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Considering Entering A Long Term Committed Relationship? Plan Ahead For A Smoother Journey

Before heading off on a long road trip, taking some time to plan out the best route often results in a smoother, safer ride to your destination. Long term committed relationships, whether that is moving in together or getting married, can also benefit from some pre-planning. Even if you have driven along the same route before, it can be worthwhile reflecting on your past experiences to make your new journey even better. Here are a few tips to help you on your way….

Identifying Potential Hazards

Just as you would identify potential hazards on the road, it is important to spend some time looking at potential problems in your relationship. This doesn’t mean that things won’t work out – it just means that you may need to take extra care at times. For example, one of you may have children and the other doesn’t. So when you are entering a long term commitment you may need to take extra care and special attention to building a relationship with the children as well as your partner. Or perhaps when there is a disagreement, the way that you interact with your partner doesn’t seem to resolve the matter. You may need to look at some strategies to ensure that you resolve conflict in a constructive manner. If you take some time to identify the areas in your relationship that could cause a bumpy ride and spend some time working together on resolving them, your journey should be smoother and more enjoyable.

Planning Refueling Pit Stops

All relationships need some pit stops. This is true whether you are entering a relationship, or whether you have been together for 20 years. Pit stops aren’t breaks from the relationship – they are times that you set aside just for the two of you to spend time together,. It’s about refueling the relationship with the things that a relationships needs – communication, trust, intimacy, honesty, respect, and fun. Life can be very demanding and we can sometimes take our partners for granted, especially if we have a job that takes us away from them for long periods of time. If you just keep driving and don’t plan some pit stops you could suffer relationship fatigue. Some ideas are: plan a short break like a weekend away; head out for dinner; find a babysitter if there are children involved and head to the movies. It doesn’t have to cost a lot of money but it does need to be quality time with just the two of you. How many ideas can you come up with?

Traveling At a Safe Speed

On our roads there is a speed limit which is essential for safe travel. When we are in a relationship, sometimes one partner might want to move a little faster than the other. For example, one partner might want to move in together after a few months of dating whereas the other might think that it is too soon. It is important to recognise the speed at which you want to travel and that this might not be the same as your partner. It is important to communicate around this and perhaps work towards a compromise which respects both partners’ wishes. After all, it is important that the journey is enjoyable and everyone arrives at the same destination happy!

At Relationships Australia, we offer relationship counselling and support to assist you and your partner to enjoy a smoother journey. Call 1300 364 277 to find your nearest Relationships Australia branch.

Parenting and co-parenting during difficult times

Just as individuals go through life transitions, so do relationships and families.  One of the most difficult transitions a family will face is separation.  Whilst not all families separate, the reality is that many children will experience at least one, if not more, family separations during their childhood. 

 

Research shows that most parents are able to work out arrangements in an amicable manner when they separate.  However, a percentage of parents find it more difficult to reach agreement.  This maybe due to the sometimes overwhelming emotions that are experienced during and after separation.  It is normal to feel grief, sadness, anger, bitterness, fear and other strong emotions.  Difficulties may also be due to feeling intimidated by the other parent and pressured to make certain decisions.

 

It can be useful during this time to see a counsellor.  A counsellor will be non-judgemental and can provide assistance with moving through the separation as smoothly as possible.  Terry says “Child and family counselling helped me through this difficult stage”

 

You may also require some practical assistance after separation.  If you need help making arrangements for the children, a mediator, or Family Dispute Resolution Practitioner, can help you.  Mediators are qualified professionals who assist families to come to an agreement about how to move forward.  Terry says “it was during my separation and disputes about our children when I most needed outside help. Family Dispute Resolution meant nothing to me until a mediator helped my ex-wife and I agree on parenting solutions that suited both of us.”  The mediator will ensure the both of you maintain a focus on the best interests of the children and what they need at this critical time. 

 

There are services available for children as well as parents and it maybe helpful for your child to participate in a group with other children from separated families so they do not feel so different and alone.  Counselling can also be useful for children to help them make sense of their situation and to provide them with coping strategies.  However, the thing that you can do which will help your children most of all is not to expose them to any conflict between the two of you and to maintain as much stability as possible.  Children who are exposed to parental conflict fare much worse, with potentially long-term consequences, than children who are not exposed.  Separation itself does not lead to difficulties for children, it’s the way you manage the separation that is important.

