Sunday, February 13, 2011

Thoughts on the eve of Valentines Day (day 13)



devotion is a choice a lover makes
allegiance to the one ambrosial
valentine throughout the passing years and through mistakes
intimately sharing personal
details of their heart, their mind, their all
honoring their paramour, their sweet
taking time to nurture thus the thrill
aspiring to become the one helpmeet
you turn to at the ending of each day
longing for a touch, a hug, a kiss
or just a glance or kindly word to say
"romeo had nothing close to this!"

Monday, January 31, 2011

Yep--Marriage is GOOD for you!



National Marriage Week is coming up quickly--February 7th to the 14th--and all across the world (literally) there are plans and celebrations to encourage many diverse groups to strengthen individual marriages, reduce the divorce rate, and build a stronger marriage culture, which in turn helps curtail poverty and benefits children.  So to prepare for the upcoming week and recognize the significance of marriage, I thought it would be fun to talk this week about making a case FOR marriage.  

In the news recently, marriage overall has been taking quite a beating.  There are scandals every day involving infidelity and bitter spouses divorcing.  Steve Harvey's wife claims his infidelity was "like rape to her."  There are studies released that supposedly say that up to 40% of Americans say marriage is "obsolete."  The media claims that other studies indicate that "Two women cheating with each other is okay!"  Church leaders are blaming Facebook for the rise in infidelity and saying their parishioners have to delete their account or leave the church (Thou Shalt Not Use Facebook).   Meanwhile the divorce rate is about 50% (which according to one comedienne is one of every two people--that means either you or your spouse--heehee).  

Here at Affaircare, though, we are strong advocates for marriage and time and again, studies have proven that there are serious benefits to being in a committed, faithful marriage relationship.  So to being thinking about National Marriage Week, here are just a few thoughts on why marriage IS relevant!



More and better sex
"Sexual activity is 25 percent to 300 percent greater for married couples versus the non-married, depending on age." -- Marriage and Sex, Discovery Health.  

In 2006, British researchers reviewed the sexual habits of men in 38 countries and found that in every country, married men have more sex. (See the Men's Health article)

About 40% of married people have sex twice a week, compared to 20-25% of single and cohabitating men and women. Over 40% of married women said their sex life was emotionally and physically satisfying, compared to about 30% of single women. For men, it’s 50% of married men are physically and emotionally contents versus 38% of cohabitating men.  Waite and Gallagher note that cohabitating couples are less likely to be sexually faithful. Faithful partners do not worry about sexually translated diseases, are more likely to work to improve their sexual relationship, and do not have to worry about sexual jealousy. (Waite and Gallagher, "The Case for Marriage" 2000)

More money
A Virginia Commonwealth University study found that married men earn 22 percent more than their similarly experienced but single colleagues.  (See the article in Men's Health magazine.)

Married men are more successful in work as well, getting promoted more often and receiving higher performance appraisals. They also miss work or arrive late less often (Kostiuk, P. & Follmann, D.A. “Learning Curves, Personal Characteristics, and Job Per­formance,” Journal of Labor Economics 1989; 7(2) 129-146,). As for women, white married women (without children) earn 4% more and black married women earn 10% more than their single peers (Waite, 1995). While some point out that house work for married women (37 hours per week) is greater than that of single women (25 hours), half of that is due to having children (South, S., & Spitze, G. (1994). Housework in marital and nonmarital households. american Sociological Review, 59, 327–347)

Longer Life
Married people live longer as well. Single men have mortality rates that are 250% higher than married men. Single women have mortality rates that are 50% higher than married women (Ross CE, Mirowsky J, Goldsteen K. (1990): The impact of the family on health: the decade in review. J Marriage Fam; 52:1059-78). Having a spouse can decrease your risk for dying from cancer as much as knocking ten years off your life. Single people spend longer in the hospital, and have a greater risk of dying after surgery (GOODWIN JS, HUNT WC, KEY CR AND SAMET J. (1987). The effect of marital status on stage, treatment and survival of cancer patients. J. Am. Med. Assoc., 258, 3125-3130.).

