Wednesday, December 26, 2012

How Intimate Relationships Fail | Psychology Today

There are three clear cut ways to measure if your relationship is thriving or headed for trouble. Independently or simultaneously, they pose significant threats to a relationship?s survival. The sooner intimate partners recognize them and change their patterns, the more likely they can get their relationship back on track and recreate the love they once knew. ?

Threat Number One ? When bad interactions begin to outnumber good ones

Most intimate love relationships begin with many more positive, intriguing, and loving interactions than painful ones. In time, though, every relationship will face unexpected hurdles that create negative interactions. If the partners do not resolve the resulting emotional damage at the time, they will silently suffer from those buried, unresolved issues and begin the process of withdrawing energy and hope from the relationship. ?

When your relationship began, you most likely remember how treasured you felt by your partner, praised for your assets and readily forgiven for your faults. Some ?not-so-compatible? areas may have existed, but consciously or unconsciously, you chose to give them less attention. ?

Over time, those non-attended-to negative interactions may have changed the percentages of good connections to bad ones. Now you are having more difficulty both erasing them and also holding on to the positives you once took for granted. The good parts of your relationship may still be there, but the damage is taking its toll and you can feel each other?s lowered frustration tolerance and increased quickness to anger. Emotional scars are building and your relationship?s ability to create new options is diminishing.

If you cannot transform your negative patterns and grow beyond your current limitations, your lack of action will keep feeding energy into the bad interactions and starve out the good ones. Your relationship will begin to show signs of decay: loss of hope, more conflict, and decreased intimacy. Stuck in old patterns and destructive rituals, you may no longer be able to access the resilience you once had.

Solution

The imbalance of bad interactions to good can be reversed if both partners do the following:

  1. Recognize the direction the relationship is going without blaming each other for what has happened. This is a crucial time to not judge, but simply to share your observations with each other without becoming defensive.
  2. Identify and stop whatever interactions that may be causing either of you to feel scarred. You must stop your destructive behaviors destruction before you can move forward.
  3. Begin focusing on behaviors that still feel positive between you, and share those observations. Agree to continue to remind each other of feel-good interactions every day until your love feels stronger again.
  4. Look for new ways to go beyond your current relationship?s limitations by creating better communication skills, more joyful times together, re-prioritizing your obligations and commitments, and cutting down on any stressors that have weighed your both down.

Threat Number Two ? Letting attachments suppress authenticity

Every partner in an intimate relationship has attachments to his or her significant other. An attachment is anything that you may be afraid to lose or something you want from your partner. As the relationship matured, you may both have increased or added attachments to certain behaviors, and found others to be less important. ?

As you deepened your commitment to each other, your attachments likely increased as well. To keep them secure, you had to sacrifice some of your own needs at times in order to give your partner what he or she wanted from you. You may have felt a little martyred some of the time, or even gave up some of your own self-respect, but in the moment, it seemed the right thing to do. You felt that your partner not only recognized your willing sacrifice, but would readily have done the same for you.

Somehow, over time, you began to feel that you were giving more than you were getting back. Your sacrifices now appear to be more expected and your paybacks are not adequately compensating you for your efforts. Your partner not only doesn?t give you more of what you want, he or she doesn?t even recognize that you?ve been silently bargaining.

If you allow this imbalance to continue, you will eventually feel like you?re being taken for granted and lose trust in your partner?s willingness to reciprocate. Shutting down your own needs to keep your attachments from being threatened, you are now self-blackmailing just to keep things in place. Worse, you may be blaming your partner for breaking a contract that he or she never signed.

Status quo attachments are hard to give up. You started out readily sacrificing and expecting reciprocity, as your partner may have as well. Over time, you may have also have created many other legitimate tethers: children, possessions, families, friends, business partnerships, spiritual communities, values, and commitments. You would understandably want to hold on to those attachments, not knowing how to resolve with the imbalance that is now expected.

Solution

  1. Make a list of the behaviors or things you are attached to in your relationship. Put a number from one to ten after each to let your partner know how important they are to you. Asking yourself what you would be afraid to lose can help guide you in creating your list.
  2. Tell your partner which of the things on the list he or she already provides for you, and which you feel you are not getting.
  3. Let your partner know those things or behaviors you have been willingly sacrificing, and those you martyred yourself in giving.
  4. Ask your partner if there is anything you can do to get your needs met.
  5. Ask your partner which things you are presently sacrificing that may no longer be important to him or her.