 

Families who experience difficulties with their child contact or changeover arrangements are able to use a Children’s Contact Service or CCS.  CCSs provide a safe and neutral environment where fully trained staff provide supervised contact or changeover, without parents having to actually meet.  CCSs encourage parents to eventually manage their own arrangements but provide an interim solution for the benefit of the children. 

 

It is normal for all or some members of the family to experience difficulties navigating separation.  Rather then struggle alone, it can be helpful to access services specifically designed to assist all family members.

The Gifts that Keep on Giving

Valentine’s Day is much-celebrated in Australia and its popularity is increasing by the year. Valentine’s Day is an opportunity to strengthen bonds of love with partners, family, friends or those we secretly admire.

This Valentine’s Day, as well as offering flowers and chocolates, we can bring other gifts to our relationship that continue to be appreciated throughout the year.

Dr Gary Chapman writes about the five love languages as a way for us to connect with our partners and create long-lasting, happy, stable relationships.

The love languages are:

Gifts – loving through giving and receiving

Acts of Service – loving through doing things for your partner.

Words of Affirmation – loving your partner by speaking positively.

Quality time – loving through valuing them and listening attentively.

Physical touch – loving through closeness and affection.

This might sound easy, but how do you identify your love language? Are you and your loved one speaking the same love language? More often than not, we prefer to express our affection in different ways, which can lead to misunderstanding and quarrels when what we get differs from what we want. We fail to recognise that our loved one is in fact expressing love in their language.

By learning to speak and understand each other’s love language, we enrich our relationship, communicate our love and feel loved in return.

Relationships Australia offers couples the opportunity to learn each other’s love languages and communicate in ways that enhance their relationship, through counselling and education.

Call Relationships Australia on 1300 364 277 or visit www.raq.org.au

Finding Your Work-Life Balance

One of the biggest challenges facing modern families is to maintain a healthy balance between work and home life. Covering basic living expenses can be challenging enough, without the additional pressure to keep up with the latest products, trends and luxuries. This can lead to pressure to earn more – working longer hours, taking on multiple jobs or seeking higher paid (and more demanding) employment. In one way or another, most families struggle to find a healthy balance between work and home life.

Under these types of pressures, parents may find it difficult to maintain a healthy relationship with their children and partner. In Saulwick’s (2003) survey, 58% of employees expressed that the pressure of work was detracting from their family and personal life; 54% said that work left them too tired to go out; and 33% of women said their work pressure was such that it left them sexually disinterested. These and related issues can create strain on family relationships.

Why is this phenomenon happening? A 2004 study by Breakspear and Hamilton found that families endure long hours in unsatisfying conditions to pursue the long-term dream of a ‘happy’ retirement / lifestyle later on. They called this the ‘Deferred Happiness Syndrome’.

The motivations for deferring happiness are various, but three major factors lead people to continue working even though they were unhappy or felt guilty for the time that they could not be spending with their children.
1. Growing aspirations for more expensive life style dominate some people’s lives. The desire to stay in this race often means longer, harder hours.
2. Some workers felt the need to accumulate as much as they can to prepare for retirement. Many participants expressed that they were concerned when it would come time for them to retire that the pension would not meet their need and that they would be on their own.
3. Some participants become fearful that if they change from their demanding jobs that there may be catastrophic consequences. This ideology often remains unchallenged until some crisis at work or home forces them to consider alternatives.

When people decide they no longer want to be driven by the Deferred Happiness Syndrome, research shows that downshifting, or a voluntary decision to change their lives in a way that reduces their incomes and spending is an alternative option. The most important reasons given for downshifting is to spend more time with family (35%), a desire for a healthier lifestyle (23%), more personal fulfilment (16%), and a more balanced lifestyle (16%).

However, for those who are not in a position to downshift right now, there are ways we can better manage our time and stress, to encourage a more balanced work/home life:
• Take some time out to relax
• Try and do a bit of exercise (great release of stress)
• Leave work at work. Do not try to take paperwork home. If you work from home, when it comes ‘knock-off time’ close the office door and don’t go back no matter how tempting
• Try to balance your diet and try not to eat too late in the evening. If heavy foods are eaten late, it can affect sleep.
• Make rituals with the children and partner – these rituals create a habit. For example, every Sunday you may develop the ritual of taking the children to the park.
• Learn to say ‘no’ to unreasonable demands at work. A bit of assertiveness can help you maintain a healthy work-life balance.

For more tips on creating a healthy work-life balance please contact Relationships Australia on 1300 364 277 or visitwww.raq.org.au to find your nearest Relationships Australia branch.

