Project 12 of 12 toward high-nurturance families and relationships

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Overview: Family PROJECT 12

Help Each Other Stay Balanced and
Enjoy Building Your Family!

By Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

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        This is one of over 150 articles focused on building high-nurturance family relationships and preventing divorce. This introduction describes the Web site's purpose and the best ways to use its resources. Each article is part of a mosaic of ideas, so the more you read, the more sense they'll all make. These articles augment, vs. replace, other qualified professional help.

        Before continuing, reflect: why are you reading this - what do you need?

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        This article outlines the last of five post-wedding family Projects which - with seven prior tasks - can help co-parent couples gain short and long-term satisfactions from evolving a high-nurturance marriage and family.

Project 12:  Co-parents (a) stay balanced personally + maritally + domestically + with other co-parents, and relatives; and (b) help each other enjoy patiently growing your family together!

  Perspective - The American Busy-ness Syndrome

        The Ed Sullivan Show was popular variety entertainment in the early days of television. A featured act involved a man alone on stage with a set of tall, slender wands and a stack of fine china plates. With dramatic background music, the man would theatrically balance a plate on top of an upright wand resting on the stage. 

        He spun the plate and flexed the wand so that the plate balanced horizontally while the wand wobbled. Then he started a second plate whirling on its wand, and then a third. As the first plate began to slow and tip, he would spin and flex until it regained it’s balance.

        Each new plate took longer to set up and stabilize, because he had to constantly tend each of the other spinning plates so they wouldn’t lose momentum and fall. Finally, the showman would have a line of perhaps eight or 10 spinning plates atop their wobbling wands, as the music crescendoed and the studio audience applauded his dexterity and concentration.

        I wonder if this act was mesmerizing partly because we viewers saw the whirling plates as representing our daily lives – rushing from one role to another to keep each one "moving" and avoid "crashes." I’m constantly impressed at how busy typical co-parents are. Usually each of them...

  • has a job and career to tend; and...

  • a dwelling, vehicles, and appliances to maintain; and they...

  • work hard to be responsible caregivers for custodial or visiting kids, while...

  • occasionally socializing, and perhaps doing some...

  • community or church volunteering, and...

  • talking to and spending time with relatives, and...

  • buying and preparing food, eating, and cleaning up;

And typical co-parents (like you?) also periodically...

  • go for medical care

  • care for the pet/s

  • read the mail, periodicals, and books

  • take a class

  • read periodicals

  • manage their money

  • Watch TV

  • worship and meditate

  • go to plays or concerts

  • do the laundry

  • exercise and bathe

  • sleep 6-8 hours

  • plan and go on trips

  • exercise

        And occasionally, married partners "find" (vs. make) time for sharing and intimacy...

        Sound familiar?

        Restated: typical co-parents in warp-speed America (like you?) constantly try to balance  concurrent dynamic roles as mate + co-parent + citizen + employee + homeowner + relative + student + friend + worshipper + patient + consumer + tourist + citizen + body-owner + evolving "person." 

        Communications expert Robert Bolton estimates that typical American middle-class married couples average seven minutes of undistracted talk together every day. How about you? I suspect that the pace and demands of rural family life is similar to this composite urban sketch. Kids’ lives seem to be equally jammed. Spin, wobble, spin…;

        Now add to this frenetic role-kaleidoscope the need for stepfamily co-parents to learn and do 10 or 11 concurrent, complex, alien stepfamily Projects, while keeping all their other plates spinning well enough. Finally, add the elusive goal - co-parents striving to enjoy this ceaseless daily mix welter of activities, choices, and responsibilities, while keeping their minor kids healthy, happy, safe, entertained, and growing.

        I vividly remember a woman's comment in a seminar on single parenting. Heads nodded all over the room as she said "As a single mom, most days I have too much to do, for too many people, with too little time and money, and too little help." That’s what many divorced custodial parents and their kids are used to. 

        Non-custodial parents try to cram "fun" and quality parenting into too few, too short visitation times, often dictated by (harried) judges and/or resentful (busy) ex mates. That’s normal middle-class life in 21st-century America. Does this sound right to you?

        Premise: kids and adults make the best short and long-term decisions when they're undistracted, calm, and secure - "centered" - alone and together. Is this your experience? Building a complex, alien, dynamic multi-home stepfamily amidst other life activities requires co-parents to make many daily decisions.

        A compelling primary reason for co-parents to consciously stay personally + re/maritally + co-parentally balanced is the long-term welfare of their dependent kids and their descendents.

        Burdened with up to three overlapping sets of needs, typical stepfamily kids steadily need centered, informed, wise co-parental decisions and guidance. Without that, they're at significant risk of developmental slowdown and developing a dominant false self. Typical custodial and visiting kids can't ask for co-parental balance or protect themselves from the impacts of false self wounding.

        The second major reason for this overarching project is about co-parents' and kids' quality of life. Co-parents consciously working to stay balanced personally and together have the greatest chance of often enjoying their complex stepfamily enterprise. That raises the odds that their kids will too - daily and over the years. 

