Money, Money, Money: Stop fighting about it.

Sonia NelsonWe all have heard that money is the most argued topic amongst married people. Well, when I began my career as a psychotherapist, we were in the middle of a down economy. For the first two years, literally every couple I saw in counseling was experiencing the strain of this, in the form of unemployment, under-employment or overall strain to the finances because of higher cost of living, coupled with lower take home pay. I sat with a number of men and women who had gone to school, worked hard and planned well, but were facing financial strain beyond what they ever imagined. As a result, marriage relationships were being tested.

As I sat with couples, the issue of money and how it was spent in their homes was an ongoing topic in the counseling space. Money, it turns out, has the power to make people feel cared for, provide distraction and contrary to the old adage, bring peace and happiness. When there is an absence of the stuff, people tend to get cranky.

As with most other relational conflict, communication is key to resolving differences. Hiding feelings about how your significant other spends the family cash or hiding the actual spending of the dollars, is never good for the relationship. When things are tight, the communication has to get transparent to make it through the season.

Tips For Weathering the Storm
Have conversations about the non-negotiables

When it is time to tighten the belt, it is important to know what each member of the family absolutely needs to feel like a person. It is crucial to identify areas where cutting back is possible and where the cutting back may cause more conflict. Budgets can almost always be reworked and reworked some more, to accommodate both the needs and a few wants of each member of the family, but this cannot be done if people are not upfront about what they are willing or unwilling to part with.

Keeping an open mind in this process is important since we all tend to think about what should be kept and what needs to go, in terms of our own personal viewpoints. While the highlights your wife has put in her hair may seem like a luxury to you, it might be something she is willing to sacrifice in other areas, to keep. (Hey…I am just keeping it real with a very personal example.) If highlighted hair is more important to her than an updated cell phone, new clothes or dinners out, that has to be discussed with understanding and appreciation.

Studies have proven that during crisis, it is the little things that give hope. For example, in times of scarcity, people will pay as much for something as meaningless as lipstick as they will for food! This is because “extras” make us feel like we are doing better than simply surviving. So, if every member of the family has been forced to identify their nonnegotiable and then has those needs met, you run a much better chance of weathering the storm.

Get real about the sacrifices

For awhile there, it seemed like every time someone was trying to get people to give to a cause, or encourage saving, they would tell us to give up our Starbucks coffee. The truth is, most families in financial crisis are not getting treats at Starbucks EVER! They are trying to pay for soccer and dance and their sacrifices are much bigger than skipping a frappacino. They are already operating without much of the fun stuff that only some people are purchasing on a daily basis.

This is when the sacrifices might be more painful than we would like. When individuals are making sacrifices for the good of the group, it is important for those sacrifices to be acknowledged openly and often. Telling your children that you know they are missing cable TV and you are doing every thing you can to get it back or expressing gratitude that the old car was fixed instead of replaced, is an important dynamic to create. Even when closer evaluation reveals that everyone is doing just fine with the changes, showing appreciation for good attitude goes a long way.

There are very few parents who resent giving up their extras when their children are appreciative and the same is true between husband and wife. We know that relationship is always more important than material possessions, but silence or brooding is not relationship. Talking through the situation and allowing each other to continue dreaming toward a return to good times, is important when a family is in financial crisis.

Utilize systems meant to encourage spending, to save

Whether you are in financial crisis or simply in transition from no kids to a baby, a job change, a new home or even heading into retirement, sometimes finances can become the largest challenge in the relationship. This is the time to put that college education to work utilizing the many resources provided in our capitalist society! I sometimes laugh to myself at the very practical applications I find myself sharing with people who come to me for help with their relationships.

  1. Find a credit card that rewards something that your family enjoys and limit all credit purchases to that one card. Whether it is cash back or miles toward an airline trip, it is wise to capitalize on the rewards when possible. Please do not hear me encouraging you to incur huge amounts of debt with this suggestion. But, our family read a blog about how to utilize the Southwest Airline credit card most effectively, and we have a buddy pass and are going to fly free to numerous locations this year because we got serious about working the system.
  2. Utilize stores that offer points or membership benefits associated with your family needs. Our local grocery store offered a point system when our daughters were in sports. It is amazing the amount of money we saved in gas, and the amount of money that went directly to our individual account with their teams. It made their “non-negotiable” possible when we were in crisis.
  3. Use the numerous online services and phone apps that give instant coupons or cash back for purchases that you already have to make. I literally do not make an online purchase without going through my ebates.com account or checking to see if my honey.com account offers an additional rebate. It seems like a lot of extra steps in the beginning but if a reward check of $100 means that our family can cover each member’s “what-makes-me-most-happy” then it is totally worth it.