Feeling Flat? Could Be More Serious

Read over the following statements and answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ as they relate to your life.

  • Are you feeling fatigued, dejected, ‘down’?
  • Is every day an uphill battle?
  • Do you feel ‘numb’ and like a robot who is going through the motions?
  • Do you have trouble sleeping (when you get the chance) and then not want to get out of bed?
  • Do you think that nothing ever seems to work out; that there is no light at the end of the tunnel…..just work, the bills, the pressure to get the job done, and your partner and kids complaining that you are never around, and when you are that you never do enough and don’t do it right?
  • Are you eating too much and putting on weight, or wasting away because it’s too much effort and you’re not hungry anyway?
  • Is your concentration not what it used to be, your energy levels low and life generally looking bleak?

If you said ‘that’s me’ to several of the above, then it is possible you’re living with a condition that affects about a third of us at some time in our lives – depression.

At times, depression can seem to come from nowhere. Other times it may have been around for a long time and has just gotten worse. For some it can also be a reaction to any number of life events (such as a relationship breakdown, family problems, illness or a lack of sleep).

We also know depression can and does get better with the right treatment. It’s a good idea to seek help either through a visit to your doctor or through a session with a counsellor. Sometimes depression needs to be treated with medication, while at other times talking to a counsellor can help to put things into perspective and lift the dark cloud. Counselling can help you sort out what’s getting you down and to find ways to help you get back on top of things. Research shows that talking to a trained counsellor will make a positive difference.

When you are busy with work it can be difficult to find the time to get to either a doctor or a counsellor, but depression should not be left untreated for a prolonged period of time.

Sometimes simple things can make a difference. Here are some questions to think about.

  • When was the last time I took a couple of days off, had a decent sleep or spent some time with family?
  • How much longer can I keep doing what I’m doing the way things are now?
  • When did I last do something just for the fun of it?
  • If I’m doing this for my family, will they still be there for me when I get home?
  • Can I take some time off occasionally and still keep my head above water?
  • What do I like about what I do?
  • Are there things I used to enjoy doing that I don’t do anymore?
  • What do I want for the future?
  • What’s the worst thing that could happen if things continue the way they are going….and is it worth the risk?

Try to take a few moments every couple of weeks to reflect back on how you are feeling and what has been happening in your life. Don’t ignore danger signs. Help is available and just a phone call away.

To make an appointment with a trained professional, call Relationships Australia on 1300 364 277.

Supporting families recovering from disasters

The flood waters are slowly residing to reveal the extent of damage to property, personal belongings, and loved ones including pets.  Enormous loss is experienced on  all levels, for the individual, family and communities affected. Impacts of natural disasters are usually felt in two waves, the first is the physical impact of the task before us, the clean up, insurance claims, replacing property, grieving over lost items, photos, pets.
The first wave is generally a call to action, people busy themselves doing what they can to have a productive impact on recovering from the disaster.  The second wave is somewhat more complicated in that it normally hits once life starts to resemble normal once again, after the clean up is over, and life is functional again.  It is at this time that we slow down and the grief and loss catches up with us.  It is critical that we support ourselves and one another through both of these impact times.
Tips for managing immediately after the crisis:

  • Don’t be afraid to talk about how you are feeling
  • Physical productivity assists with the sense of moving forward and is therapeutic, but be careful no to overdo it
  • Don’t allow the clean up to consume you 24/7, take time for a conversation with a friend, or a walk or drive to change the scenery, even 5 minutes helps.
  • Remember to eat regularly, be mindful of sleeping patterns, and monitor alcohol consumption
  • Set yourself a reasonable ‘to do’ list each day
  • Accept help that is offered, don’t go it alone
  • Stay connected with family, friends, community supports

Tips for managing after things settle down:

  • Reflect positively on your achievements in pulling everything back together
  • Reflect on those family or friends or neighbours that helped out, also on what you have done or others
  • Continue to talk about the experience when you need to
  • This may be a good time to talk to someone with skills in the area, a local community counselling service can assist.

Long Distance Relationships: Keeping the Romance Alive

Couples involved in long distance relationships often face challenges unique to their situation. The questions are often asked: Can long distance relationships work? How can they work? and What stands in the way of a successful long distance relationship? There are many couples out there who are currently involved in fulfilling and functional, long distance relationships. Love can last despite the distance and here are a few things to consider:

Communication
• Effective communication – it’s vital for the success of any relationship, but even more so important for couples who do not see each other every day. Being clear about your expectations from the outset is important. Be clear about what it is that you expect from your partner and be clear about what you are willing and able to provide for your partner – consider the issues of support, intimacy, your physical and emotional availability and the roles you will both play in the relationship. Talk about these issues and if you and your partner have different expectations, so the cards are on the table allowing successful negotiation and compromise to occur.
• Utilise all forms of communication to stay feeling connected (letters, e-mails, web cams, phone calls, SMS). Think outside the box and be creative.
• Be available for your partner – talk about how often you will communicate, by what means, and who will initiate the contact.