        One alternative is grimly enduring stepfamily life for months or years, and harvesting accumulating bitterness, sadness, disappointment, and frustration in middle and old age. The other option is psychological or legal re/divorce and the inevitable burdens of anxiety, grief, guilt, shame, and regret that it generates.

        Bottom line: To maximize co-parents' odds of...

  • enjoying their steadily challenging stepfamily-building experience,

  • staying sturdily re/married, and...

  • contentedly savoring their stepfamily achievements together in old age as they do these other safeguard Projects together,

...they need to pay regular conscious attention to staying balanced, and to helping their kids and kin do the same. Project 12 focuses on filling this ongoing need.

        Meditate on what you just read. Would you say honestly that most recent days you've felt consistently centered, calm, serene, energized, and balanced? Has your partner (if any) felt those? What do your answers mean to you and your dependents, short and long-term?

     Project 12 Goals:  All three or more related co-parents...

Evolve the awareness, motivation, and ability to stay balanced in four domains, most days, and...

encourage their minor and grown kids to do the same, and...

enjoy their unfolding stepfamily-building process and larger lives often enough, vs. enduring it or experiencing it (and life) as a ceaseless treadmill of tasks to do and obstacles to overcome toward some undefined life goal.

Why Don't Typical Co-parents Stay Balanced?

        Because of the pace and complexity of their inner and outer lives, the ~1,000 co-parents I've met appear to often have frequent trouble staying centered (balanced). Therefore, key personal and stepfamily decisions are often impulsive, unrealistic, and thoughtless. This promotes accumulating innerpersonal and interpersonal stress, and ultimately, legal or psychological re/divorce.

        The primary reason is that typical divorced people and re/married adults appear to be significantly wounded, and have rarely experienced prolonged inner and social balance and the peace that it brings. We Grown Wounded Children (GWCs) find it hard to imagine balance, or believe we could get and keep it, without some massive pain and sacrifices.

        Our frenetic personality subselves often cause ceaseless mental chatter. This blocks vital personal awareness - the foundation of all four levels of balance. Typical Americans aren't aware of their unawareness and its high costs...

        Secondly, our wounded, unaware society and media relentlessly focus us on speed, gratification, excitement, acquisition, and doing; not awareness, serenity, and inner peace. One cost of our privileged American lifestyle is that most middle and upper-class people have too many choices available on how to spend their money and time. Less fortunate people must hustle just to survive.

        A related cost is the accelerating pace of environmental change that the current population and technology explosions force on us. Relatively few of us intentionally choose a simple, well-paced life with few belongings and selected mindful activities. Can you name anyone who does this among the people you know?

        A third reason for Project 12 is that  typical males (and many busy females) are programmed to value action and achievement over inner awareness, reflection, and serenity. To survive and support their kids, many blue-collar parents and divorced women are forced by their situations to be frantically busy every day. Do you know such people any who want to take the time to find their daily balance?

        A fourth reason to commit to  Project 12 is that typical co-parents have significantly more conflicting, alien, concurrent tasks, roles, and responsibilities than adults in other types of family. They have to "run faster" just to keep up!

        How many people do you know who had parents who values and modeled self-aware personal and marital balance? Did yours? Your grandparents? Do your kids' schools offer classes in personal meditation and "living mindfully" (i.e. with present-moment self awareness)?

How Can Co-parents Achieve Their Project-12 Goals?

        By patiently helping each other work at the following steps as partners, not adversaries...

Prepare

        Study the vital skill of awareness. Are you developing and using it often? Are your caregiving partners? It's essential for discerning and keeping your daily and situational priorities and balances. As part of awareness, notice the difference between false-self numbing and denial and true-Self balances.

         Take stock - each co-parent honestly evaluate whether they've thoroughly assessed themselves for false-self wounds. If they (you) did and concluded that you're probably or surely wounded, then honestly confront what you've done about that. If you and others who know you well agree that you're in meaningful true personal recovery, then go ahead with this balancing project.

        If not, stop. Without empowering your true Self (capital "S") to harmonize and lead your other subselves (personality), my experience is that finding and keeping personal + marital + home + family balances is unlikely. This applies to each of your other co-parents.

        Each co-parent learn...

  • stepfamily basics,

  • the reasons for all 10 other ongoing safeguard projects, and...

  • the steps comprising them.

Build a clear wide-angle, long-range vision of the many family-building goals and subtasks you all are trying to achieve together over many years. Ideally, you'll have begun refining that in a thoughtful multi-home mission statement together (Project 6).

         Balancing requires noticing and keeping discomforts (needs) within tolerable levels. Communication aims to fill local needs. Project 2 here invites your co-parents to learn, model, and teach your kids communication basics and seven powerful skills over time.

        Doing this together is probably the second most powerful tool you can acquire to keep your balances. Reducing false-self wounds is the first, and learning and teaching others your stepfamily identity and what it means is third.

        Each of you adults sharpen your awareness of what's possible here by reading about and discussing the four levels of balance: personal + re/marital + household + stepfamily.