Based on life expectancies, nine of ten married men and women alive at age 48 are alive at 65, while only six of ten single men and eight of ten single women make it to 65. Married men may have better immune systems as well, either from support or from nagging to monitor blood pressure, cholesterol, weight, etc… and may be at less risk to catch colds (SOCIABILITY AND SUSCEPTIBILITY TO THE COMMON COLD)

For both men and women, marriage lengthens the life span. This benefit increases with the duration of the union. Married men live, on average, 10 years longer than nonmarried men, and married women live about four years longer than nonmarried women.(Waite and Gallagher) 

A UCLA study found that people in generally excellent health were 88 percent more likely to die over the 8-year study period if they were single.  (The Men's Health article is right here.) 

A new study finds that people who have never married have the highest risk of death in the United States, contrasting with other studies that have found the highest risk in divorced, separated or widowed populations. There are many reasons married people tend to be healthier, not the least of which is they tend to be wealthier. Published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, the new study finds that, compared with married people, people who are widowed are 40 percent more likely to die, people who are divorced or separated are 27 percent more likely to die, and people who have never married were 58 percent more likely to die. ( The Effects of Marriage on Health


More happiness
Married men are half as likely to commit suicide as single men, and one third as likely as divorced men.  Married people report lower levels of depression and distress, and 40% say they are very happy with their lives, compared to about 25% in single people. Married people were half as likely to say they were unhappy with their lives.(Smith, Mercy, and Conn, 1988 "Marital Status and the Risk of Suicide"). 

Overall, 40 percent of married people, compared with about a quarter of singles or cohabitors, say they are "very happy" with life in general. Married people are also only about half as likely as singles or cohabitors to say they are unhappy with their lives. This is not just an American phenomenon. One recent study by Steven Stack and J. Ross Eshleman (1998 "Marital Status and Happiness: A Comparative Analysis." Journal of Marriage and the Family. 60 (MAY): 527-536) of 17 developed nations found that "married persons have a significantly higher level of happiness than persons who are not married," even after controlling for gender, age, education, children, church attendance, financial satisfaction, and self-reported health. Further, "the strength of the association between being married and being happy is remarkably consistent across nations." 

In a paper called "I just want to get married- I don't care to who! Marriage, Life Satisfaction and Educational Differences in Australian Couples" doctoral candidate Shane Worner of Australian National  University reports that married people are happier than unmarried people, and men who marry educated women are happier than men who marry uneducated women.


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Wednesday, January 26, 2011

The kids are NOT okay when parents divorce!

 I read an interesting article on Huffington Post the other day: "Kids of Divorce and Suicide: New Study Shows Link".  This article was about the recently-released study by Esme Fuller-Thomas, a professor at the University of Toronto.  The study--"Suicidal Ideation Among Individuals Whose Parents Have Divorced"--was published in the January 19th Psychiatry Research.  Using a community of more that 6600 people, Professor Fuller-Thomas found that boys whose parents had divorced were three times as likely to have seriously considered suicide.  Even when factors such as parental abuse or addiction were taken into consideration, boys were still more than twice as likely to have suicidal thoughts! These findings verify what we have known here at Affaircare for a while: kids are NOT okay with divorce, and it would seem that boys take it even harder than girls.   Clearly there are serious, adverse mental health effects on the children when parents decide to divorce, and what's even more shocking is that this study is not the first to show us that "The kids are resilient--they'll be okay" is just a fairy tale!

Far too often, when one parent is having an affair, they will re-write marital history in an attempt to justify doing what they know is wrong.   "I love you but I'm not in love with you" "We're just friends" "It just happened" and "I've been miserable for years!" are all part of a very common script that Disloyal Spouses follow.  In an attempt to justify their behavior, a cheating spouse builds a fantasy that includes such fairy tales as: "Affairs are love stories," "My Loyal Spouse will just move out and the Other Person can move right in," "I'll get to keep the house and get child support," and "My kids and family will be glad I found happiness and love the Other Person."  But the most outrageous fairy tale of them all has been broadcast on the news, on TV, in magazines, in movies--and that is that the kids are resilient and they will be okay.  How many unfaithful spouses have devastated their spouse and absolutely DESTROYED their children with the flimsy excuse, "They'll be okay"?  This is just purely false, and I personally believe we need to educate people about the truth!