Keeping the romance alive
• Value and make the most of the time that you do get to spend together. Enjoy spending time together, and remember to laugh and have fun together.
• If you have a weekend planned with your partner, ensure you have similar expectations as to how the time will be spent. If one of you expects a romantic weekend for just the two of you when the other has made plans for a social weekend with family and friends, conflict and/or disappointment is likely to result. By communicating and compromising, both partners can have their needs met from the time spent together.
• Be considerate and thoughtful – an email to say “Good Morning” , a small gift by post or a card / letter can send a very powerful message that “you are special to me”.

Support one and other
• Provide your partner with support even though you don’t see them everyday. The overall goal here is for your partner to know they have a special place in your heart and that you are there for them to help celebrate life’s little achievements and to support them through life’s disappointments.
• Be aware of what’s going on for your partner and share what’s going on for you. Is something happening at the moment for your partner requiring extra attention and encouragement from you ? (eg: job interview, medical issue, family issues). It’s easier to be there for your partner if you know what’s going on for them.
• Individuals may need to utilise and expand upon other support systems to access the face to face support there partner is unable to provide (family, friends, clubs and social activities)

Trust
• Trust is also very important – individuals who are faithful, act with integrity and feel safe in their relationships find it a lot easier to navigate through a long distance relationship. Discuss with your partner roles, boundaries and expectations. Be transparent, open and honest with each other.

Conflict resolution
• If there is an issue of disagreement or a problem that you and your partner need to work through, agree on a suitable time to talk things through. It might be best to avoid times when either you or partner are tired or stressed.
• Keep discussions involving conflict resolutions separate to the phone calls you utilise to have some quality couple time together.

Long distance relationships can be challenging – at times, one part of the couple can feel lonely and unsupported. It takes a special effort to make it work, but with good communication, trust and consideration for the other person’s feelings and needs, couples can survive the distance. Remember also that absence makes the heart grow fonder, resulting in the time couples do manage to spend together being exciting, fun, rewarding and emotionally fulfilling.

If you wish to speak with an experienced counsellor please call Relationships Australia on 1300 364 277 or visit www.raq.org.aufor more information.

New Year, New You

Here we are, all set to take on the New Year, including new challenges and New Year resolutions. We all start with good intentions, but as we are all aware, good intentions do not guarantee us the outcomes we want.

How can we stay on track and break old habits?

Remember when you were learning your times tables at school? Some people picked it up straight away; others took time to learn. Some days you may have got the answers right; other days it just did not click.

The same thing happens when we are trying to break an old habit.

Habits are learned. A habit might be nail biting, a poor exercise regime, smoking, interrupting people, or gambling, to name but a few. The one thing all habits have in common is that they are learned behaviours with short-term rewards and long-term costs.

The good thing about this is that just as habits are learned, they can also be unlearned.

Motivation to unlearn (or change) goes through a cycle of different stages:
• Thinking about changing
• Making a decision to change
• Acting on that decision
• Maintaining that action
• Then, either relapsing or exiting from the cycle and breaking the habit.

The most important step in breaking a habit is deciding that YOU want to change. If we are breaking a habit to please someone else rather than ourselves, it can be difficult to maintain the motivation to break the habit.

The next step is to carry out an accurate assessment of the problem through the process of self-monitoring. When does it happen? What are the precursors before the habit? What are the consequences? This self-assessment can lead to a greater understanding, greater control, and a baseline measure of frequency and severity.

From monitoring yourself, you can work out a plan of attack. It might consist of
• Changing what occurs before the habit. Assessment often shows that habits are related to particular situations or emotional states, for example hours of boredom may lead to overeating.
• Changing consequences. At the moment your habit is being maintained be aware of certain short-term consequences or ‘pay-offs’ – these need to be altered. Introduce a system of rewards and incentives to change the pay-offs, for example if you do not like yogurt, every time you have a cigarette have a teaspoon of natural yogurt.

