
This article is from Time magazine and features a quote from our author, A. Thomas Horvath! The article can be found on page 50 of the February 28 issue hard copy and online at http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2050027-1,00.html .
By John Cloud / Malibu Monday, Feb. 28, 2011
A difference between an addict and a recovering addict is that one hides his behavior, while the other can’t stop talking about it. Self-revelation is an important part of recovery, but it can lead to awkward moments when you meet a person who identifies as a sex addict.
For instance, within a half-hour of my first meeting Neil Melinkovich, a 59-year-old life coach, sometime writer and former model who has been in Sex Addicts Anonymous for more than 20 years, he told me about the time in 1987 that he made a quick detour from picking up his girlfriend at the Los Angeles airport so he could purchase a service from a prostitute. Afterward, he noticed what he thought was red lipstick on himself. It turned out to be blood from the woman’s mouth. He washed in a gas-station bathroom, met his girlfriend at the airport and then, in the grip of his insatiability, had unprotected sex with her as soon as they got home — in the same bed he said he had used to entertain three other women in the days before.(See how addiction affects the brain.) Read More »
Patrick fell for Zoë the instant he saw her. But he wasn’t prepared for the intensity beneath her pretty, seductive surface. Sexually demanding, volatile, and even suicidal, she turned their brief relationship into a vortex of instability and negativity that left Patrick wary of risking intimacy again.
Our author Marsha Temlock is now a blogger on Huffington Post (can be found at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/marsha-temlock/a-grandmother-struggles-w_b_798520.html)! Here is her first entry:
When an adult child’s marriage ends, it’s not just the divorcing couple and their children who are hurt. What many people do not realize is that the grandparents are struggling with a ton of emotions and questions. The following is a pretty typical story about the issues seniors face.
It was midnight and the phone rang. My husband and I often got calls at odd hours since our son lived in another time zone. This time the sound reverberated throughout the house. My husband picked up the phone. I waited my turn while the two engaged in the usual guy talk.
“How’s the job, did you get the roof fixed?”
Don’t ask why but all the while they were talking my mother radar was picking up static.
“How are the kids?” I asked.
“They’re fine,” my son replied. There was a pause — a long pause.
“And Barbara?”
“Okay.” Another long pause.
And then I heard those dreadful words I don’t think any parent is ever prepared for. “Mom, Barbara and I are getting divorced.”
I felt as if my family had just fallen off a cliff.
All night long, these parents asked themselves why? What went wrong in the marriage? They needed some reason, some explanation to buffer the shock. They asked: Why didn’t we see this coming? Who’s to blame? What does the future hold for our child? the soon to be ex-law? the grandchildren? How will this divorce affect us?
Of course, not all parents are taken by surprise when the couple finally goes public. Some predict the marriage is doomed before the ink is dry on the marriage license. Even so, the issues are the same. Parents are not sure of their role. Do they stay on the sidelines or enter the fray?
Some seniors find it difficult to accept the decision. They try to fix what’s broken. One reaction is to suggest the couple go for marriage counseling. This grandmother was told it was too late. The message was clear: “Mom, butt out.”
A real concern is access to the grandkids. Generally speaking, the paternal grandparents lose out to the maternal grandparents even in the case of shared custody since the mother typically controls the amount of time children spend with the father and makes daily decisions about their schedule. Ex-daughters-in-law can create roadblocks, favor their own parents, and reduce the time the father’s parents spend with their grandchildren. (http://www.grandparentstoday.com)
This grandmother was lucky. Her grandkids came to visit while Mom and Dad were hammering out the settlement. Grandma agonized over what to say, what to do to make the children comfortable. She removed the parents’ wedding picture from the display of family photos and was careful to avoid any subject having to do with the divorce. She hoped the kids would volunteer information – they didn’t. The older one, protective of her mother and angry at her father, decided grandma was allied with the enemy.
Fortunately, time passes. The dust settles. Everyone moves on. Many grandparents maintain a warm, working relationship with the former son or daughter-in-law. When their child remarries, there are those who put an extra leaf in the table and invite the whole mishpocha (family) to Chanukah. The faces of grandchildren and step-grandchildren deck the halls with good cheer.