Threat Number Three ? Trust-breaking incidents

Most new couples do not address their non-negotiable bottom lines up front. They either trust that their lovers have the same values and ethics, or believe that they would never hurt them by doing something they have agreed would be unacceptable.

You probably began the same way. Then, as your relationship matured, you discovered new things about each other that altered your initial perceptions. Some of those revelations were delightful surprises that deepened your trust and love. Others may have caused concern, like past behaviors that your current relationship could not survive. You?ve probably talked to each other about what each of you holds sacred, and trusted that your commitment would keep any potential trust-breaking at bay.

As you grew to know what your partner could or could not tolerate, you may have begun withholding some potentially relationship-destroying thoughts, telling yourself that you would never act upon them. Perhaps you feared a loss of your intimacy or painful criticism if you did share what you were thinking. Whatever the apprehension, you chose to keep them in an internal, emotionally secret compartment to keep the love between you intact. ?

If you were aware of the slippery slope you were creating by rationalizing the situation, you may have decided to risk sharing your internal desires with your partner to restore your relationship?s authenticity. Hopefully, your partner was grateful that you were honest and was willing to work with you. If, instead, he or she communicated anger, resentment, or fear, you may have regretted your decision to be honest, offered superficial reassurance to ameliorate the situation, and gone underground again. That choice will have left you vulnerable to act out your hidden desires at some future time.

Couples who cannot share their secret thoughts or behaviors risk the loss of their intimacy. Their bond weakens, and they are more likely to act without considering the outcome. For instance, one partner may have started a non-flirtatious relationship with a co-worker, then found it slowly becoming more intimate over time. Were the other partner to know, he or she would feel exposed, threatened, or embarrassed. The initially innocent partner now cannot share how far it has gone without fearing incrimination or loss.

If you have been the unfortunate one who discovers your partner?s secret, threatening behavior, your trust may be irrevocably shattered. You must now decide whether you to stay in the relationship, and, if so, what it would take to rebuild. A significant break in trust is agonizingly difficult to repair, and you both must decide if you have what it takes to stay together.

Solution

Source: http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/rediscovering-love/201212/how-intimate-relationships-fail-0

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Sentinel : Borrowing Hope | Keystone Elder Law ? Mechanicsburg ...

Tis the season to be jolly! Festive decorations, gatherings of family and friends, and sharing of lavish feasts and sweet treats brighten our spirits. Today, some of us celebrate the birth of Jesus in the Little Town of Bethlehem as we sing ?The hopes and fears of all the years are met in thee tonight.?

Hope is essential to our ability to face the uncertainty of life. A great prophet proclaimed to the chosen tribe of Israel: ?Those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.? (Isaiah 40:31)

Hope that is promised within religious scripture is a certain hope, greater than a secular, human hope that Webster defines as ?to expect with confidence.? The difference in the two concepts is spiritually profound for those with religious faith. Those who are not religious might not perceive degrees of hope, so the distinction of religious hope could remain as a mystery for them, much like an unwrapped gift under the Christmas tree.

There is a real difference for me between the perfect hope that is promised in the Old Testament and celebrated in the New Testament, and the hope which we, as attorneys and care coordinators, lend and nourish. Our clients and their care advocates face difficult choices as they anticipate and manage the challenges and opportunities of extended care. Our experience and knowledge is useful, but promising a perfect outcome in the final chapters of life is more hope than we can offer.

Sometimes an individual client has an uncertain medical prognosis, as can occur with a rare disease. Other times, a spouse of a person who has dementia feels such stress from caregiving that his or her own health is deteriorating; yet, a profound commitment to stay together makes a suggestion for voluntary separation seem to be impossible. In such circumstances, it can be hard to know what to hope for.

When it comes to knowing whether a legal document will stand up to scrutiny if challenged in court, it is the responsibility of a lawyer to understand the legislation, regulations and case law which apply to the circumstances at hand. An elder law attorney knows how legal outcomes for older persons might be different than for those of a younger age. Giving our clients a high level of confidence that their wishes as expressed in a legal document will be honored by a court, or encouraging wise planning now so that extended care can be affordable in the future, supports our clients? healthy desire to have a hopeful attitude.

