Title: CONFLICT RESOLUTION AND CHANGES IN RELATIONSHIPS
1CONFLICT RESOLUTION AND CHANGES IN RELATIONSHIPS
Designed by Regina Crews, Secretary of Student
Support Services
2RELATIONSHIPS
- Self - In order to have a fulfilling
relationship with others, we must have a good
relationship with ourselves. Do you like
yourself? Are you comfortable with who you are
and what you hope to become? - Family - Parents and siblings. Unconditional
love. We cannot change those people who are a
part of us, but we can change how we relate to
them. - Spouse - Take time for FUN seize a spontaneous
moment. Life can be too serious. Honoring the
wedding vows, for better, for worse.till death
do us part is not easy. For a marriage to
last, you must
be married to your best friend. - Parenting - The most important job a person can
undertake. - The only job for which no training or experience
are required. - Fatherhood - Providing for your family is an
obligation to be taken seriously.
Being a positive role model and actively involved
in the raising of your children is at least as
important as earning a paycheck.
3- Motherhood - Motherhood is not about fulfilling
your own potential its about helping your
children fulfill theirs. When the Glass Slipper
Doesnt Fit, Worley and Cloninger.
Responsibilities include loving, training, and
providing for your childrens needs. - Children - Need to be nurtured, not rushed out of
childhood. Pat Zell suggests our children have
rights to be a child - the right to be loved
-- the right to be disciplined - the right to be protected
-- the right to learn to think - the right to know they have a lot to learn
- the right to learn respect
-- the right to learn to forgive - the right to learn patience
-- the right to spiritual
involvement - the right to encouragement
- Friends - One must be a friend in order to have a
friend. Genuine friendships last a
lifetime. They need to be
cherished as one would a rare treasure.
4ELEMENTS OF A GOOD RELATIONSHIP
5SPEAKING THE TRUTH IN LOVE by Gary D. Chapman We
were sincere, we were loving, we said it kindly,
but it resulted in a war of hot words or perhaps
a cold war of silent withdrawal. Find a new way
to speak the truth in love, and your spouse will
receive it as you intend it. Some of us
pride ourselves on speaking the
truth, but we are not very big on
seeking to express it in love.
6How to Avoid Verbal SCUD Missiles
- Learn from the defensiveness of your spouse.
Dont take it personally. Recognize their
defensiveness is because you have threatened
their self-esteem. The next day, ask your
spouse why he or she thinks they got so defensive
at your comment. The answer may give you genuine
insight into your spouses emotional history. - Learn the art of making requests. For some, this
means asking if their spouse would be open to a
suggestion. For all of us, it means couching our
criticisms in the form of a request rather than a
demand. - Do you know what would make me happy? Do
you - know what I would like for you to do for me?
Would it be - possible for you to This is the language of
requests. - Make sure that your statements of truth are
expressed in love. Am I sharing this
because I sincerely believe it will benefit my
spouse? If it does not pass the test of love, it
should not be shared.
7Speaking the truth in love is far different from
getting it off my chest. The latter simply
ventilates pent up anger. The former is designed
to stimulate constructive change. We all
understand we are not perfect, that there is room
for improvement in our lives, and
ultimately we come to respect the person
who loves us enough to speak the truth
kindly.
8ADAPTING TO CHANGE
- CHANGE ADVENTURE, RISK, FEAR OF THE UNKOWN..
- Adapting to change is tempered by who we are,
life experiences and expectations. - Our attitudes may reflect an open mind and be
receptive to new experiences. - We may cling to the comfort and security of
wanting things to stay the same. - We may not have a choice and be forced into
change. - Our inherent nature of optimism or pessimism
determines if we look for the best in any
situation.
9EXAMPLE OF CHANGE
- COLLEGE - a big change in your life - what
brought you here in the first place? Identify
your support system. Set goals so you can
measure your accomplishments. Recognize the
VALUE of the change you are experiencing. The
college experience tends to help one be more
accepting of new ideas and more able to control
ones future. - The most fundamental value of education is
that it makes life more interesting. This is
true whether you are fetched up on a desert
island or adrift in the impersonal loneliness of
the urban hurley-burley. It allows you to see
things which the uneducated do not see.
It allows to understand things which do
not occur to the less learned. In short, it
makes it less likely that you will be a
crashing bore to those whose company you keep.
By analogy, it makes the difference
between the traveler who understands
the local language and the traveler to whom the
local language is a jumble of
nonsense words.
