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  • Managing Life With A Slob

    I just don't know how neat freaks can marry slobs.  I mean, it just seems to me like that would be setting yourself up for one very tense household.

    Sam R. Hamburg agrees with me.  A clinical psychologist and marital therapist, Hamburg recommends in an article on CNN.com that couples talk specifically and extensively about their housekeeping expectations before they move in together.

    What if you skipped that step?  If you're already married to a slob, Hamburg still has recommendations for how to make it work.

     

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  • Even More On Sex and Chores (and Chore Sex)

    Mr. CleanIf there's a theme emerging on the Derby and in the rest of the news, it's that women want guys to do more in the way of housework, and doing the dishes or folding the laundry is essentially foreplay. There's even this article on the hotness of a man who knows how to wield an iron (some ladies made a "porn" book of photos of guys cleaning, hee hee). Now, I'm gonna bet that some guys already pick up the house without being told, maybe even as the neatnik in the family. But the bottom line is this: If you and your partner aren't necessarily compatible in the standard of cleanliness you require for sanity, the messier of the two is probably going to have to pitch in even when they don't want to, because that's part of being in a relationship. One person doing the lion's share is a recipe for trouble unless that's an agreement both are on board with.

    That said, of course the same goes for sex.

     

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  • Adaptation: How Has Parenting Changed You?

    "Life has a way of sending us children who prove to us that we definitely do not have all the answers and no matter what we THOUGHT we were going to do before our child entered our life, the reality of living, loving, and working with this separate person forces us to examine some of our theories and intentions and make adaptations."

    I couldn't have put it better myself.  In her post "The Role of Adaption in Parenting," Kori Rodley Irons examines how - and why - we adapt to our children as parents, and what the difference is between adapting to our kids' personalities/needs/tastes, and bending to their wills.  It's essential to be able to recognize the difference, and to remain "in charge," while being open to change at the same time.

    I have found that compromise, creativity, routine and positive reinforcement are essential to parenting in my house.  And I've had to learn to adapt, over time, to all of them.  Modeling compromise for my older daughter especially, often proves way more effective in terms of discipline than that "my way or the high way" stuff.  There is a time and a place for that (I am not flexible on table manners, keeping hands to ourselves, or picking up our own messes, for example).  But more often than not, getting to the bottom of what the feelings are behind the inappropriate behavior leads to a natural, neutral place, where punishment really isn't necessary. Getting creative has been as simple as creating a behavior chart, and as complex as thinking of ways to make the kids feel as though their in charge, even when they're not.  Using positive reinforcement to encourage good behavior, rather that punishment to curb bad behavior, is something that as a parent, I have found hardest to adapt to, probably because it's so much easier to just sent the kids to time out, or whatever.  But as I evolve, and as my kids come into their own as people, and we adapt to each other as we grow and change, it is my hope that the message I'm sending is that we an all learn from our mistakes, and change for the better, no matter how old we are.

    How have you had to adapt as a parent?  What do you find the hardest?  What are you simply not willing to compromise on?



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