Sometimes, a client comes to us with uncertainty and fear about what will happen after their finances are exhausted. Our services help clients to preserve their assets, obtain government benefits, and avoid financial liability for their children after their assets have been exhausted. To feel a sense of independence and dignity and to fuel a hope that life remains worth living, most clients need to feel that their extended care challenges will not drain their family emotionally or become a financial liability.

Our mission to integrate the legal and caregiving aspects of extended care issues is challenging. Since every case is different, we are like a guide who has walked the trails and fished the waters previously, but cannot guarantee what will be around the next bend or whether the fish will be biting today. Our experience enables us to understand a probability of what might occur, yet for many reasons we cannot know the certainty of what lies ahead. A wise approach to extended care issues can sometimes seem like the Chinese wisdom that one?s best hope to cross a river is to focus on the need to progress from one stone to another, one step at a time.

Sometimes the confusion and stress of extended care can become overwhelming, and it is hard to know what to do next. Just as a hiker who is lost in the woods feels relief to be found by a park ranger, we offer a sense of relief to those who are lost in the extended care maze. The guidance and preparation we give our clients equips them to experience the extended care journey with less confusion and greater probability for financial advantages.

When a caregiver feels lost, his or her sense of hope can seem to be burnt out and in need of rekindling. Often, clients or their caregivers come to our office with an arm full of information and a chest full of stress. We lend our clients and their caregivers the hope which our experience and knowledge with extended care issues has given us an opportunity to discover. We feel it is a hopeful sign when they sigh deeply before leaving our office and express a sense of relief.

If Alzheimer?s or dementia seems to be stealing the personality of someone you love, we understand that you might feel lonely, and even angry or abandoned. In some ways, a caregiver?s pain can be similar to that of grieving a death. Eloise Cole, a bereavement specialist who was also a family caregiver, wrote a poem ?Borrowed Hope? which begins: ?Lend me your hope for a while. I seem to have mislaid mine. Lost and hopeless feelings accompany me daily.? The hope that her poem seeks is the type of hope that we offer as elder law practitioners.

If your family?s humor and laughter as you celebrate Christmas feels a bit awkward at moments because you are also suffering with a loved one through an extended care crisis, that is understandable. But give yourself a break and embrace what joy you can in this time of celebration. Find comfort in this conclusion of Eloise Cole?s poem: ?Lend me your hope for a while. A time will come when I will heal and I will lend my renewed hope to others.?

Merry Christmas!

Dave Nesbit
Attorney

Source: http://www.keystoneelderlaw.com/blog/sentinel-articles/sentinel-borrowing-hope/

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Best Buy airs its own ad ?Finding Santa?, solely for Apple products

Best Buy has put together its own ad for the holiday season, this latest one concentrates solely on Apple products. The ad features a young boy trying to track down Santa. Unfortunately he has little success until the last minute when he manages to get a FaceTime call with the white bearded man in the red suit.

You can do anything with your gifts - including track down Santa Claus with all of your Apple products. All things Apple. All at your local Best Buy.

Apple will probably release its own ads for the holiday season very soon. Last year?s Apple ad saw Santa using Siri to help him get around homes delivering presents as he wwnt. Not sure if Apple will use a similar theme this year especially after the criticism it has received over its own Maps app.

Source: YouTube



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Ubisoft CEO Says It's Time For New Consoles To Hit The Market ...

reading:Home ? News ? Ubisoft CEO Says It?s Time For New Consoles To Hit The Market

Published: 26 November 2012 5:37 PM UTC

Posted in: News

Tags: francesco de meo, generation, new console, News, ubisoft CEO

The current console generation is probably the longest we have ever seen: the Xbox 360 has been out for seven years now, with no real announcement for its successor. Ubisoft head Yves Guillemont believes that this generation has lasted way too long and it?s time new consoles are released on the market.

Console generations usually lasted for 5 years, with the last year of the cycle being really slow from a sales and developing point of view: developers are more inclined in producing new IPs and experimenting on new hardware rather than taking a risk and making totally new games for an old hardware. When a new console is released it?s mostly bought by the hardcore gamers who want to try new gaming experiences, making experimenting way more worthwhile: after some time casual gamers will start buying the new hardware to get a taste of that same new gaming experience, resulting in good sales even for new IPs. The prolonged current generation has caused big losses for the developers and that?s why they?re trying to push new business models and digital distribuition to not loose too much: it?s still not the ideal situation because developers are really holding back their projects and this can?t be good for the industry on the whole.