A difficulty that arises when we are trying to break a habit is that we can start out all energised and confident we can stop the habit in its tracks. This is fine, but if we jump into the deep end, we may soon feel like we are sinking, as we do not have helpful coping strategies in place. One way to avoid feeling swamped is to set yourself reduction/increased targets and goals. For example, if you want to start exercising, set a goal to start off small then over time move to more exercise sessions per week. People who run marathons do not just one day get up and start running 42km at a time. They progressively work themselves to that level.

Another way to help you cope when breaking a habit is developing strategies. Try establishing a range of coping strategies that can be implemented when you are feeling particularly vulnerable to resorting to the behaviour. Draw up a list of activities that are incompatible with the habit and distract you from the urge. For example, drinking a glass of water instead of biting your nails, or talking to a friend instead of having a beer.

Working out a list of positive thoughts that you can say to yourself when feeling vulnerable can also help you cope. For example, “I don’t need a drink but I’d like one, if I can resist for the next hour, the urge will reduce”.

One final point is accepting setbacks. Do not be discouraged if you relapse. Relapses are a natural part of progress. Learn from them.

At Relationships Australia, we can assist you in planning for a smoother journey. Call 1300 364 277 or visit www.raq.org.au to find your nearest Relationships Australia branch.

Don’t Drive Angry!

There is a terrific line in the comedy classic ‘Groundhog Day’ where Bill Murray’s character (who feels invincible because he is ‘stuck’ in a day of his life that keeps repeating itself) allows himself to be driven by a groundhog – after getting in the car with the groundhog behind the wheel, he says to the groundhog ‘Don’t Drive Angry!’.

Of course in this instance those words were uttered for the sake of a comedic scene in a movie, but they hold some deep truth for when we get behind the wheel. For any road user, a simple road trip can quickly push the blood pressure sky high when someone in front is driving erratically.

We can also get in to a vehicle feeling angry after just having had an argument with someone. Carrying anger from outside to inside a vehicle can be explosive if we add a motoring incident to the mix. Being cut off by another motorist can take you from mild annoyance to an explosive rage if you have gotten behind the wheel while still angry.

Anger can impact our judgment and ability behind the wheel. It can make a good driver into an aggressive one very quickly, causing us to overreact when faced with an incident or a ‘near-miss’.

Here are a few tips on how to re-focus after an on-road incident to ensure that you ‘Don’t Drive Angry’:

DO

  • Take a deep breath. When we are tense or angry we tend to stop breathing (just for a few moments) or take very shallow breaths and this makes us more tense. So take a few deep, slow breaths and you can feel yourself start to relax.
  • Think happy thoughts. You can get your mind to switch to another emotional state by thinking of something that made you laugh or smile (think of your partner, children, pet).
  • Change a negative into a positive. Even though what may have just happened was life threatening or just plain dangerous, you can switch the incident around to a positive by saying things like ‘at least I am OK and haven’t been hit’, ‘at least I don’t drive like that’ or ‘I wouldn’t make that decision and annoy other drivers’.
  • Turn the radio on and switch stations until you find some light music or music that makes you sing along. This will improve your mood and switch your mind away from what has happened on the road.

DON’T

  • Retaliate. Yes, the person may need to sit another driving test, but perhaps they are having a bad day as well. Give them the benefit of the doubt and remember the times when you made some decisions that weren’t perhaps the most compliant to the road rules.
  • Keep replaying the event in your mind or talking about it with someone else in the truck. That will keep you angry and tense, which can impair your judgment behind the wheel. Instead, make a comment and then get on with the job of driving safely.
  • Store up the anger. When you get a chance, go for a quick walk or engage in some other healthy physical exertion (a quick swim, jog, kick a ball around) in order to get a physical release of the emotional energy that you are storing. It will help to get you calm again.

If all else fails, make sure you hire a copy of Groundhog Day and watch it so you can remember the scene where Punxsutawney Phil is driving and Bill Murray utters those words ‘Don’t Drive Angry’ – that way you can replay it in your mind every time something happens on the road and it will bring a smile to your face.

If you experiencing problems in your relationships and think that you may need to make some changes, please call Relationships Australia on 1300 364 277 or visit www.raq.org.au and we can arrange for you to talk to an experienced counsellor.

Managing Change

Life is full of ups and downs and we all make decisions on a daily basis that can impact on ourselves and others. Change is a common part of life for most of us. Sometimes change is welcomed, it is positive and leads to greater life satisfaction, other times, change can be difficult and can present a major challenge.

