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Caregiving and Marriage
Communication Key to Keeping Marriage on Track

By Denise M. Brown, Publisher and Editor

Putting priorities in place may be the most difficult part of juggling caregiving and your marriage. How do you help your care recipient, who needs so much, and make time for your spouse?

Cathy Hazzlerigg, a life and relationship coach, likes to live by a Biblical principle, Marriage first. An important way to put marriage first is to commit to honest and open communication. Cathy offers these tips for communicating with your spouse:

1. Use "I" language. When you use "I" language ("I feel", "I want", "I worry"), you take responsibility for what you feel, what you want and what you need. "I" language minimizes the blame game ("You make me feel so bad!") and when blame is out of the equation, you both communicate effectively.

2. Bring your spouse into the solution so that your spouse becomes involved in making the situation better. When you're both working toward improvements, you've created a team.

3. Be assert, state what you want and what you'd like to see happen. Your spouse, not matter how well he or she knows you, can't read your mind.

4. Use active listening skills, such as reflective listening. Reflective listening involves repeating back what you heard to ensure that what you heard is what your spouse meant to say. Clarifying ("I heard this...") before responding helps to minimize misunderstandings.

5. Avoid reacting defensively. Tell yourself: "I will be calm". If you feel yourself becoming defensive, ask your spouse to rephrase or re-word statements. If you really feel the heat of the moment taking control, then take a time out and agree to revisit the discussion when you're both calmer.

6. Think of communication as a process. Discuss a situation, allow time for brainstorming, consider a potential solution, try the solution, then re-visit how successful the solution is. Participating in the process--and expecting that the right solution will come with trial and error--removes the pressure.

7. Put yourself in your spouse's shoes. Understanding how your spouse feels will help you communicate effectively and work toward solutions that work for both of you.

8. Look for solutions that work for everyone, including, but not exclusively, yourself (or your care recipient). Everyone can make compromises; no one person should make all the sacrifices.

As with all good things in life, marriage takes work, Cathy says. Some ways you can make sure you're putting an effort into your marriage include:

* Be sure you're meeting your mate's needs. Ask yourself, "What am I doing for my spouse?"

* Respect your mate.

* Look for the strengths and minimize the weaknesses. The more strengths you focus on in your spouse, the stronger and greater the strengths of your marriage.

Some red flags that you might see in your marriage that may indicate the need for professional help:

1. You feel like your communication is just like beating a dead horse. You go round and round without realizing a solution.

2. You fight a lot and feel that the love seems lost.

3. Sometimes, conflict is silent. If you feel the distance in your gut, it may be time to talk with a professional.

Think of your marriage like your car, Cathy says. If you never change the oil, some day the car just won't work. In order for your car to start every day and weather the rough patches, your car needs regular maintenance.

The same is true of your marriage. Regular TLC will keep your marriage humming. And, when it hits those potholes created by life (and it will), you'll be able to quickly steer it back on track.

Resources that Cathy recommends include:

His Needs, Her Needs: Building An Affair-Proof Marriage by Dr. Willard Harley

The Five Love Languages: How To Express Heartfelt Commitment to Your Mate by Gary Chapman

Love Busters: Overcoming Habits That Destroy Romantic Love by Willard Harley

Personality Plus for Couples: Understanding Yourself and The One You Love by Florence Littauer

About Cathy: Cathy Hazzlerigg of Versatile Seminars Plus is a life and relationship coach, certified singles coach, couples mentor and DISC Personality Trainer. She is passionate about empowering singles and pre-marital and married couples to find and have the relationship of their dreams. She teaches live and telephone seminars, as well as coaches individually one on one. For more information, call 702-274-0271 or visit her website at www.v-s-plus.com.

Index of Articles:

Making the Connection Means Planning for Time Together

Communication Key to Keeping Marriage on Track

It's Not Him, It's My Cabin Fever

Caregiving Poll Results: How Has Caregiving Impacted Your Marriage

 


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