goodhope - Focus on the Family Canada
Transcription
goodhope - Focus on the Family Canada
recommended resources coming up next THREE BIBLICA LLY-BASED BOOKS ON M A RRI AGE Have you ready any good books lately? Encouraging your clients to do the same? If you are looking for marriage-themed resources to add to your bibliotherapy shelf, consider the following trio: FOCUS ON MARRIAGE 2013 • How to Act Right When Your Spouse Acts Wrong by Leslie Vernick (2001, Waterbooks) • Safe Haven Marriage: Building a Relationship You Want to Come Home To by Dr. Archibald Hart and Dr. Sharon Hart Morris (2003, W Publishing Group) • Thriving Despite a Difficult Marriage by Michael Misja, PhD, and Chuck Misja, PhD (2009, NavPress) Both How to Act Right . . . and Thriving Despite . . . build upon the provocative question explored in Gary Thomas’ Sacred Marriage: What if God designed marriage to make us holy more than to make us happy? In this age of soaring divorce rates and “let’s see if we like it enough to marry” live-in arrangements, the idea of sticking with a less-than-perfect, tiresome or irritating partner is somewhat countercultural! Both Vernick and the Misja brothers reflect the Biblical relevance of patience, forgiveness and purposefully addressing our own sins in the pursuit of marriage in all its fullness. “Safe Haven . . .” presses into understanding the significant influence of early life attachments – or more likely, attachment disruptions – upon the intimate attachments sought, and often missed, between marriage partners. Biblical perspectives, reflective exercises and solid research are well handled and illustrated through case vignettes and contemporary cultural references. To order these resources, visit our online bookstore at Shop.focusonthefamily.ca. Moncton | May 24 Edmonton | June 6 Ottawa | May 25 Calgary | June 7 Cambridge | May 26 Winnipeg | June 13 Toronto | May 27 Chilliwack | June 14 Saskatoon | May 28 Kelowna | June 15 Whatever you fight about, fight right! Come to a fun-filled night out and learn how conflict can actually strengthen your marriage. Presented by Focus on the Family Canada, this 10-city tour features bestselling authors and speakers Drs. Les and Leslie Parrott. • Uncover the two surprising forces behind TEL: 1.888.5.CLERGY EMAIL: counselling@fotf.ca WEB: Clergycare.ca | FocusHelps.ca MAIL: 19946 80A Avenue, Langley, BC V2Y 0J8 THOUGH WE HAVE enjoyed a bit of a lull from the hectic year we had last year (counselling numbers were up 40 per cent over the previous year), it’s getting quite busy again in our office. My new assistant told me yesterday that we were booking our last available appointment for the week and it was only Monday! I’m sure you have weeks like that! every conflict. • Discover three words that instantly change the tone of any conversation. • Learn the three-minute exercise that brings you closer. For information and registration visit Focusonthefamily.ca/fightright. We believe that the increase in callers requesting counselling is often, at least in part, in response to our radio broadcast. There have been several broadcasts WORDS FROM WENDY recently that I think are worth noting. NATIONA L MENTA L HE A LTH W EEK When: May 6-12, 2013 The Canadian Mental Health Association is celebrating 62 years of improving people’s understanding of mental health. To support an activity planned for your region, check the websites Mentalhealthweek.ca or Cmha.ca. GET IN TOUCH © 2013 Focus on the Family Canada goodhope Wendy Kittlitz VP of Counselling and Care Ministries 604.455.7930 wendyk@fotf.ca check out these marriage resources I N THI S I S S U E We are always interested in hearing about new resources for counsellors, referrals for potential new members of our Counsellor Referral Network and ideas for upcoming issues of goodhope. Please contact us anytime! Karin Gregory Counsellor Supervisor 604.455.7986 karing@fotf.ca A QUARTERLY NEWSLET TER FOR FOCUS ON THE FAMILY CANADA’S REFERRAL COUNSELLORS Spring 2013: Volume 10, Issue 2 • An update on our team • Cheery hellos, wistful adieus • Why marriages fail and what to do about it • Resources & professional development CONTACT US! 1.888.5.CLERGY One broadcast I found especially helpful aired on April 1, entitled “Fighting as a Team in Marriage.” Greg Smalley, director of marriage for Focus on the Family (U.S.), was featured. I really like Greg’s emphasis on seeing your marriage as a team, and his point that when one person “loses,” the team loses. He encouraged listeners to talk openly about how conflicts can be resolved so that the team (rather than an individual) wins. I also encourage you to check out a two-part interview with Sue Birdseye, a woman whose husband suddenly abandoned her and their five children. This broadcast aired March 21-22 and the title is “Surviving Divorce and Single Parenthood.” Sue‘s book When Happily Ever After Shatters is an excellent