Archive for July, 2009

Are Your Relationships Getting Better or Bitter?

Monday, July 13th, 2009

I met a man who had enormous passion and his voice got progressively louder as he told me, “I’ve talked with my boy, I’ve begged him to listen, I’ve yelled and then I’ve yelled even louder.  My boy refuses to listen to me.”

Their relationship is getting bitter – not better.

Make A Decision

Now is the time to make a decision

So let’s ask a few simple questions about your relationships, and especially about the communication inside your relationships. 
1. What is working for you? 
2. What is not working so well?
3. What exactly is your “plan”?

Most of the folks I’ve met don’t have any “plan” for getting better.  Instead, they keep on doing the same things that they have always done, and somehow hope for a different result.  I remember a childhood friend whose dad repeatedly grounded him, and every grounding got longer and longer as if the boy might finally “get it” if he was punished just a little harder. 

The dad must have reasoned, “If I just work my plan a little harder, my boy will get it.”  Yell louder, make them go to bed hungry, swear a little, or perhaps get really upset.    

I think it is obvious that these kinds of “plans” don’t work, so the real question must be, “How can I have a good plan?” 

First we must begin with a picture of the end result we want to achieve.  It is just like getting in your car and knowing your destination.  For example, I see my family living in harmony, laughing together, working together and experiencing joy in every aspect of life.  

Second, we must make a firm decision as to how important it is for us to achieve our vision.  Is our destination really going to be “Harmony Lane,” or are we simply jumping in our car for a temporary little joy ride that brings us nowhere?  For example, suppose my children interrupted me while I was in the middle of writing this very important article which you are reading right now.  I am on a writing roll, in the groove, making it happen – yet my children interrupted me.  So what is my real priority in my life?  Is it my writing or my relationships with my children?  I must decide.

These first two steps are the most crucial steps anyone can take.  We cannot change our lives until we first examine who we are and decide who we want to be.   Without a thorough examination and a decision on your part, you will almost assuredly go back to your old ways.

Once you have made your decision, you must say it out loud, “This is who I want to be in my relationships….”  This is how I will react to others.  This is my stance, my position, my foundation.  Hopefully you have written it down in detail.

Next we must become a disciple of our decision.  When we are a disciple it means we are a devotee and follower of an ideal.    It is your decision of who you want to be, so now it is purely a matter of putting your decision into action.  This begins with discipline. 

The word discipline and the word disciple have the same root meanings.  They mean that you will do whatever it takes to reach your goal.  In short it means:
• You will follow through. 
• You will tell others about your decisions and ask them to help you. 
• You will read about your ideals, study and do whatever it takes to achieve your end. 

Simply put, it means you are going to surround yourself with words, people and activities that will help you put your ideals into practice. We’ve all heard, “You are what you eat,” yet I believe we are truly what we put into our eyes and ears and thoughts.  Garbage in equals garbage out.  If I want to have great relationships with my family and friends, then I need to learn from others who have already studied these topics.   Perhaps I need to ask my minister for a recommendation on several good books.

Having a strong plan and being a disciple of good relationships may not be easy.  But the alternative is so much harder and uglier.   Unfortunately, the bottom line says:  If your child does not feel the right kind of love from you, they will find it somewhere else – perhaps in drugs, sex, pornography, alcohol or violence. 

Your children desperately want to be loved – by you.  Today is a great day to start your new plan.  ThumbPeople.com can help.

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Love Hugs

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

I love when my kids smile!Yesterday my 3 year old son and my 2 year old daughter both ran to me for absolutely no reason and whipped their little arms around me and held me in a bear hug that lasted a whole minute.  There were no ulterior motives, no needing cookies, ice-cream or even a drink of water.  Just a love hug.

I’ll bet you can imagine how I felt.  Like superman!  I smiled, laughed and later, I cried to think how precious it is that my babies love me so much.  
And I’m not a perfect dad by any means.  Sometimes I get my eyes locked in on a ballgame and I don’t even hear my kids as they say, “Dad, Dad, Dad…  Dad, Dad, Dad” as they vainly attempt to get my attention.  Sometimes I love my kids because of my own selfishness, because I simply want them to love me back. 

On the other hand, our Father God always pays attention to us.  He always loves us and is always with us.   There is never a ballgame, or a movie or work to get in the way of his amazing love for us.   There are no conditions, no exceptions, and no “what have you done for me lately” comments from God.

So I can only imagine how God feels when we love him the way that my kids loved me…  When we raise our arms to heaven and hug our Father with all we’ve got…  When we say thank you with our hearts no matter what is happening in our lives.

And you know what God loves just as much?  It is when we love others the way that Jesus loves us.  Jesus said that true religion is when we come to the aid of those in need.   True religion is when we love our children, our weak, our lonely and frail.  It is when we spread God’s love to those around us, simply in thanksgiving to God.   It is a love hug.

I hope this message is a love hug – from me to you!

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Michael Jackson’s Broken Heart

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

When you hear the name “Michael Jackson,” you probably have two different thoughts: “incredible performer” and “very strange person.”

I personally think that history will largely remember his legacy of memorable songs, videos, and dance numbers.   But it is sad that he’ll always be tagged with his ghostly images, the dangling of his baby from a balcony and his reclusive lifestyle.

I think if we took a real autopsy of Michael Jackson, we would see that he truly died from a broken heart.   Whether it was drugs or a heart attack is irrelevant, because he died feeling unloved, lonely and out of place.  Even thought he was surrounded by people who catered to his every need, he truly died alone.

After producing “Thriller,” the biggest-selling album of all time, Michael Jackson buried his incredible brilliance into a self imposed imprisonment from society.   During the prime of this man’s life, at the height of his creative talent, he became invisible all because he felt unloved, unheard, and misunderstood.

So here’s my question: What if Michael Jackson had known that he was truly loved.  Not “adored” by screaming fans, but loved just for who he was?   What if the little boy, Michael, would have grown up in a home where his mom and dad showed their love for him with their words, gentleness and caring?  What if Michael would have known the love of God our Father deep inside his heart?

Can you possibly imagine the unseen talent that was forever buried when they buried that man?

More importantly, what kind of message do we give our children every day?   Do our children know that they are loved all the time, or only when they perform?   Do our children hear the love in our voice, in our look, in our inflections?  Do our children know how precious they truly are?

I believe that people become their very best when they know they are loved.  When they feel the presence of our loving God in their lives, they want to respond by giving their all.  They want to respond with their finest.

Oliver Wendall Holmes said, “Most people go to their graves with their music still inside them.”  Let’s make sure that we are bringing the music, smiles and laughter out of our children, and show them our love – today. 

Get started today.  It’s obvious that tomorrow may be too late.
All the Best,
Mark Arens

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