When a child gets married, parents assume their parenting role is over. But because divorce does not exist in a vacuum, their role may be helping their adult child, ex-law and grandchildren get back on track.
This grandmother may not necessarily agree with her son’s decision, but she got off on the right foot by saying, “I love you. What can I do to help?”
For more guidance for grandparents and parents of divorced children see: Temlock, Marsha. Your Child’s Divorce: What to Expect … What You Can Do. 2006. Impact Publishers
Krumboltz and Levin, authors of the newly released book, Luck Is No Accident: Making the Most of Happenstance in Your Life and Career, believe that traditional career counselors add to unnecessary pressure by striving to “cure” their clients of indecision about goal commitment. Their own experience in the field revealed the flaws in this approach. “We have no objection to tentative career goals combined with continual open-mindedness, but we hate to see people get trapped in an occupation that makes them miserable because their tunnel vision prevents them from seeing alternatives.”
Robert Alberti, author of Your Perfect Right: A Guide to Assertive Living, will be on KCBX tonight from 6:30-7:30 pm.
For more information:
here’s the link to their website: http://www.kcbx.org/Pages/Programming/weekly_program_highlights.html
the link to our Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Atascadero-CA/Impact-Publishers/108167199235363
and our Twitter page: http://twitter.com/impactpublisher
By SAM PAZZANO, Courts Bureau
A Brampton judge has thrown three books at an estranged couple and assigned them some homework that’s due before their next court date.
Justice David Price ordered the parents of 11-year-old twins to read three books about parenting in a divorce situation before they return to family court in December and provide proof they completed the assignment by Nov. 30.
Karen Garney and Melvin MacNeil must also write “a one-page summary for each book of one insight that they have gained from it and one strategy, if any, they are prepared to adopt based on it,” the Superior Court justice wrote in a judgment obtained Thursday.
The books are former New York Times best-seller Difficult Conversations by Douglas Stone, Bruce Patton and Sheila Heen, Parenting After Divorce by Philip M. Stahl, and Parenting from the Inside Out by Harvard-educated child psychiatrist Daniel J. Siegel and Mary Hartzell.
The judge explained the reasoning behind his unusual order.
“This may improve their ability to communicate and resolve some of the issues that are still troubling them,” said Price, listing a number of issues that the couple cannot resolve, including providing access to the children.
Garney has already finished reading the books and embraced the advice prescribed by the authors.
“I try to keep positive, say nothing personal and I always do things that are in the best interests of my children,” Garney said in an interview Thursday.
These books should be recommended reading for any and all parents who find themselves in the same situation, she said.
“These are three books everybody in our position (divorcing) should be reading,” said Garney, a former Etobicoke travel agent who has sole custody of twin 11-year-olds, a boy and a girl.
Earlier this year, the judge recommended the parents read the books. The judge credited the 41-year-old Garney with having read the books already, while her estranged husband hadn’t, so the judge ordered the reading and writing assignment.
MacNeil, now 43, and a construction contractor, and Garney became a couple in August 1996, married two years later and separated in March 2007.
They kept living together under the same roof until June 2007 when Garney left the matrimonial home. The twins continued to live primarily with their mother.
MacNeil is seeking to vary the custody order and asserts his rights to access are being violated, the judge wrote.
MacNeil had access to his children on Wednesday nights and every other weekend as long as he brought their son to his hockey games and practices on the weekends.
MacNeil was not available for comment.
Dr. A. Thomas Horvath’s book, Sex, Drugs, Gambling and Chocolate: A Workbook for Overcoming Addictions was also awarded the ABCT Self-Help Book of Merit Award! Read on for some great tips about beating your bad habit!
Can you eat just one chocolate…or do you keep “sampling” until the box is gone? Does “just one beer” turn into…“one more for the road”?
If your bad habits have more control over you than you do, here’s good news: you don’t have to give up your bad habits or addictions in order to control them. The information is especially exciting for people with addictions to things such as sex or food — which most of us don’t wish to give up completely! This does contradict the teachings of most 12-step groups, such as Alcoholics Anonymous, which require total abstinence. Read More »