| Digg it UP |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Relationships > Relationships > Ten Ways Control Issues Can Harm a Marriage |
|
Digg it UP - Ten Ways Control Issues Can Harm a Marriage
Why Team Building Activities are So Important? ’s rules. This can become a game of sorts within the relationship.Team building activities are one of the most important keys for the success of your company. The more precious time coworkers spend together, the faster it is for your industry. Corporate team building games are that make this possible- and if you do not have cohesive employees, you are seriously handicapping your industry out in the marketplace.According to team building experts, office team building games are needed as much as success, since friendliness and kindness are feeling 10. Unexpressed anger and resentment accumulate, and eventually the passive mate may rebel and decide there’s nothing to lose by becoming defiant or ending the marriage. This brings out the controlling tendency of the spouse even more, and his (or her) efforts to control the “rebellion” make things worse. Any vestige of being on the same “team” is now gone, and the partners can feel like adversaries. Trying to control your mate—actions, thoughts, feelings—will always boomerang eventually and will have a harmful effect on your relationship. It’s important to understand the relationship dynamics that are created when power and decision-making is out- You Know Internet Marketing Is for You When Is your spouse too controlling? Are you too passive? Or are the roles reversed? Either way, if decisions in your marriage are normally a “tug of war” struggle and the same partner either almost always wins or almost always gives in, then your marriage is being impacted by control issues.There are many people in the world who feel stuck in jobs they hate and lead lives they can barely afford. These people feel frustration is a way of life, and consistently feel they are missing out on the things that really matter. They must consistently choose work over family, friends, and personal interests. You may be one of these people. You may feel the frustration of being undervalued and lacking the kinds of challenges you are perfectly capable of living up to. If you are one Control issues refer to who’s in control, who’s in charge, or who’s getting their way. What’s at stake is the power in the relationship and how differences are resolved. It’s impossible to completely avoid all control issues in a relationship. Whether you have serious control problems in your marriage will depend on the frequency and intensity of the control issues that arise. But significant control issues are harmful to a relationship. Here are ten reasons you need to be concerned if you have unresolved control problems in your marriage: 1. Control issues set up a parent-child relationship or dictatorship in the marriage. This shows a lack of trust and respect for the partner’s feelings, preferences, and judgment. 2. Relationships based on “one-up-man-ship” are constructed on the “winner-loser” model. This isn’t what you want to have in a healthy relationship. You want to create a “win-win” model. 3. The “winner” of the control struggle is viewed as “strong,” while the “loser” is viewed as “weak.” This dynamic isn’t helpful to your relationship. It tears down your feeling of closeness and intimacy instead of building it up. 4. By stifling individuality and freedom, you run the risk of smothering and stifling the very things that you value most—your spouse and your marriage. When one person makes the majority of the decisions, new ideas and honest feelings and reactions are suppressed. 5. Control issues contribute to increasing the anger, resentment, and bitterness in the relationship. This is the natural spin-off of feeling disrespected or controlled by someone else. 6. Thinking your mate should be just like you harms your relationship, as does viewing your mate as an extension of yourself. This squelches individuality and freedom and keeps your mate from living up to his or her potential. 7. Passive partners often become passive-aggressive when they are in a relationship with a more controlling partner. This gets in the way of honest, direct communication. They “forget” to keep a promise to the spouse or conveniently sabotage the spouse’s efforts in some way. 8. An overly-controlling spouse sets up dynamics in the relationship that encourages the more passive partner to sneak around and hide things rather than risk confrontation. For example, a passive spouse may secretly phone a friend who she (or he) knows the partner doesn’t want her to have any contact with. 9. Control conflict in a marriage encourages the game of “catch me if you can.” In this game, the passive partner tries to defy or get around the controller’s rules. This can become a game of sorts within the relationship. 