The TRUTH is found in this study: the kids are NOT okay when their parents divorce, and over the harm is not temporary--they are harmed and the harm done is long-term and extensive.  Children whose parents divorce consider suicide, and for boys they are three times as likely to think of killing themselves than counterparts in two-parent families.  Would you like to hear some additional studies about the TRUTH of what divorce does to the children?  Teenagers in single-parent families and in blended families are three times more likely to need psychological help (Peter Hill “Recent Advances in Selected Aspects of Adolescent Development” Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 1993).  A study of children six years after a parental marriage breakup revealed that even after all that time, these children tended to be “lonely, unhappy, anxious and insecure." (Wallerstein “The Long-Term Effects of Divorce on Children” Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 1991).  Compared to children from homes disrupted by death, children from divorced homes have more psychological problems. (Robert E. Emery, "Marriage, Divorce and Children’s Adjustment” Sage Publications, 1988)  That means that the DEATH of a parent is LESS devastating to a child than a DIVORCE. (Even I wouldn’t believe this if I didn’t see the statistic myself.)  A Child in a female-headed home is ten times more likely to be beaten or murdered. (The Legal Beagle, July 1984, from “The Garbage Generation” Ch. VI The Custody Trap, page 64, the whole paragraph)!  Whether you use children's grades, standardized test scores, or dropout rates, children whose parents divorce generally perform poorly in school and these results have been found quite consistently throughout a variety of research studies over the past three decades!

So let's recap.  If you're having an affair, and you're thinking about divorcing your children's other parent so you can legitimize your adulterous relationship, you need to know that:

  1. Your children will be three times as likely to think about killing themselves--it hurts them THAT much!  Is that how you want your child to feel so you can feel "happy"?
  2. Your children will be three times more likely to need psychological help than their friends in school who's mom and dad stayed together. 
  3. For more than SIX YEARS after the divorce your children will feel "lonely, unhappy, anxious and insecure"--is your happiness worth making them feel like that for SIX YEARS?
  4. Your children will have lower academic scores and a higher likelihood of dropping out of school altogether.
  5. Your children will have a  higher likelihood of having psychological problems and issues requiring counseling, possibly even mental illnesses, even than children whose parents have DIED!!!  To rephrase that, the death of a parent is less traumatic than a divorce. 
  6. Your children will be ten times more likely to be beaten or murdered.  Yes, you read that right.   That would be enough to stop me dead in my tracks right there.   

So make no mistake.  An affair is not a "love story."  It is not "loving" for the Other Person to treat a married person as if they are available. Even if there were troubles in the marriage, a true friend would steer you back to your spouse and help you figure out how to communicate with your husband or wife.  It is not "loving" for a Disloyal Spouse to put their own happiness ahead of their commitment to their spouse, their obligation to their marriage, or their responsibility to their children.  And it most definitely is not "loving" to do this kind of long-term damage to children who are depending on your for protection and love.  So do the loving thing.   Yes, it will hurt and yes it will be hard, but do the right thing and love your children enough to work it out with their parent and work hard to make your marriage a place where you can be happy.  Don't fool yourself--your children will not be "okay."


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Monday, January 3, 2011

Happiest Moments of 2010


There have been several things this year that just made us giggly with happiness, so let's take a moment and review those moments. After all, one way to be happier is to remember those happy moments! So without further adieu, here are the happiest moments of 2010:

  • Celebrating family birthdays together.  With nine of us in the family, we have one almost every month, PLUS there are spouses, fiances, aunts, uncles, cousins, siblings...let's just say we use almost any excuse to get together as a family, eat, and open presents.  
  • The "Hunt for Happiness" series I wrote for Portland Infidelity Examiner--specifically the article: "Does a love affair and divorce lead to more happiness?"  What can I say?  It was good!
  • Joining the Talk About Marriage forum.  We've officially been there for a year now, and you know what?  We LOVE posting over there.  Yeah...very happy moment. 
  • Celebrating Marriage Week in February here on the blog and privately with my Dear Hubby.  Hey, I'm actually in love with Dear Hubby and I intend to keep it that way! 
  • Celebrating our anniversary--that's always very special to me.
  • Receiving the Sunshine Award from TheMarryBlogger.  I realize it's silly and not THAT big of a deal, but I was pretty happy!  Plus I admire Stu and the work he does on his blog, so it was special getting a nomination from him.
  • Getting a chocolate cake with chocolate frosting for my birthday.  Only it wasn't just any old chocolate birthday cake.  Oh no!  Dear Hubby made it by scratch and it was about four layers of every imaginable kind of chocolate!  YUM.
  • Joining ProConnect at YourTango.  We had the amazing blessing of being one of the founding members of ProConnect and meeting one dynamo of a woman, Melanie Gorman.  What a gift that was, and we are so happy to be associated with such a professional organization.
  • Our oldest daughter graduated from college.  Don't get me wrong, not every one of our children is the "go to college" type, but when she graduated I was very happy and very proud of her accomplishment.  GOOD JOB, HONEY!
  • The annual summertime family vacation, this year to go see Styx and then Weird Al in concert.  We trek across the state, stay in a nice hotel, go out to eat, see scenery...and oh yeah, it changed our youngest daughter's life.  
  • Happiness Happens Week and the celebrations here on the blog and at YourTango.  I got more comments, talk, buzz, and media chit chat about "Happiness Happens: 20 Tips to Increase Your Happiness" than any other article all year! 
  • Our first interview on the air!  Oh we had the indescribable privilege of meeting Courtnee Scott, the Haidmaiden behind Headaches of a Holy Handmaiden (HHH).  She asked us to come talk on the Handmaiden Live BlogTalk Radio, and we had so much fun she asked us back again the next week.  Yes, Courtnee makes us happy and through her we have met many, many brothers and sisters in Christ. 
  • In October we had the joy of releasing our first book.  I say "first" because now that we've written one we have several more in the works: one written specifically to disloyal spouses, another that is the "seven steps" for Christians, another that teaches about marital fidelity, and probably for fun, a systematic theology for beginners.  
  • Spending GREAT family time for the holidays, seeing almost all of the kids and their significant others, spending time with the relatives, eating food together and singing, decorating the tree, laughing at the "bird's nest" at the top of our tree, watching "The Santa Clause" and "Polar Express" while holding hands, singing Handel's Messiah together, and discovering the movie "The Nativity Story."
  • The final happy moment of 2010 was celebrating the Affaircare blog's one year birthday.  

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Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Is Our Marriage Perfect?


When a person, or in our instance a couple, works with others to build better, stronger marriages or recover after an affair, at some point someone says, "Oh yeah!?  Well is YOUR marriage perfect?"  I hope you don't mind but I'd like to address that question because I think it's very pertinent.  I would like to state right here and now that Dear Hubby and I do not have a perfect marriage.  We are just like everyone else: we sin, we occasionally disagree, and now and then we even fight.  In our pasts, neither one of us was perfect--in fact far from it!  We didn't grow up in perfect middle-income America with manicured lawns in suburbia.  We both had families that went to church and learned some from that as children, but neither family was perfect either.  And when we grew up, both of us chose to do what we knew was wrong and ended up marrying people who were not a wise choice for a Christian believer.  We both chose people who were non-believers, and we both tried to stick with our marriages but paid the price for it.  We both did ungodly things like drinking, smoking, partying and general rabble-rousing.  We both made bad decisions or selfish decisions--and at times we still do to this day!

Why is this important now?  Well some people think that in order to help others or minister that it has to be someone who has been married 40 years, never disagreed, and never, ever sinned personally.  Some people think that if you try to help others that you're saying "Hello!  I have all the answers!"  but I personally disagree with that.  I believe that every single one of us is a sinner--even those folks who grew up in manicured suburbia who had perfect families who went to church and they grew up and married a believer and had 2.5 perfect kids.  I believe that every one of us falls short of the glory of God (Rom 3:23) and yet we are called on to use our gifts to edify each other--even while we are imperfect!  (I Cor. 12)

So no, we don't have a perfect marriage.  We sometimes get lax with each other too, or avoid a topic that's painful.  We think of ourselves and not of each other.  We feel like we do all the work and our spouse just rides on our coat-tails (and the funniest part...we both feel that way at the same time!).  We disagree--which is fine--but sometimes we get snarky about it.  But I think the difference is that when we do make a mistake like that in our imperfect marriage, we have learned how to fix it.  We have also learned some good habits over time and learned some generally helpful things about our personalities, love languages, what builds love and what tears it down...and those are the things we want to share with you.


Monday, December 13, 2010

Happy Birthday Affaircare Blog!


One year ago, I began in earnest to write regularly on the Affaircare blog.  I began the year with a bang, writing eleven posts all about Christmas, rekindling love, Her Christmas List and much more.  And here we are, one year later, still blogging along and once again right in the middle of the Christmas season.  Isn't this just the perfect time of year to celebrate a rebirth?