Sonia NelsonAs with all relational conflict, if the discussion can change from facing one another and pointing out the issues we have with one another into a dynamic where a couple or a family stands side by side and faces the struggle as a team, the outcome can be drastically altered. Financial crisis should not cause a dynamic of anger or shame or guilt. It should be a time of team building and character growth in a marriage or a family. If you need more assistance, please give me a call.

Sonia

Relationship Imbalance: It is all okay until it is not

Sonia Nelson CouchtimeWhen an individual, a couple or a family comes to counseling, I often ask them, “Why now?” I am curious as to what is was that tipped the balance, in the relationship at stake, or the issue at hand, to cause their desire to seek assistance. What moved the meter from “I can handle this” to “OUT OF CONTROL”? Some situations are elevated by obvious trauma: finding out about a cheating spouse, a death, or a diagnosis. But many situations become unbearable over much less overt changes.

When Enough is Enough

When someone has just decided that they are finally “done” with a situation, or subtle change has caused them to want to leave a job, abandon a relationship or ask a child to leave their home, it is important to identify the elements of the situation that have been causing the slow, ongoing frustration.

Here are some examples of thoughts I have heard:

His porn addiction did not bother me until I found out I was no longer enough to satisfy him.

I figured she could try pot and alcohol but I never expected her to lose her scholarship.

I was happy to do everything related to the home, but I needed his help when I was sick.

When I was passed over for the promotion, I realized the extra work I had done was unnoticed.

Her constant nagging was one thing but when she started criticizing my appearance, I lost it.

Hope Is Not A Strategy

In relationships there is always a balance of things going well and things that need a little attention. It is important, especially in the relationships that we want to be ongoing, that we watch the meter closely and fix the imbalances. Our tendency is to “hope” that things will improve or if the situation called for the other to act, they would. But “hope” is not a strategy. And just hoping things will improve usually leads to more dissatisfaction.

The only way to truly know if the marriage, the friendship or the job is worth saving is to be direct at the outset of the imbalance, to share the frustrations you have, the part you are willing to contribute to solving the problem and the timeline that you foresee being the healthiest for the relationship. The WARNING LABEL to this prescription however, is that boundaries once set, can lead to a truth that might be hard to stomach.

You might learn that your spouse does not care to work on the relationship or that the friendship you shared never had a place for you. You might learn that if you want your career to advance, you are going to have to find new employment. As difficult as the truth is, it is better than swimming upstream believing that you can win the approval or work harder to get noticed.

To Find Your Voice You Must Use Your Voice

The good news is that you might find out that you have a spouse that is willing to make significant changes to keep you in their life. You might find that a friend did not know you were feeling taken advantage of or that your boss had another job in mind for you that better fits with your goals.  Either way, having the truth in hand, allows you to take back the power and decide how YOU want to proceed. It changes the experience from ‘life happening to you’ into ‘having a voice in how you live your life’.

Find your voice. Use your voice. Live your life.

Sonia
[email protected]

Friendly Narcissists: Can’t live with ‘em, can’t get away from them…

You might already know that mental health professionals use a book called the DSM to support diagnosis in the counseling space. This book has all the descriptions and codes necessary for us to better understand our clients, but also gives codes used by doctors to insurance agencies to represent the client issues. A few years ago, a new and updated DSM was issued and one of the BLARING omissions was the diagnosis for Narcissism. That is because, for something to be abnormal behavior, the majority of the population can’t be diagnosed with it. Well, my fellow Americans, you can see where this is going! The majority of Americans fall somewhere on the spectrum so it is considered normal. No formal diagnosis… but the folks who noticeably fall into the spectrum make life a little tricky for the rest of us.

Many narcissists are friendly, engaging, & charismatic

What many people do not understand is that individuals who have narcissistic tendencies are not just selfish, greedy people. There are plenty of those around but they may not be narcissists by definition. In fact, there are a large number of people who have narcissistic tendencies in positions of ministry, the military, teaching and other very admirable occupations. Quite honestly, many narcissists are extremely friendly, engaging and charismatic.

Many clients come to counseling because of the effects that narcissists have on their lives. They are often confused because friendly narcissists demonstrate behaviors that are caring and loving. What can be difficult for the client to grasp, is the narcissist’s thought process behind the actions versus their actual behavior.

