Communication, Commitment,
Forgiveness, Spirituality, Fun, Friendship and Sensuality. The workshop is
presented in an educational format.
NEXT Workshop: Saturday, November
16, 2002, 8:30am-3:30pm Portland, OR. Cost: $135.00 (materials and lunch
included). Couples can register by calling 503-667-1435, or online at
www.hopefamilyservices.org. For
more information email: counselor@hopefamilyservices.org.
6. Keeping
Love Alive! Workshop Transform your relationship in a day! Keeping Love
Alive offers the skills and techniques for changing your relationships into
positive and healthy ones. Workshop is scheduled for October 19, 2002,
9:00am-3:00pm at Courtyard Fountains, 1545 SE 223rd Ave, Gresham, OR.
Pre-registration required. $120 couple; $95.00 individual (materials and lunch
included). For information call 503-667-1435.
7. Free
Teleclass-Managing Your Holiday Moods Do the holidays sometimes seem
overwhelming? Do you struggle with all the demands of family, work and high
expectations during the season? The Free Teleclass will give you a simple
practical approach to having the Holidays of your dreams. The Teleclass will
offer the same benefits of an in person seminar with the greater convenience of
attending from anywhere you might be. Date: Tuesday, November 5, 2002,
7:00pm-8:00pm (pst). All you need is a telephone. Pre-register at
www.pathwaycoaching.com. |
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