Affaircare was actually born in June of 2007--that was when I first went onto blogspot and reserved the name and picked out the blog's design and whatnot.  At that time I was several years past my divorce, I had moved to Oregon, and Dear Hubby and I were married.  I had just ended my job as the Administrator for a large political party and was just beginning my work-at-home career, and while I was working-at-home I had a crazy idea to start a website and a blog to help people survive the trauma of infidelity.  I came up with the name "Affaircare" because we give people care after an affair!  Seriously!  Isn't that funny?  Still when I first began working-at-home I was very focused on the job and did not yet quite envision Affaircare as a ministry, so I put it aside for a couple years as I grew my home business and did some additional training.  


I'm not sure what "possessed" me in December last year to really begin a more dedicated approach to Affaircare, but I had an inner passion for the topic and for helping couples--especially when I know what it's like "in the trenches"!  At first you lose your mind--then everything you thought was dependable is destroyed--and it seems so hard and hopeless!  Well, I knew a way through...and a way that often leads to reconciliation and if not, a way that leads to recovery for the individual.  A way that leads to a stronger, happier, more intimate marriage.  See?  I had to share that!  


So one year ago we began to post regularly, and as I posted Dear Hubby joined in more and more...we had guest posts...and here we are today!  


Want to help us celebrate?  We're going to review some of our FAVORITE posts from throughout the past year, and share some of our hopes and goals for the future.  How about you?  What were some of your Favorites?  Where would you like to see on the Affaircare blog?  Do you have a question you'd like us to write about?  Want to just say "Happy Birthday"?  Here's the place!




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Sunday, December 5, 2010

Prince of Peace

Isaiah 9:6 (NIV)


"For to us a child is born,
   to us a son is given,
   and the government will be on his shoulders.
And he will be called
   Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
   Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace."



It's the second week of Advent, which is the week of Peace, so I wanted to take a moment to write about peace.

So often we have this vision of peace that is laid-back, pacifist, compromising, and non-confrontational.  We envision a doormat who's peacefulness is taken advantage of and who is a "Casper Milquetoast" kind of guy.  Or sometimes we might think of someone who's a hippie and into "Peace and love,man!  Love everybody!"
In the Old Testament the word used for peace is "shalom"and according to Strong's Lexicon that word was translated: "peace, well, peaceably, welfare, salute, prosperity, did, safe, health, peaceable" and "pay, peace, recompense, reward, render, restore, repay, perform, good, end, requite, restitution, finished, again, amends, full."  In New Testament Greek the word for "peace" is "eirene" 
 which means "have peace, be at peace, one, rest, quietness."

The concept of "peace" is actually tied to the fourth commandment: "Remember the Sabbath Day to keep it holy."  Is that really a commandment to go to church on Sundays or telling Jews to go to shul on Saturdays?  Not really--although I'm pretty sure our pastors or rabbis might want it to be!   The concept of that commandment is to never, ever forget the "Sabbath rest" we are able to enjoy due to God's work.  When God created the universe, He was not "tired"--He rested as symbol of the Sabbath rest to come--the saving work of His Son--and *THAT* is what He wanted us to remember.  God's work was that while we were sinners, and undeserving of ANY peace or rest--Christ died for us. While we were in a pit of doing what we knew was wrong and not doing what we knew was right, and digging ourselves deeper every day, God became flesh (that's what this Advent anticipation and Christmas is all about) and lived among us.  He lived the perfect life and did not deserve death--we were NOT perfect and were dead already!  But Christ took our punishment, bore our blame, and died on our behalf.   He lifted us up out of the hole and now we are at rest! The fourth commandment is to "Remember the Sabbath rest to keep it holy" -- and when we believe Christ died and rose again for us--then WE are at peace. The kind of peace Isaiah was talking about when he wrote those prophetic words.

Do you have troubles in your marriage? Are you facing infidelity? First come to the peace of Sabbath rest--believe Christ died and rose again for you, in your place.  Once you are at peace with God, He's already lifted you out of the pit you were digging, so you are at peace with HIM! Then you can give God your marriage, dwell in peace with your spouse, (aka harmony, calmness, contentment, and tranquility) and let God change you.


 
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