10. Unexpressed anger and resentment accumulate, and eventually the passive mate may rebel and decide there’s nothing to lose by becoming defiant or ending the marriage. This brings out the controlling tendency of the spouse even more, and his (or her) efforts to control the “rebellion” make things worse. Any vestige of being on the same “team” is now gone, and the partners can feel like adversaries. Trying to control your mate—actions, thoughts, feelings—will always boomerang eventually and will have a harmful effect on your relationship. It’s important to understand the relationship dynamics that are created when power and decision-making is out-o What is Your Biggest Problem Online? Here are ten reasons you need to be concerned if you have unresolved control problems in your marriage:Last month we conducted a survey of our readers. The results have been interesting, to say the least.We intentionally asked an open ended question to find out what our subscribers biggest problem was online. Here are the results.* Not Knowing What To DoThe largest response we received was "I just don't know what to do." Responses noted not knowing where to start, who to trust, what steps to take, how to get to the next level in their business.* Not Getting E 1. Control issues set up a parent-child relationship or dictatorship in the marriage. This shows a lack of trust and respect for the partner’s feelings, preferences, and judgment. 2. Relationships based on “one-up-man-ship” are constructed on the “winner-loser” model. This isn’t what you want to have in a healthy relationship. You want to create a “win-win” model. 3. The “winner” of the control struggle is viewed as “strong,” while the “loser” is viewed as “weak.” This dynamic isn’t helpful to your relationship. It tears down your feeling of closeness and intimacy instead of building it up. 4. By stifling individuality and freedom, you run the risk of smothering and stifling the very things that you value most—your spouse and your marriage. When one person makes the majority of the decisions, new ideas and honest feelings and reactions are suppressed. 5. Control issues contribute to increasing the anger, resentment, and bitterness in the relationship. This is the natural spin-off of feeling disrespected or controlled by someone else. 6. Thinking your mate should be just like you harms your relationship, as does viewing your mate as an extension of yourself. This squelches individuality and freedom and keeps your mate from living up to his or her potential. 7. Passive partners often become passive-aggressive when they are in a relationship with a more controlling partner. This gets in the way of honest, direct communication. They “forget” to keep a promise to the spouse or conveniently sabotage the spouse’s efforts in some way. 8. An overly-controlling spouse sets up dynamics in the relationship that encourages the more passive partner to sneak around and hide things rather than risk confrontation. For example, a passive spouse may secretly phone a friend who she (or he) knows the partner doesn’t want her to have any contact with. 9. Control conflict in a marriage encourages the game of “catch me if you can.” In this game, the passive partner tries to defy or get around the controller’s rules. This can become a game of sorts within the relationship. 10. Unexpressed anger and resentment accumulate, and eventually the passive mate may rebel and decide there’s nothing to lose by becoming defiant or ending the marriage. This brings out the controlling tendency of the spouse even more, and his (or her) efforts to control the “rebellion” make things worse. Any vestige of being on the same “team” is now gone, and the partners can feel like adversaries. Trying to control your mate—actions, thoughts, feelings—will always boomerang eventually and will have a harmful effect on your relationship. It’s important to understand the relationship dynamics that are created when power and decision-making is out- Use the Power of the Internet to Sell Your Book 4. By stifling individuality and freedom, you run the risk of smothering and stifling the very things that you value most—your spouse and your marriage. When one person makes the majority of the decisions, new ideas and honest feelings and reactions are suppressed.Here’s the challenge for today’s authors: The number of books published each year is increasing (195,000 titles in 2004 alone), books sales are decreasing, and only brand-name authors are getting the necessary support to market their books. The unfortunate result is that most authors aren’t going to see even modest book sales.The solution for authors is the Internet. With today’s sophisticated targeting capabilities of the web, an author can promote his or her book directly to re 5. Control issues contribute to increasing the anger, resentment, and bitterness in the relationship. This is the natural spin-off of feeling disrespected or controlled by someone else. 6. Thinking your mate should be just like you harms your relationship, as does viewing your mate as an extension of yourself. This squelches individuality and freedom and keeps your mate from living up to his or her potential. 