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8 qualities shared by strong families

8 qualities shared by strong families. Commitment Appreciation God communication patterns Desire to spend time together A strong value system Ability to deal with crises and stress in a positive manner Resilience Self efficacy. 6 decision making steps. Define what you need or want

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8 qualities shared by strong families

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  1. 8 qualities shared by strong families • Commitment • Appreciation • God communication patterns • Desire to spend time together • A strong value system • Ability to deal with crises and stress in a positive manner • Resilience • Self efficacy

  2. 6 decision making steps • Define what you need or want • Look carefully at your resources • Gather information on all your choices • Identify, evaluate, and compare your choices • Make your decision, develop a plan and get started • As time passes, evaluate your decision and readjust if necessary

  3. Intensity matrix page 46what do you think? • Is intimacy a goal for you? • Is it difficult for you to be intimate? • In what action realm (intellectual, physical, emotional) do you share intimacy most easily? • Which realm is most difficult?

  4. The American Myth of Love and Marriage • We Americans marry for love and who in the midst of falling in love is always reasonable? • Because Americans tend to believe the romantic myth, numerous marriages have little other than love going for them and the union dissolves because the couple has no basis on which to build a lasting relationship.

  5. The American Myth of Love and Marriage • Much of the confusion of about the myth of love as a basis for marriage has to do with how love is defined. • Does it mean the same to you as it does to me? • What is the difference between, loving, crushing, passion… all of it?

  6. Defining love • The ancient Greeks divided love into a number elements • Ludus (game playing love) • Storge (friendship love) • Mania (possessive dependent love) • Eros (physical sexual side of love) • Guess which types tend to produce negative consequences?

  7. Defining Love For the Greeks, the three most important types of love leading to more successful intimate relationships are: • Eros (carnal or physical love) • Agape (spiritual love) • Philos (brotherly or friendly love).

  8. Defining love • Philos, the love found in deep and enduring friendships is most important to society’s humanity • We need this connection with other people to create a successful society • Alienation • Crime • Isolation • Dehumanization

  9. Love is what you make it • We each define love for ourselves • In lasting relationships, the partners must come to a mutual understanding of what each means by love

  10. Love is what you make it • Intimate self disclosure- opening your self up can lead to getting hurt • Intimacy dilemma- love is always an adventure because danger is involved

  11. Love is what you make it • Indifference is the opposite of love • When hurt occurs the lover may react with hurt or hostility • However someone who just doesn’t care wasn’t in love

  12. Love is what you make it • The indifferent person exercises more control over the relationship. • Principle of least interest • The most loving person in the relationship is more vulnerable and, therefore, often goes to great lengths to placate and please his/her mate

  13. Love is what you make it • The concept of love has been feminized in America • Men vs. women • Lets talk about us vs. I provide for you • Women use sex to get love • Men use love to get sex

  14. Gender differences in love • Men are less willing to marry without being in love than are women • Once a woman commits herself, she tends to become more expressive than he is

  15. Gender differences in love • Women tend to take more time to love and commit themselves to a relationship than do men • Women generally seek emotional relationships, whereas men tend to initially seek physical relationships

  16. Theories of love • Brotherly love- friendship • Maternal love- unselfish interest in your partner, placing your self second • Mature love- all of that plus a sexual response

  17. Mature love 4 basic elements • Care • Responsibility • Respect • Knowledge

  18. The Wheel as a Model of Love

  19. The Wheel as a Model of Love • Stage 1 The Rapport Stage • Partners are struck by the feelings that they have known each other before. • They are comfortable with each other, and both want to deepen the relationship.

  20. The Wheel as a Model of Love • Stage 2 The Self-revelation Stage • The partners share more intimate feelings. • This deepens the relationship because such sharing is only done with special people.

  21. The Wheel as a Model of Love • Stage 2 The Self-revelation Stage • Self-disclosure is associated with increased commitment, mutual trust, and feelings of love. • Women are more likely than men to reveal their thoughts and feelings

  22. The Wheel as a Model of Love • Stage 3 Mutual Dependence • As sharing becomes more intimate, a feeling of mutual dependence develops.

  23. The Wheel as a Model of Love • Stage 3 Mutual Dependence • Falling in love provides a sense of very rapid expansion of the boundaries of self. There comes a feeling of loss when the partner is absent.

  24. The Wheel as a Model of Love • Stage 4 Intimacy • The partners experience more intimacy and need fulfillment as they deepen their relationship. • Emotional support • Sympathy

  25. Elements of Loveintimacy, passion and commitment • Nonlove: Absence of all three elements. • Liking: Intimacy without passion or commitment.

  26. Elements of Loveintimacy, passion and commitment • Infatuation: Passion without intimacy or commitment. • Romantic love: Intimacy and passion without commitment .

  27. Romantic Love • The confusion between romance and love causes great trouble in forming long-lasting intimate relationships • We often fall in love with our own romantic ideas about someone rather than the real person

  28. Romantic Love • Are you a romantic or a realist? • Let’s take the survey on page 70-71

  29. Romantic Love • Because romantic love is such an emotional arousal it is difficult to maintain • When a person confuses true love with romantic love you will constantly be disappointed

  30. Love versus like • It is probably more important to like someone than it is to love them if you are going to live together for an extended amount of time • It is easier to like and love someone you who makes you feel good

  31. Love versus like • What research tells us • Page 74-75

  32. Love • Falling in love is grand • Staying in love is hard work

  33. Companionship love • With time, the emotional excitement of passionate love tends to fade into a lower key emotional state of friendliness and a deep attachment • The fact that love changes over time makes it no less important

  34. Companionship love • If enduring love is to evolve from a passionate love, the relationship has to be nurtured

  35. Love in strong families • Many families take each other fro granted until something happens to upset their routine.

  36. Love in strong families • Respect and appreciation- you cannot appreciate if you do not respect • Vicious circle- a pattern of behavior in which negative behavior provokes a negative reaction, which in turn, prompts more negative behavior

  37. Unrealistic expectations • Many of the difficulties we experience in our interpersonal relationships stem from conflicting attitudes and unrealistic expectations rather than from specific behavior

  38. Socialization • The process of passing society’s values on to new members that begins at birth. • Talk about the girl in the cellar

  39. Developmental Stages • Self-Love Stage: Infancy and Early Childhood • Attachment to significant others • In order to love we must be loved

  40. Developmental Stages • Parental Identification Stage: Early and Middle Childhood • This is where children learn the masculine or feminine role that goes with their biological sex • Sex vs. gender

  41. Developmental Stages • Group Stage: Late Childhood and Preadolescence • Elementary school each groups sticks to themselves • Cooties?

  42. Developmental Stages • Heterosexual Adult Stage • Heightened awareness of the opposite sex and some knowledge of what love means and how to display it • Love map- guides you to fall in love with one person and not the other

  43. Jealousy • The state of being resentfully suspicious of a loved one’s behavior toward a suspected rival.

  44. Envy • Represents a discontent with oneself and/or desire for the possessions or attributes of another • Elicits more shame, longing, guilt, denial, and a sense of inferiority

  45. Quick Quiz

  46. 1. Love that includes intimacy and commitment without passion is • Familial Love • Companionate Love • Empty Love • Liking

  47. Answer: b • Companionate love is a strong bond that includes intimacy and commitment without passion.

  48. 2. The process of passing society’s values on to new members is • Coding • Modeling • Brainwashing • Socialization

  49. Answer: d • Socialization is the process of passing society’s values on to new members.

  50. 3. The Greek term for brotherly love is • Agape • Philos • Eros • Storge

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