Relationship Success
Premarital Counseling Marriage Education

Friday, December 18, 2009

What is your marriage teaching your child(ren) about relationships?


As a part of my premarital counseling program, one of the things we talk about is each partner’s expectations for marriage. Most times these expectations stem from what each person saw in their home growing up. I’m a big believer in “monkey see, monkey do”. What your children see in your marriage is what they consider normal. Chances are, this is what they will emulate in their marriage. After all, it’s normal.

Think about the type of marriage you want your daughter/son to have. Take a moment and really think about it. Visualize your children as married adults. What does their marriage look like? How happy are they? Do they enjoy their spouses company? Do they go on vacation together? How do they nurture their relationship daily? Do they laugh together? Do they fight fair? Are they the envy of all other couples in the neighborhood? (Notice no mention of a house, car or any other stuff)

If you love your children as much as I assume, the image you created is an example of an amazing marriage. It’s a marriage full of love, joy, cooperation, patience, kindness, passion and fidelity. The type of relationship you imagine for your children is the type of marriage you should have right now. Are you teaching by example?


Wednesday, December 9, 2009

If Tiger and Elin were my clients...

I have tried and tried to refrain from giving my two cents about the future of Tiger and Elin Woods' marriage. However, yesterday I began thinking - what if they were a couple coming to see me for marriage counseling? How would I approach the issues that have come to light so far.

I don't know all of the details, but from what I understand there's been some infidelity. Lots of it with a variety of women. If this couple came into my office, there would be a few things I would want to know and have the couple understand before the real work begins.

1. What is their marital contract? For some couples infidelity is not an option. For others, it's accepted as long as the person(s) going outside the marriage is discreet. It is not my job to define what is acceptable in a marriage, just to understand what agreements were broken.

2. What is it that each person wants for this relationship? What is the vision they have for this relationship and is it realistic?

3. On a 0-10 scale, what is the level of motivation each partner has for (re)creating a healthy marriage? It may have never been a healthy relationship. Maybe it was and they fell off track at some point. Either way, are they willing to put in the work (and it will be a lot of work) to make a healthy marriage? The divorce lawyer should not be on speed dial.

4. I've heard the label "sex addict" applied. I would not be so quick to attach that label as it can create a sense of "What do you want from me? I can't help it." as a cop-out. Unless it's been previously diagnosed, a full assessment should be performed before using that as a reason for the infidelity. It should also be noted that there is still debate in the mental health community as to whether or not it is an actual addiction. So I would want to understand the person's definition of his/her addiction.

5. Because they are who they are, we would also have to take into account their fame and how that affects (magnifies) everything. It's not right or wrong, it just is. The same would be true, although on a much smaller scale, for any other couple. If word gets out in your community, and people are talking, there will probably be additional feelings of shame or embarrassment on top of all of the feelings associated with the infidelity. 

6. Both partners need to understand that it will be a long process to repairing the relationship. "I'm sorry. I promise not to do it again" does not work here. Marriage counseling is not a magic pill that works after a few sessions. If both are truly committed to repairing the relationship, they have to turn inward, focus on the marriage and prepare for a bumpy ride.

Now the real work begins.