7. Passive partners often become passive-aggressive when they are in a relationship with a more controlling partner. This gets in the way of honest, direct communication. They “forget” to keep a promise to the spouse or conveniently sabotage the spouse’s efforts in some way. 8. An overly-controlling spouse sets up dynamics in the relationship that encourages the more passive partner to sneak around and hide things rather than risk confrontation. For example, a passive spouse may secretly phone a friend who she (or he) knows the partner doesn’t want her to have any contact with. 9. Control conflict in a marriage encourages the game of “catch me if you can.” In this game, the passive partner tries to defy or get around the controller’s rules. This can become a game of sorts within the relationship. 10. Unexpressed anger and resentment accumulate, and eventually the passive mate may rebel and decide there’s nothing to lose by becoming defiant or ending the marriage. This brings out the controlling tendency of the spouse even more, and his (or her) efforts to control the “rebellion” make things worse. Any vestige of being on the same “team” is now gone, and the partners can feel like adversaries. Trying to control your mate—actions, thoughts, feelings—will always boomerang eventually and will have a harmful effect on your relationship. It’s important to understand the relationship dynamics that are created when power and decision-making is out- Outsourced Chiropractic Billing Service Performance Index - June 2006 n become passive-aggressive when they are in a relationship with a more controlling partner. This gets in the way of honest, direct communication. They “forget” to keep a promise to the spouse or conveniently sabotage the spouse’s efforts in some way.Benchmark-driven performance management helps establish objective industry standards. Medical service providers can use benchmarking to evaluate performance of their billing service and measure their improvement over time. This article presents a prototype for a rule-based chiropractic index, including its coverage definition, update cycle, volume weighting, and provided information.Current (June 2006) Billing Precision Index (BPI) stands at 18, which means that the average of te 8. An overly-controlling spouse sets up dynamics in the relationship that encourages the more passive partner to sneak around and hide things rather than risk confrontation. For example, a passive spouse may secretly phone a friend who she (or he) knows the partner doesn’t want her to have any contact with. 9. Control conflict in a marriage encourages the game of “catch me if you can.” In this game, the passive partner tries to defy or get around the controller’s rules. This can become a game of sorts within the relationship. 10. Unexpressed anger and resentment accumulate, and eventually the passive mate may rebel and decide there’s nothing to lose by becoming defiant or ending the marriage. This brings out the controlling tendency of the spouse even more, and his (or her) efforts to control the “rebellion” make things worse. Any vestige of being on the same “team” is now gone, and the partners can feel like adversaries. Trying to control your mate—actions, thoughts, feelings—will always boomerang eventually and will have a harmful effect on your relationship. It’s important to understand the relationship dynamics that are created when power and decision-making is out- The Wrong Way To Go ’s rules. This can become a game of sorts within the relationship.Everyone knows that if you want to be a standup comedian, you have to study a lot of standup comedy, right? Wrong. How many acts did comedian and writer Ian Coburn watch before writing and performing his first real comedy gig at eighteen? We know, we know, sounds like the intro to one of those light bulb screwing jokes! But, no, Coburn saw just one comedy act—at fifteen, on TV, while babysitting...We don’t know if his future as a successful writer and comic was fostered by the d 10. Unexpressed anger and resentment accumulate, and eventually the passive mate may rebel and decide there’s nothing to lose by becoming defiant or ending the marriage. This brings out the controlling tendency of the spouse even more, and his (or her) efforts to control the “rebellion” make things worse. Any vestige of being on the same “team” is now gone, and the partners can feel like adversaries. Trying to control your mate—actions, thoughts, feelings—will always boomerang eventually and will have a harmful effect on your relationship. It’s important to understand the relationship dynamics that are created when power and decision-making is out-of-balance in a marriage. That’s the first step to becoming more aware and knowledgeable about the subject so that you can evaluate your relationship and decide if you need to make any personal changes.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Unusual Promotional Products Produce Results! Savings Account Payday Loan - So Much More Convenient Loan For Financial Emergencies How To Get Affordable Health Insurance Quotes Individual And Family
|