When I am describing this to clients I often say that while their non-narcissistic “sunglasses” have a rose tint, their narcissistic spouse, friend, boss or child might be operating with green “sunglasses”. No matter how much you try to explain to a narcissist what it is like to see life through your rose colored glasses, they can only see life through their green lens. They see life, and the people in their life, only in terms of how they are personally effected. For example, YOU might be willing to help a friend or family member by doing something you do not enjoy at all. While you are happy to do it, there is an expectation on your part that the relationship is reciprocal and they would do the same for you. But in a relationship with a narcissist, this is not a given. In fact, unless there is something “in it” for the narcissist, you might be left hanging.

Living & working with narcissists is possible if your goals line up

Living and working with narcissists is possible if your personal goals and theirs line up. The conflict comes when concessions need to be made. If you are in a relationship where you feel like the only one making concessions, and your efforts go mostly unnoticed, you might need to come up with some strategies to work with your narcissistic counterpart. You might also need help identifying the “hook and pull” that occurs when the narcissist finally identifies that you might have had enough and they work extra hard to get you back to orbiting their world via words of affirmation, actions that have been requested numerous times in the past, or gifts. And…if truth be told, you may need a nudge to come up with a plan for if your strategy doesn’t work.

The first time I diagnosed a narcissist in a marriage relationship, while I was still a graduate student, my supervisor was quick to let me know that working with those on the narcissistic spectrum is exhausting. He told me that I might find myself wanting to scream at them when the best course of action from the therapist chair is to actually show empathy. I can tell you from experience in my personal life, the narcissists I have in treatment get more of an empathic response than narcissists I have to encounter on a regular basis.

For those of you who might be trying to save a marriage, a job, or a relationship with a friend or even your child who shows this tendency, I have a book suggestion for you. Sandy Hotchkiss, in her book Why Is It Always About You?, lays out some ways to identify and work with the narcissists you love, have to work with or even those you helped to create. This book is life changing for many and has helped me, deal with some people who I don’t want to abandon, but also enabled me to walk away from a few relationships that were not worth the ongoing effort.

Boundaries are always difficult to establish but more so when the person isn’t able to understand that your needs are equally important as their’s. Let me know if we need to schedule some time.

Sonia
[email protected]

 

Wedding Vows: If I had known then what I know now

In just a few weeks, Mike and I are going to celebrate 25 years of marriage. I am amazed that the two of us have lived together now, longer than we lived apart and I am eternally grateful for the relationship we have. If I am honest, had I known the trials we would face and the mountains we would have to overcome, I am not sure that my younger self would have taken that walk down the aisle.

Sonia Nelson - Moriah Ventures, LLCThe week before my wedding was tumultuous to say the least. The minister scheduled to marry us, a dear friend of the family, got really sick and was hospitalized and there was a military coup in Venezuela, making it impossible for many of my relatives to attend. However, as a young bride, head over heels with the most handsome boy I had ever known, I was not going to let anything come in the way of my wedding. I practically ran down that aisle into a marriage that I truly believed would be picture perfect.

A couple days before the wedding, we met with the pastor replacing our family friend. He had vows that he liked to use in wedding ceremonies, so we had to make sure that we were all in agreement. We were not. He and I had a back and forth about the word “obey” and I left him with, “I am going to have 350 guests at my wedding. If you ask me to commit to obeying my husband, I will say no. You decide if you want us to have that moment.” He did not use the word obey.

Because of that interchange, I am not sure I stopped to think all that long and hard about the vows I was committing to…the vow for better or for worse…the vow for richer or for poorer…the vow in sickness and in health…the vow till death do us part. Maybe because I did not think there would be a time of worse, or a time of poor or a time without health.

Sonia Nelson - Moriah Ventures, LLCBut we have had them all. The last 25 years have not been picture perfect as I had hoped. We have endured trials that many marriages would not survive. We have faced infertility, numerous moves, struggles with family dynamic, unemployment, loss of fortune, and grave sickness. Had I known that sharing my life with this man would bring all this, would I have said yes?

Maybe, just maybe, the reason we agree to these vows in front of our closest friends and family and in the presence of God, is that true death-to-us part love can only be found in the dark times. When I think of the times in my marriage where I have felt truly known and truly loved, is was not necessarily the good times. I felt most loved when my husband held my hand through doctors visits, when we were told we could not conceive, when he stood up to people who were not treating me well, when he spoke at my parents’ memorial services, when he drained tubes of disgusting fluids out of my body following my double mastectomy and slept on a blow up mattress on the floor next to my sleeping chair for two months. I felt most known when he agreed to me going to graduate school a second time, when it was not a wise financial decision. I feel cared for each day when he carefully makes me the best cup of coffee because Starbucks is no longer an option for us. I feel truly blessed when this man listens to my crazy dreams for our future and when I hear and see him parenting his college aged children with crazy love. While I do miss that head over heels, bubble in my tummy, want-to-shout-it-from-the-mountain top love feeling, would I trade it for what I have now?