        Get undistracted, and meditate on your childhood years. Think of typical mornings, dinnertimes, and weekends. Form a non-blaming opinion of the frequency and steadiness of personal, marital, and household balances that your caregivers modeled and promoted for you. Assess how that affected you and any siblings, long-term.

        Can you think of friends' caregivers who seemed more balanced, or less so? Have you ever been in a group who's leaders were often centered and grounded? If not, you may not know what a balanced leader in a balanced group feels like!

        Get quiet, and form as vivid a picture as you can of your (step)kids when they're middle aged, as a group. They'll probably have kids of their own. Imagine asking the group what would have been most valuable to them across their earlier years - you co-parents being busy and productive, or being often tranquil, calm, clear, and centered.

        Try not to focus on why that is or was difficult. If your real kids are old enough, ask their honest opinions now. Have they ever experienced you co-parents as staying balanced on all four levels? If not, they can't really answer your question yet.

        Review your recent personal and re/marital priorities, as judged by your actions, not your words. How important - really - is "keeping my personal and other balances each day? If this doesn't rank in - say - your top five priorities, the rest of these Project-12 articles may be of little use to you. Discounting or paying only lip-service to daily personal balance is usually one symptom of significant false-self wounds.

        Review your mission statement and co-parental job descriptions. Is staying balanced on the four levels a part of those guides? If so, are you partners acting on that? If not, are you truly motivated to add balance to these family-building tools?

        Evaluate: Periodically, each of you co-parents assess your recent personal, marital, and stepfamily balance levels. This is not about blame or perfectionism. It's about refreshing your awareness, clarity, and dedication. Discuss your results with each other as teammates, and see if you want to (a) do something different, and/or (b) affirm something you're already doing! Consider including feedback from kids and others who know you...

Maintain

        Put these wise guidelines where you all can see them, and help each other use them to promote your balances, and nurture your spiritual growth and lives as you go.

        Stay aware of your option to use qualified professional help to help you get and stay more balanced on any of the four levels.

Contribute

        If you belong to a stepfamily support group, consider periodically devoting a meeting to this key project.

        Periodically review together what you're teaching your minor and grown kids about the four balances. What will give you the most satisfaction when you're old?

Enjoy!

        The second half of this overarching family Project is to consciously help each other appreciate small and major satisfactions from evolving a harmonious, high-nurturance stepfamily despite many challenges. Working patiently together to gain the real benefits being a balanced stepfamily is one of the most (potentially) satisfying and rewarding activities you can choose.

        The closeness, companionship, sharing, stimulation, warmth, and support you all can patiently co-create are truly priceless. Balanced co-parents and mates will want to make (vs. find) time to do this often enough, and to encourage their children and kin to do the same.

        Co-parents who enjoy being who they are as unique gifted, persons with limitations are probably most apt to enjoy their stepfamily experience. Do you usually enjoy being you, most days? Does your partner enjoy who s/he is? If so, your Selves are probably guiding your personalities, and you're serenely trusting in and connected to your Higher Power. Option: periodically use this strengths inventory together to help you all appreciate the good things you're co-creating together...

        Easy Does It: Help each other to stay aware of the wisdom in this motto: "Progress, not Perfection!" If your three or more co-parents are personally and collectively balanced, you'll not need any conscious attention to Project 12 as you patiently progress on your version of these 10 others!

        Before we finish this overview, try a...

Reality Check:

        Take a few undistracted minutes to sense where you stand with staying balanced, and enjoying your stepfamily-building challenges. T = True; F = False, and ? = "I'm torn or unsure now," or "It depends on..."

My true Self is guiding my personality now  (T  F  ?)

I generally agree that each of our co-parents valuing our four levels of balance  is good for us and our kids short and long-term. (T  F  ?)

I feel personally balanced more than 70% of the time these days (T  F  ?)

I feel that recently, my partner and I (if any) are well-balanced relative to our priorities more than 70% of the time (T  F  ?)

I feel comfortable and motivated to discuss the four levels of balance with each of our stepfamily's co-parents now.  (T  F  ?)

Staying balanced is among my top five life daily priorities now.  (T  F  ?)

I like what we co-parents are teaching the kids in our lives about the four levels of balance; or if not, I'm steadily motivated to improve that now.  (T  F  ?)

I enjoy the challenge and process of building our complex multi-home stepfamily often enough now; or if not, I'm motivated to improve that now.  (T  F  ?)

Each of our other co-parents would answer these items as "True" now. (T  F  ?)

Something I just learned from this reality check is... (what?)

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        Option: refresh your wide-angle perspective by reviewing your 12 co-parent projects. Option: print and use this Project-12 summary at anniversaries or troubled times to help you all (a) keep your wide-angle, long-range perspective, and/or (b) identify things that are unbalancing one or more of you.

        Pause, breathe, and recall why you read this article. Did you get what you needed? If so, what do you need now? If not - what do you need? Is there anyone you want to discuss these ideas with? Who's answering these questions - your wise resident true Self, or "someone else"?

Continue Project 12 by exploring the four levels of balance.
 

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Updated September 12, 2008