resource for spouses who unexpectedly find themselves in this difficult situation. To listen to either broadcast online, visit Focusonthefamily.com, then click the “broadcast” link at the top of the home page. Scroll down to the broadcast calendar and choose the dates I have already mentioned. Finally, please suggest our Focus on Marriage 2013 event to your clients if they live near an event venue. Les and Leslie Parrott do a great job of encouraging couples to grow their relationship intentionally. (See details on the back page.) Though we have access to some terrific resources, we are always grateful for your partnership; our referral network is another great source of help for individuals and families. We pray God will bless you and your work through the busy spring season! Wendy Kittlitz VP of Counselling and Care Ministries Focus on the Family Canada to Canada’s network of pregnancy care centres. She also provides administrative support to the adoption and foster care initiative we are developing in Calgary, in partnership with World Vision Canada. Cara Plett (nee Walton) has made a very successful transition to the creative services team, putting her newly minted English degree to use as an editorial assistant. We’re delighted that both Cara and Sylvia remain as talented and valued colleagues at Focus! COMMENTS FROM KARIN an update on our team SINCE THE LAST ISSUE of goodhope arrived on your desk in late January, a few things have changed in Focus Canada’s counselling and care ministries. Both of the wonderful ladies you’ve known as our intake team throughout the past couple of years have moved into other areas of the ministry. Sylvia Welfing, counselling assistant, now serves as our liaison COUNSELLOR REFERRAL NETWORK cheery hellos, wistful adieus THIS SPRING, we are pleased to welcome several new members to Focus on the Family Canada’s counsellor referral network. Reference letters, transcripts and other documents needed to complete applications have been pouring into our office at a very healthy pace, and acceptance letters are in preparation as I write this. To paraphrase that ubiquitous fast-food jingle, “We’re lovin’ it!” In fact, if you have received this exclusive goodhope newsletter for the first time, congratulations! You are definitely one of our new referral network members! Stepping up to manage the multiple challenges of our busy office – while providing administrative support to Wendy Kittlitz, VP for counselling and care ministries – is counselling intake assistant Mayda Wong. Mayda brings a treasury of skill, experience and life context to our team. Her professional background as a registered psychiatric nurse, together with several years of clinical program administration, makes her a wonderful fit for her “first contact” role, helping callers when they first identify their hope for counselling or referral. It’s been exciting to identify additional providers who, along with their solid Christian faith, bring registered psychologist status, ministry experience, EAP acceptance, crosscultural experience, availability to under-served regions, and other “standouts” that assist us in matching referrals to client needs. Mayda continually updates the database as we receive information changes from existing members: address and phone numbers, additional professional credentials, expanding areas of practice and delivery modes, and so on. Thank you for keeping us up to date and for encouraging colleagues you value to contact us! We’ve also said goodbye recently to a few counsellors who are reducing or completely stepping out of private practice. For some, it is simply the As an adoptive parent, Mayda brings meaningful experience and faithfuelled wisdom to Focus Canada’s ongoing commitment in developing resources to address adoption and foster care from a Christian perspective. Mayda’s responsibilities also include managing the database for our referral network counsellors – you! In fact, you may have already exchanged emails with Mayda or spoken with her directly. Her sense of humour, initiative and energy have definitely found Mayda “at home” within our team. Finally, part-time counsellor Jennifer Antonsen has recently stepped aside from her Focus position for a time to concentrate on her growing family. We look forward to Jennifer’s return at a future date. Hans Weber and Shari Lau continue as senior care ministries associates, while Dave Ortis, Louise Madill and I are privileged to be Focus Canada’s partand full-time counsellors. next step in an orderly plan for their professional journey. For a few others, health challenges or pressing family concerns have driven the change. A few counsellors have advised us of some very difficult circumstances they are facing – circumstances created because of their responses as Christian practitioners in an increasingly secular, and sometimes hostile, professional and media environment. In moments like these we recognize the Focus counsellor referral network is not just a professional tool. It’s another reflection of the Body of Christ; believers brought together by the Holy Spirit. Although you may not know any of these latter counsellors by name, or the details of situations weighing upon them, we invite you to remember them in your prayers (1 Thessalonians 5: 16-18). Why marriages fail and what to do about it by LARRY J. RUSSELL BY MANY ACCOUNTS, researchers report that approximately 50 per cent of first marriages, 76 per cent of second marriages, and 84 per cent of third and subsequent marriages fail.