Mister Guillemot isn?t the only one who?s asking for new consoles: it?s probably time for Sony and Microsoft to show them to the world.

?


Article from Gamersyndrome.com

Related posts:

  1. Rumor: Samsung to enter video game market?
  2. The Fourth Generation Consoles !!!
  3. Gears of War 3 on next-gen consoles?
  4. next-Gen consoles mean higher costs for developers
  5. ClayFighter Coming to Nintendo Consoles

Source: http://gamersyndrome.com/2012/news/ubisoft-ceo-says-its-time-for-new-consoles-hit-the-market/

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Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Community Dentistry Is Your Destination For Quality Dental Care

Community Dentistry is the destination for quality dental care in Springdale, AR. Drs. Jordan Cooper and Andy Orr and the team of dental health professionals want to ensure that you and your family have strong, functional, gorgeous smiles that will last a lifetime. The Northwest Arkansas dentists ae available to assist patients with a wide range of issues, including tooth pain, general cleanings, dental implants, cosmetic dentistry procedures, routine cleanings and X-rays, prevention and treatment of gum disease, orthodontics, wisdom teeth extractions, crowns and bridges, dentures and more.

The staff at Community Dentistry believes in helping patients maintain a lifetime of healthy smiles. The team believes proper dental care can do more than just keep the mouth healthy, it can improve self-confidence and the overall quality of life.

At the state-of-the-art facility, conveniently located in Springdale, patients can enjoy superior service from the highly-trained, friendly staff. To provide the best possible service and results, the entire staff is committed to continual education and learning.

The Springdale dentists are known for their current treatments and advanced technology and procedures. They are committed to personalized, gentle care. Community Dentistry strives to be an affordable dentist and Medicaid for dental procedures is accepted. Patients will be treated like family while receiving excellent, quality dental care. In addition, Se Habla Espanol! Dr. Jordan Cooper is a bilingual dentist, so that even more of the Northwest Arkansas community can be reached and cared for.

Drs. Andy Orr and Jordan Cooper and the rest of the Community Dentistry staff believe that patients deserve the most current treatment options and advanced technologies and procedures available. As dental health professionals, the staff wants patients to be confident knowing that they are in the care of a team of trained and skilled clinicians whose goal is to look for opportunities in the community to make a difference in the lives of others.

Community Dentistry is committed to making a difference in their community. They donate food to the NWA Food Bank, support local teachers, participate in Colgate???s Bright Smiles, Bright Futures program for children, and most recently celebrated National Dental Hygiene Month with discounted services. To provide the best possible service and results, Community Dentistry is committed to continual education and learning.

To learn more about how Community Dentistry can become your family dentist, call today at 479-419-5959, or visit their website at www.communitydentistry.net.

This Content has been taken from http://www.cybershimla.com/article.php?id=48443

Community Dentistry is the one-stop source to find Dentist in northwest arkansasand Springdale dentist the affordable dentist in northwest Arkansas and Springdale. Our Doctors and entire team are dedicated to provide personalized care that you deserve.

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Source: http://www.workoninternet.com/business/reviews/miscellaneous/219938-article.html

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Beyonce doesn?t usually email you, but she made an exception for Obama

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Thursday, September 6, 2012

Should you pay for a dog park? 3 pros and 3 cons.

Members-only dog parks have some definite advantages over public parks, but there are definite drawbacks as well. Here's how to decide if a membership is right for you (and your pooch).

By Angela Colley,?Contributor / September 4, 2012

In this August 15 file photo, Hercules, a 3-year-old European Boxer, drinks from a water fountain at the grand opening of the Paducah Dog Park at Stuart Nelson Park in Paducah, Ky. Members-only dog parks have plenty of perks, but rules, fees, and inconvenient hours can go with it.

Allie Douglass/ThePaducah Sun/AP/File

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I have an extremely friendly 58-pound?puppy. Calling her rambunctious would be an understatement. In fact, my vet recommended she get at least one hour of outdoor play every day. Any less and she runs circles in my house ? slamming into furniture and knocking stuff over.

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So needless to say, I spend a good chunk of my week at my local dog park.?Last year, I visited six different free dog parks, trying to find the best one. This year, I signed up for a members-only dog park. The membership costs $43 a year. So is it worth paying for something I could get free? Yes and no.