- Kingman Brewster, former
president of Yale University
10CHALLENGE TO CHANGE
- Change is a process. Long-lasting changes
require a well-defined series of stages. - Stage 1 Precontemplation - People in this stage
often start to pay attention when they understand
the dangers of their problem behavior (drinking,
smoking, overweight). - Stage 2 Contemplation - I should change, but
You may be stalled because you fear the costs of
change. Make a list of the pros
and cons. You must be convinced that the
benefits of making the change
outweigh the sacrifices. - Stage 3 Preparation - You must have a game plan
to be successful at a behavioral change or
eliminating a bad habit. Examples Change of
routine, mental defense against
temptations, plan for obstacles, set a date and
go public, try a halfway measure, etc.
11- Stage 4 Action - Decide whether to go it alone
or in an established program. Strengthen your
commitment - personal responsibility. Set goals.
Establish rewards. Replace old behaviors with
healthy ones. Change your environment. Get
support. - Stage 5 Maintenance - Learn from your mistakes
through trial and error. Do not let slip ups get
you down. Chart your progress. Keep your
confidence by keeping your perspective.
12GROWTH OCCURS IN SIX DIMENSIONS
- Intellectual development - Learn how to create
ideas in your own words and express them to
others. - Occupational development - Awareness of
opportunities in the world of work that fit your
interests and abilities, as well as an
appreciation of how liberal arts and sciences
provide thinking skills that are applicable to
the great majority of career fields. - Emotional development - Learning to cope with
stress and anxiety, awareness of personal
feelings, enthusiasm for life and ability to
succeed - Physical development - The lifelong value of
prevention in fitness,
exercise, and nutrition. - Social development - The value of contributing to
the common welfare of our community
and getting along with others. - Spiritual development - Gaining a sense of ones
own values as well as an appreciation of the
value systems of others, a sense of ethics, and a
general appreciation of life and the natural
forces in the universe.
13All six areas are interconnected to make an
interlocking portrait of yourself. Discovering
your strengths in one area leads to similar
strengths in other areas.
14CONFLICT
- A normal part of life
- Cannot be eliminated.
- Can be reduced.
- Usually follows the emotion of anger
- Caused mostly by misunderstanding
- Reduced by better communication
15THE DIRTY FIGHTERS
- Avoider - refuses to fight pretends to be busy
or asleep will not face issues. - Guilt-Maker - tries to change anothers behavior
by making him feel guilty. - Mind Reader - explains what the other person
really means. - Gunnysacker - saves his feelings attacks
later. - Joker - refuses to be serious blocks feelings.
- Belt-Liner - hurts or belittles partner gets
even.
16FIGHTING FAIRLY
- Identify the problem as your own by using I
language. - Be clear and direct in expressing thoughts and
feelings. - Listen to the others thoughts and feelings.
- Make reasonable requests, not demands.
- Negotiate/compromise.
- Implement the solution.
17In order for change to be successful or
acceptable, we must take an active role in the
circumstances surrounding the change. If we do
nothing toward gaining acceptance or generating
enthusiasm for the change, the wall of resistance
is more likely to become apparent. Nothing
ventured, nothing gained. The same old
thing. Why bother? Mind
closed.
18PROACTIVE vs. REACTIVE
- If you are in a canoe in the middle of a lake,
the absence of an oar forces you to float in the
direction of the current and have no control over
where you are going or the condition in which you
get to shore. People resistant to change lack
the oar to set the direction of their lives. One
guarantee in life change will happen without
your consent.
19PROACTIVE STANCE
- Gain as much information as possible about the
new situation - Talk with someone in a position to provide you
answers to your questions. - List positive outcomes you anticipate from this
change. - Have your support system available during
difficult times - Set small goals to accomplish along the way.
- Identify something good that happens each and
every day during the process. - Let go of excess baggage that no longer applies
to your life.
20LIFE CHANGES
- College
- Divorce
- Career change
- Death in the family
- Retirement
- Empty nest
- Health problems
21Do not let the changes and conflicts in your life
rule it. Take a proactive stance and try to find
the bright side of the change and look to how it
will affect your future. Remember Life is what
you make of it, do not let the actions of others
affect you. Compromise is very important in all
types of relationships and is the glue that binds
them. Compromise keeps the boat going in a
straight direction instead of in circles. Change
can be a good thing, embrace it. To be happy is
the ultimate result of all ambition. Samuel
Johnson
22- We hope you have enjoyed this workshop and gained
some useful information from it. Please complete
and return an Academic Enrichment Summary so
that we may document your participation in this
workshop. If you are viewing this workshop via
the internet please come by the Student Support
Services office to complete an Academic
Enrichment Summary or you may click on the link
in the directions box on the Workshops page and
print it out or e-mail it to rcrews_at_wallace.edu
so that we may document your participation.
Handouts available upon request. -
- EXIT