* Sadly enough, those statistics hold true even in the Christian community. Obviously, we have some work to do if we are to emulate the model of marriage that the apostle Paul laid before us in Ephesians chapter 5 when he admonished men to love their wives as Christ loved the church. That model seems to indicate that the relationship between Jesus and His bride, the church, is our example of what a marriage should be. The master architect of marriage spoke to us through the writer of Genesis that “for this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and they will become one flesh . . . . The man and his wife were both naked, and they felt no shame.” We have strayed so far from the loving, fulfilling, contented relationships that God intended for us to have. However, there is hope! Marriages fail for a reason – the old “sow and reap principle” still applies today. Whatever we put into a marriage will predict what we get out of it. John Gottman, a researcher for many years in the arena of marriage, has written a book entitled Why Marriages Succeed or Fail. In it, he has isolated a particular slide that marriages fall prey to on their way to failure. In fact, his research team has been able to accurately predict, with a 94 per cent success rate, which marriages will succeed or fail based on these principles. The spiral which leads to marital failure begins with criticism. Complaining, on the other hand, addresses a specific behaviour – a negative comment about something you wish was different than it is. In fact, complaining is one of the healthiest activities in marriage. Criticism, however, attacks your spouse’s personality and becomes a character assassination. Complaints begin with “I”; criticism begins with “you.” When criticism has firmly entrenched itself into your routine of interaction, you sink to feelings and actions of contempt. At this point, you are no longer able to admire each other or remember why you fell in love and married each other. What separates contempt from criticism is the intention to insult and psychologically abuse your partner – now you do it on purpose. The spiral downward continues when defensiveness sets in. One of the major destroyers of communication in marriage is defensiveness – the need to justify and explain our actions. However, the major problem with defensiveness is that it obstructs communication and nothing gets resolved. The final stage in the downward spiral of marriage failure is stonewalling. A stonewaller has a stony silence – no response – a wall which cannot be penetrated. Friendship is no longer present. It has been replaced with loneliness and emptiness. At this point, couples have only a six per cent chance of survival without intervention. God never intended for the institution of marriage to come to this. He set out to create something beautiful between a man and a woman which would provide a loving, caring, intimate, sharing relationship which would span the years of time. So, if you are in this failure spiral, how can you pull yourself out? First, a little self diagnosis is in order. Which stage of the slide are you in? Once you have determined that, apply these principles to reverse the process: Instead of disengagement, re-engage. Instead of defensiveness, apply openness. Instead of contempt, show respect. And, finally, show acceptance instead of criticalness. Work on boundaries in your life – understand that it is ok to be different. Develop empathy – seek to know your mate’s heart. Learn to see the positive side of your spouse. Allow for growth – give them permission to fail. *Based on statistics from the US © Larry J. Russell. Reproduced from Shmministry.com and also posted on Focus on the Family Canada’s FocusHelps.ca. Used by permission. Larry Russell and his wife Lorrie are licensed counsellors. They offer marriage intensives through their ministry, The Shepherd’s Heart Ministry (Shmministry.com). Focus on the Family Canada is pleased to partner with the Russells this summer as they offer a series of marriage intensive weeks specifically for Canadian ministry couples at our Kerith Creek Retreat Centre (in Priddis, AB) and The Shepherd’s Sanctuary Retreat Centre located north of Toronto.
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