This summer, Mike and I are going to stand on the sands of our favorite place on earth. I most likely will wear a sundress from TJ Maxx in lieu of a two thousand dollar dress. My miracle babies will be beside us and I will walk, not run, into renewing vows for the rest of my life. This time I know what I am getting into. Life is hard. Life brings unimaginable trials. But it is worth it when you find your person to love and cherish; your till-death-do-us-part soul mate.

So I say yes, yes to all of it.

Sonia
720.449.2235 (voice & text)
[email protected]
Moriah Ventures, LLC

Addiction is tough on a family: Legal doesn’t always mean good

Sonia Nelson - Couch TimeLet me start by saying that I am not against medical marijuana. I am not sure anybody really is. If using marijuana eliminates the suffering of someone in chronic pain or someone fighting cancer or another debilitating disease, I join hands with the advocates and support the efforts in place to make this drug available to those in need. Personally, I remember very clearly, the conversation my own family had, 14 years ago, as we watched our mother fight cancer. We would have done anything to take away the pain she was experiencing toward the end of her life. Had she entertained the notion, we would have found it for her, no matter what the consequences.

However, I am a therapist, whose work with families, couples and individuals, is starting to reveal that the recent legalization to legalize marijuana, under the guise of medical use, is wreaking havoc on many people’s lives. While there does not seem to be much scientific evidence yet, that marijuana is a gateway drug, my experience is that very few people who use it, even minimally on a recreational level, stop there. I have some ideas about why that might be….

Whenever something is more readily available, people are better able to access it. This might seem obvious, but it is one of the reasons that pornography addiction is on the rise as well. (That is a topic for another day.) The legalization of marijuana, for someone prone to addiction, makes that path an easier one to take. And while many people claim to be using the drug for medical purposes, they choose to use it in a social setting, rather than the way one would normally administer an antibiotic or another disease fighting drug. Any drug used in a social setting runs the risk of being used to excess, because of the atmosphere that is created.

Continue reading “Addiction is tough on a family: Legal doesn’t always mean good”

Following our dreams: Uncertainty in life is an important part of the journey.

Matthew 2: 9-12

After they had heard the king, they went on their way, and the star they had seen when it rose went ahead of them until it stopped over the place where the child was. 10 When they saw the star, they were overjoyed. 11 On coming to the house, they saw the child with his mother Mary, and they bowed down and worshiped him. Then they opened their treasures and presented him with gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh. 12 And having been warned in a dream not to go back to Herod, they returned to their country by another route.

sonia-blogAs I reflect on the account of the birth of Jesus, I am drawn to the experience of the wise men. Known for their spirituality and their intellect, they took great risk and endured extensive travel to meet the Savior of the World. Had they known up front that they would find an infant in a stable, would they have journeyed so far and taken such elaborate gifts? How did these noble men know to bow low to the child before them? Was it confusing or embarrassing for them to return with the news of what they had seen? What went through their minds when they received the warning that lives might be in danger if they returned to Herod?

How many of us are like the wise men, drawn to Christ and brought to our knees?

Like the wise men, when we come to Christ, we are following a star and looking for the one who came to save. The appealing message of redemption and new life moves many to raise their hands or walk the aisle, during an altar call. Our hearts are hopeful as we ready ourselves for a new life in Christ. But the Christian walk can oftentimes, lead us into humble settings, where we observe God’s work in our life through trials and tribulations. We are brought to our knees by illness, financial insecurity, broken relationships or lost dreams. We have life experiences that require us to be submissive to people and situations, at the cost of our pride and earthly joy.  As we navigate these experiences, we sometimes question why our faith was not enough to spare us from the difficulties that life presents or why we cannot, in the short run, feel the blessings we imagined a life in Christ would bring.

Might it be that through our disappointment, we grow to be more like Christ himself? Who would choose to be born in a stable and die on a cross? Only our humble Lord.

We come to realize the saving power of Christ when we are humbled and desperately need to be saved. We find true wisdom when we put our trust in Him. During this season, let us be grateful for the humble King of Kings. Like the wise men, let us bow low to the baby in the manger.

Sonia