Okay, we are back from our extended break over Pesach and Chol HaMoed. I hope your holidays went reasonably well and that you are refreshed to get back to your regularly scheduled broadcast instead of drained.
The truth is that the holidays tend to be stressful times for many. Jewish social service agencies often report an uptick in calls from people seeking help around this time. If you need to get some stuff off your chest, or want to do some couples or family work (in-laws, anyone?), be in touch and let me know how I can help you!
An Orthodox Jewish therapist provides counseling online and in person for the frum community and the world at large
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Pearls of Wisdom
I was talking with a client tonight about his relationship
with his wife. In the past we had come up with the idea for him to begin each
evening when he came home from work with a five-minute period of quiet time
with his wife, as a means of changing their pattern from the old
walk-in-and-start-bickering to something more peaceful. Both he and his wife
were most agreeable to this and after implementing it for a few days they
decided it was really quite helpful.
Tonight he confessed that they really hadn’t kept this up,
despite finding it a really beneficial practice. He said now that things between them are
better, it seemed like the practice wasn’t needed. And this elicited from me the following Pearl
of Wisdom:
It is much less expensive to maintain a car than it is to
repair it.
That is to say, it’s hard work implementing new practices to
fix a broken relationship. Very hard
work. It is significantly less work –
although not by any means no work – to maintain one. Spending five minutes a day in quiet
togetherness is much easier to pull off when there is no tension between the
two parties than when both are upset and irritated with each other. Hence, I
recommended that they push themselves to keep up with this practice even
though, and in fact because, things have been so good between them.
Remember, it is much less expensive to maintain a relationship
than it is to repair it.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)