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Healthy relationships

May 14, 2012

Healthy relationships seem to be hard to come by for many people. There are a few basic attitudes that are key to having one.  Friendship to love or love to friendship. It can work either way.  It needs to be maintained with tactful honesty, courtesy, kindness, and fairness. It is important to focus on the positive in the other and let the other person know your thinking and feelings. So often we think things but forget to say them. The other person needs to know your positive feelings about them. If a negative comes up for you about the other, you can share that in an “I statement” and with kindness, yet firmness. It is important not to let negatives pile up in you and then end up blasting the other out of the blue. Each person needs to know they can count on the consistency of the other in the way they are treated. There should be no blaming and the making of amends when wrong (or even by accident hurt the other) should be handled right away. There is no importance to being “right”. Look for similar values, morals, and basic integrity when choosing who to be with. This is all under the heading of “communication” which often isn’t explained so no one knows what that really means. It isn’t complicated. It is about letting the other person always keep face and feel respected. That means you need to really respect the other and let them know. It isn’t hard if you keep it simple. This is the beginning and a good counselor or coach can teach you more if she or he is living it. The joy you will receive from happy, healthy relationships makes life worthwhile and builds self-esteem and confidence.

Abusive behavior causes illness in those connected.

May 4, 2012

A client of mine went to her chiropractor every week for the last couple of years mainly to be have her internal organs tested for health and strength. She also got an adjustment which she needed nearly every time.  Each time her organs would test out weak in most of them and often all of them. She also took supplements to help the strength of them. She and her doctor talked about her home situation often. About 2 years ago her husband started to change, suble at first and then more obvious.  The wife didn’t know what to do or what was going on under the presenting behavior.  She was increasingly being put down, sarcasm sent her way, blamed, called names, corrected, and generally being abused with guilt being the biggest tactic. As her husband was quite a bit older than her she didn’t want to leave him yet was getting more and more agitated as time went on. Since I had been in a similar situation I helped her put together a medical program which her doctor ok’d and prescribed for so when we did an intervention and her husband was put on the medication, given a specialized food, and taken to a program of positive thinking and spirituality daily,  This  helped his oncoming dementia and re-emergence of old alcoholic behavior which I thought was happening to him.  After just a couple months he was like a new person with only a few “slips” in behavior very occasionally. What happened to her was short of amazing! She began to sleep better, function more easily, not be depressed and anxious, and when tested again, all her organs tested normal and strong. She no longer required treatment/adjustments. She is actually happy every day as she was given back the life she was meant to have.  The power of the abusive person is so great and the person relating to him doesn’t realize it because she’s in it every day.  Even the sick person/addict doesn’t truly see it for what it is because he is in denial.  The wife sure does now and is she greatful for her own returning health plus getting her husband back.  Please don’t wait until you are really sick to do something about your situation. If I can help in any way let me know.   I send my love and prayers to you. website Drsusanricketson.com and Livefromyourheart.com

Counseling for the person abused by addict/alcoholic

April 25, 2012

Verbal abuse as well as physical abuse can be caused by an addict to those around him. Counseling provides help for the abused person, allowing her to gain control over her life in getting the help she needs to protect her from the abuse. The abuser wants to be enabled and will be angry if such action is withheld, and he is confronted. Codependency runs rampant in the addict’s family system and needs to be dealt with by intervention or by the one suffering abuse staying away if possible from the abuser. Getting counseling is a must for the person wanting to recover from codependency and from having to suffer abuse. It is a very serious process and needs to be taken seriously. Denial will not accomplish anything but cover over the problem and make it worse. This is dangerous to the person being abused. Denial is pretending it all isn’t happening or “isn’t that bad”.

Co-dependency brings on negativity

April 19, 2012

Co-dependency brings on negativity. People afflicted with this condition are usually chronically angry (although it may not “show” because it is covered up by extreme niceness), anxious or depressed. It is my take that those who are free of co-dependency are upbeat, optimistic, and grateful. A Harvard review brings out that people who with a better sense of well-being tend to have less heart attacks and better health all around.  It also mentions that people who have some control over their lives and are invested in their care have better outcomes in life. Get help for co-dependency. I have and it is a fantastic life.

Inter-dependency and Co-dependency

April 15, 2012

Excerpt from the book “Dilemma of Love” by Dr. Susan Ricketson: If you can take care of yourself in a relationship, you can learn to be inter-dependent with your partner, rather than codependent. This means you can be intensely connected and bonded with your partner and yet maintain your unique, precious self. You can allow yourself to be vulnerable and loving and still feel your strength and your personal power. When you are clear about who you are, you can be fully yourself with another person. This is a sign of high self-differentiation and true spiritual health.

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Susan Ricketson, PhD

life coaches coaching and mentoring life coaching professional life coaching

Advantages of Phone Counseling

  • Greater privacy and anonymity. This enco urages a deeper level of honesty, disclosure and receptivity.
  • More convenient and flexible. Allows you to schedule sessions according to your needs and availability.
  • Direct access in crisis situations. In-person counseling generally requires requires setting an appointment weeks or months in advance.
  • Saves time, energy and effort. No travel time, parking difficulties or waiting rooms.
  • Free of geographic limitations. Gives you the advantage of counseling with a professional not available in your area.
For additional help, please see my book, The Dilemma of Love. I may have written it just for you.         life coaches coaching and mentoring life coaching professional life coaching

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