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More benefits of gratitude for your relationship

By Margie Ulbrick Leave a Comment

“For many years, at great cost, I traveled through many countries, saw the high mountains, the oceans. The only things I did not see were the sparkling dewdrops in the grass just outside my door.” ~ Rabindranath Tagore

The single best thing you can do to instantly improve your relationship is to become an expert gratitude-giver! When you choose to regularly express gratitude, even when you don’t feel like it, you condition your brain to start noticing and taking in the good things in your life.

Over time, this changes your mood and sense of well-being and who doesn’t want to be with someone who feels great, who exudes happiness and well being? It’s contagious! The more automatic it becomes to express your gratitude and appreciation, the more positive you become and so on it goes. Happiness grows exponentially when you become a finder of the good.

I’m not talking about being like Pollyanna, being ungrounded in reality or having a false sense of reality. Rather, even in life’s difficulties, if we routinely rest our mind on good things and noticing the good in people around us, life becomes joyful and relationships become easier. We stop taking things personally and we build up our internal resources so we can let things go. We don’t take offense as easily and we let criticism, real or imagined, go over our heads.

Developing the habit of gratitude is also good for your health. Your immune system works optimally when you are not under stress. When you are generating a sense of appreciation and consciously noticing the good, the brain cannot be overwhelmed by stress and mindless chatter that hooks us into the negative stories. The experience then of developing a habit of experiencing ourselves differently in the world ultimately means we become more mindful and more conscious. People who are mindful also have a greater capacity for empathy. So, practicing developing a new habit like gratitude helps us transfer this skill into other areas. As the mind changes the brain changes. See Rick Hanson’s work on the brain to find out how the brain is “like Velcro for the negative and Teflon for the positive”.

It’s been a matter of survival: we have needed to remember the bad experiences like being chased by tigers so we can avoid having those experiences again. However, most of us don’t have those life and death experiences regularly. We don’t need to live on high alert nor do we need to pay more attention to the negative influences in our lives. Rather, we have to train ourselves to notice and take in the good.

So, imagine that rather than feeling irritated and critical about your partner for the dishes in the sink, the socks on the floor or whatever it may be, we choose instead to be grateful for the gift they are in our lives. We start to regularly pay attention and to notice the good they bring, the small and the not so small acts and gestures of love and kindness.

We make a habit of telling them what we appreciate and what they mean to us. Long-term relationships especially can become stale and we can take each other for granted. However, developing a practice of gratitude ensures that every day is new and each time we see our partner with fresh eyes, we generate new supplies of love, a creative and dynamic love that feeds and nourishes our souls.

This post was originally published here.

When to introduce the children to a new partner

By Margie Ulbrick Leave a Comment

Come from a place of respect and compassion and respect the differences in your partner

This is a subject that requires some prudence and delicacy. There are no hard and fast rules. The variables are many.  I know of cases where it has been soon after a break-up and I know others who have been dating for many years while still not introducing the children to the “new” man.

So, what are the important considerations here? Well, the most important is the children’s well being. Here are some questions you could ask yourself:

  • How well adjusted are the children to the separation?
  • How settled do they feel in their current circumstances?
  • Have they had sufficient time to adjust to Mum and Dad not living together?

For many children, they will resist a new date and make it difficult for Mum or Dad to see someone new. If this is the case, it is kinder and more respectful to their world, to take it very slowly. It might be that you let them know that you are seeing someone but that you do not intend to bring this new person into the family, at least for an undefined period of time.

It could depend on the ages of the children. After all, the children don’t need to know everything and may be more comfortable accepting that Mum goes out with a “friend” from time to time and not need to know more than that.

Then again, if you are committed to having a long-term life partnership with this new person, it could be that you help the children adjust to this idea and gradually respectfully in incremental stages, expose them to this new person.

To get more tips check out the rest of the article here.

How to create more emotional intimacy

By Margie Ulbrick Leave a Comment

This is my recent blog as it appeared at The Relationship Cafe advice website

How to Create More Emotional Intimacy… a list of things we can do to enhance our relationships!

Human beings are born to connect deeply with each other and we all want emotional intimacy in our lives. It makes us feel whole and it heals us. It provides us with that closeness that makes our soul resonate with well-being and gets our hormones flowing. Emotional intimacy thrives when we are open to one another and when we are not defended against feeling. So, if we are busy being angry, critical or withdrawing, then our emotional connection will be lacking. But some people only know how to express strong emotion via anger, and so they use this as a way of connecting, albeit a very negative way of inter-acting.

We all want to feel good. We know we feel good when we are emotionally connected. So, we need to learn how to make offers to connect and how to respond to those offers. We do this in myriad ways. We do kind things for each other. We demonstrate affection. We pay attention throughout the day to our partners and we look for ways to offer love and support. We notice our own behaviours and we pay attention to what triggers us. We recognise our style and pattern of communication and we commit to acting and behaving in ways that support the relationship, even when we don’t feel like it. We spend time together and we have fun together. We make our relationship a no-negativity zone and we refuse to let the child in us have the last say in a conflict. We commit to building bridges and to being quick to repair when there has been a breach in the intimacy. We let each other have our own feelings and we refuse to take things personally. We share our dreams and our hopes for the future and we listen from our hearts to what our partner is really communicating.

We treat each other with respect. This is key to making the relationship a safe place and when we make mistakes we own them. Respect, openness, honesty and allowing ourselves to be vulnerable and to be seen in all of our humanity; this is the magic of which great relationships are made. The state of emotional intimacy is supported by all of these actions and behaviours.

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How to stop attracting the wrong men

By Margie Ulbrick Leave a Comment

# Value yourself enough to take your life seriously

Young-playful-couple-on-vacation-6081NSR0023_largeA number of women do notice that there is a pattern in the “types” of men they attract. This is not surprising from a psychological perspective. Freud called it the “repetition compulsion”. We have experiences in our early life which tend to be repeated throughout our lives unless we decide to do things differently. This takes concerted effort and awareness and usually we need some professional assistance to rewire the neural pathways in our brain and to learn to make changes.

This involves unpacking the stories we tell ourselves and the meaning we have made of our experiences. It involves being prepared to look at some of the (possibly unconscious) patterns of attachment and behavior that we have used as an adaptive mechanism which may have served us well in the past but which now serve only to act as a barrier to us getting the love we want.

So, my single most important advise to women in this category is to see a counselor or psychologist to develop awareness about their behavior in order to facilitate change. It may be the most rewarding thing you do for yourself. Value yourself enough to take your life seriously. Be proactive about getting help from an expert to move you past this pattern of attraction so that you can really attract the partner you deserve.

 

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Empower-Mindful Relationships-cvr-v3 with blurb

A practical guide for using mindfulness to enrich relationships and effectively manage stresses associated with conflict. The authors explore how we can use mindfulness to develop a more compassionate, friendly relationship with ourselves and others; communicate more effectively; reduce defensive patterns; and work effectively within couples, families and workplaces. Case studies highlight key principles, while practical exercises enable the reader to develop their mindfulness skills.

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About Margie Ulbrick Relationship Counselling

Margie Ulbrick relationship counselling provides psychotherapy services for relationships, stress management and happiness. Margie Ulbrick Counselling offices are based in East Malvern, Melbourne and service the surrounding areas of Chadstone, Glen Iris, Armadale, Ashburton, Malvern, Carnegie, Kew, South Yarra, Toorak, and East St Kilda. Read more about Margie Ulbrick Relationship Counselling.

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