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Is the 'Happy Family' a Myth? by Linda Blew Carlson
Get Ready...
Success in building a happy family depends on producing quality members.
Today's hectic world demands that we strengthen our family or watch it dissintigrate.
Most of us would like it better if the individual members of the family were happy!
There are two ways to approach the problem. First, we can demand that every
individual shape up! "This is my house and I will run it this way." However,
that is like separate sticks. No matter how strong, the individual can be broken
with so much stress and pressure.
Second, we can work smarter and combine efforts at home when we find the cord that binds
us together as we seek peace, teamwork, and happiness.
Dallas Does It
The parents of a Dallas family tried to strengthen their togetherness by meeting with
their children once a week on Sunday afternoon.(They assumed that meetings where
children aired complaints and saw that parents cared for them would form the binding cord.)
However, the children had a different reaction. They leaped at a chance to get out
of the meeting which they perceived as a waste of time. Rather than unity,
the parents built resentment by taking away personal time.
The Cord That Binds
So, what is the cord that binds people together? It is the ability to
develop and share the unique talents of each family member.
Learning the difference between team work (recognizing
and utilizing real personal talents to achieve a family goal) and team effort
(individuals working separately to achieve a family goal) is important. Next
meeting the parents asked all the family members to give ideas for making their
home a happier place and what difference they thought this would make. They gave
each family member (including themselves) a short (10 questions) assessment that
told them how this person was born to respond to information. Then they began using a new
communication method that show-cased the natural strengths of each family member.
The results? A teenager, who had been caustic and made sarcastic remarks during the
previous family meetings, began to respond to this innovation with original and interesting
thoughts. The parents recognized his innate mental ability to be an idea person, and, to
the delight of the rest of the family, he was a virtual wellspring of ideas. Gone
was the sarcasm and in its place was a happier, cooperative teenager. The parents
discovered that it made all the difference in the world to cultivate the individual
talents of each family member.
Simple and Easy
The trick is not to get everyone to be like everyone else. There are ways to identify
your mental talents and those of all your family members regardless of age. The
binding cord of such family cooperation is communications that are directly aimed
at using the in-born style of each member.
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Linda Blew Carlson, is GM of FOCUS II, LLC.
for free Assessments which help families individualize their communications
and strengthen each member. Questions? Contact Linda at
tlc@ictech-works.com
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