Why memberships are worth it?

1. Size

The members-only dog park I visit in New Orleans (cutely called City Bark) is massive ? 4.6 acres that include benches, shaded areas, and rinse centers. There is even a wading area and a series of misting fire hydrants. (My pup passionately hates the fire hydrants ? but they work great on my legs.)

While some free parks I?ve visited are large, the amenities end with an overgrown lawn. When you pay for a dog park membership, you get different, dedicated areas and a larger general play space.

2. Cleanliness

At most free dog parks, it?s up to the owners to pick up after their pets. Four of the free parks I visited were clean, and I saw most owners walking around with those black waste bags. But the other two were a maze of dog waste with several broken bits of toys and trash in the play area.

When you pay for a monthly or annual dog park membership, a portion of that money goes toward a cleaning crew. While it?s still up to you to pick up after your own dog, the park workers clean the play area and take care of the grass.

3. Safety

Two of the six free dog parks I visited had safety issues. In one, there was only one entrance gate. That posed a huge safety issue for dogs already in the play area ? when a new owner walked in, the dogs could have easily run out and into the street. At the second dog park, I noticed a few holes in the far fence where dogs could dig free.

By comparison, the members-only park has high vinyl-coated safety gates and separate entrances. Both prevent dogs from escaping and getting hurt or injured. The park is also well lit and has an employee on site, so it?s safer for owners too.

Then again, there are good reasons not to pay a membership fee?

1. Rules

All six of the free dog parks I visited were more casual when it came to rules and restrictions. As long as you picked up after your pet and avoided dog fights, you were free to play with your dog in peace.?The members-only park has a lot more rules. Here?s a sample:

  • No outside toys
  • No eating or drinking at the dog park
  • Limit three dogs per household
  • Rough-housing will not be tolerated

While rules are usually good to have, if you or your dog breaks one of them, you?re asked to leave for 24 hours on your first offense. That?s time you?re paying for but can?t use.

2. Limited hours

Only one of the six free dog parks in my area closes at a certain time ? and that?s at 9 p.m. The other parks allowed you to come as early or as late as you wanted, which was great for me, since I prefer to go in the late evening when it?s cooler outside.

Since members-only dog parks usually have staff or volunteers on site, they limit their hours. The dog park may also close for several hours a week for maintenance or cleaning.

3. Crowds

Your results may vary with this one, but all of the free dog parks I visited had regulars. Every time I went, I never saw more than 10 people, and they were usually the same people. The dogs and the owners got to know each other, and there was plenty of room to play.

Members-only dog parks (especially ones in urban areas) attract a lot of people. They?re more well-known than the smaller, free dog parks ? and they get crowded. I?ve seen more than 40 people at my members-only dog park during the weekends. Crowds aren?t as much fun for your dog. There?s less room to play and a higher chance of a fight breaking out.

5 tips for choosing a dog park?

Ultimately, paying for a members-only dog park is only worth it if you and your pup enjoy your time there. To find out all the dog parks, both free and members-only, in your area, do a search for ?Dog Park (your city).? And before you commit to an annual membership, try the park out with these steps:

1. Visit the park without your pup and inspect the area. If you don?t like the park, or see several dogs you don?t think your dog will get along with, move on to the next option.

2. Ask for a day or weekend pass.?Many members-only parks will give you a free (or cheap) day or weekend pass before you fully commit.

3. Plan an off-peak visit. Take your dog to the park during an off-peak time ? like early mornings or late evenings during the week. Introducing your dog to a new area can be overwhelming when it?s crowded. Let them acclimate to the space first.

4. Visit again during peak times. Take your dog back during a busier time (like weekends) to see if she gets along well with the other dogs. Most dogs warm up to the idea of having playmates, but some don?t like to be around a lot of other animals. It?s all trial and error.

5. Ask for a discount before you buy.?If you decide to pay for a dog park, ask if there are discount programs. For example, my members-only dog park offers a discount for those who are members of different service or charitable groups in my city.

Angela Colley is a writer for Money Talks News, a consumer/personal finance TV news feature that airs in about 80 cities as well as around the Web. This column first appeared in Money Talks News.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/2VdgXonOduc/Should-you-pay-for-a-dog-park-3-pros-and-3-cons

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