Change generally occurs for three reasons: choicecrisis or chance. For example:

• You might CHOOSE to not work on weekends and spend more time with the family,
• A CRISIS might force you to sacrifice a overseas holiday you had been planning for, or you might need to look at cutting the costs to a holiday closer to home,
• With CHANCE the opportunity of a lifetime might present itself, however scary you might jump on board.

How we manage this change depends on the person we are, the options we have, which type of change it is and how many other changes have happened in our lives. The reality is that some people adapt to change easily, some people get stuck and others can act like they are dragging both feet.

How we manage change can also depend on how the family we grew up in dealt with change, our personality, our previous experiences with change, and the resources we can access. Often it can be interesting to just stop and think about how our parents dealt with change and see if we do the same thing.

 

What happens when we make change?

According to research (Prochaska, 1994), change happens over five stages, but people rarely go from the first stage to the last stage without going back:

1st stage, precontemplation – no intention of changing, often deny change would be beneficial. Basically, your often not aware there is a problem and that you need to change anything.
2nd stage, contemplation – acknowledges problem and begins to think about doing something. Real action is in the future – sometimes get stuck here. Sometimes the problem can seem too difficult and therefore change may seem impossible.
3rd stage, preparation – plan of action, specific commitment to change. May still have mixed feelings – relapse may happen. You may need to divide the change into steps, so that you have mini-goals which support the overall goal to change.
4th stage, action – change happens in behaviour and environment. In this stage you need support to keep the change in place.
5th stage, maintenance – consolidation, without a strong commitment to maintenance relapse to 1st or 2nd stage is likely. Unless you understand the problems and why it is important to make the change it is difficult to change any behaviour.

Example:

Pam 36yrs came to us because she had difficult communicating with her mother without getting into an argument. Pam felt her mother always tried to tell her how to care for her new born baby and would get angry if Pam would not follow her instructions. This often spilled over into her relationships with friends and her partner who were upset that her relationship with her mother caused her so much distress. Pam knew things had to change as she wanted a good relationship with her mother and was now avoiding speaking to her to avoid any arguments. The prospect of change seemed like an impossibility to Pam as she had been in the same pattern with her mother since childhood and knew she could not change her mother.
Pam with the help of her counsellor started to look at this problem differently, she looked at how she could take little steps to change how she communicated with her mother. Over time she gradually changed how she was communicating with her mother and this helped to change how her mother communicated with her. It was a difficult process and sometimes when she was not quite herself things slipped back into the old style. Overall she was able to manage this change in a way that benefited herself, her mother and her relationships with family and friends.

Tips for Managing Change

When attempting to make changes there are some key strategies which can make it easier. These include:

Being Aware – what am I thinking, feeling, hearing and what am I saying to myself when things are good and not so good.
Getting Support – everyone need supports, friends and family are great, but sometimes you need to link in with other supports such as a counsellor who can be objective about the issue.
Self Care – like they say on aeroplanes, make sure you fix your mask before you help others. It is critical to any change to make sure you are caring for yourself, emotionally and physically. Simply things like: getting enough sleep, a healthy diet, some time out for relaxation or pleasure, connecting with people you care about, can make all the difference.
Good communication – Leaning how to effectively communicate how you feel and how you would like to be treated in any relationship is important to feeling valued and respected.
Being Objective – there are many things that we cannot control or change, instead we can focus on ourselves in our own world, avoid blaming, but instead identity our part of the problem and what we can change.

Things to watch out for

When change occurs because of a crisis which is out of our control there are certain things we may need to avoid or be aware of so we can ask for extra help if necessary. Sometimes the stress associated with this kind of change can become chronic, and affect our physical and mental health. Feelings of depression and despair are common and not a sign of failure. Other behaviours to be wary of include:

• An increase in the amount of alcohol or other abusive substances.
• Not getting enough sleep, or sleeping too much.
• Feeling irritable, agitated, mood swings or on edge.
• Suicidal thoughts.
• Poor concentration maybe resulting in accidents.
• Poor eating habits.
• Becoming more aggressive, restless.

Making a Change

Finally it is important to acknowledge everyone changes at different paces, and so we do not set ourselves up for failure we need to also consider:

Safety: to feel secure before starting something new
Goals : to start small and be specific
Age: although it is more difficult to make changes and adapt as you get older, it is also often difficult to commit to change for people who are younger.
Time: Sometimes it takes longer to break old habits, persistence is the key to any change.
Attitude: What your thinking and your belief in yourself and your ability to change is very important to the change process

If you experiencing problems in your relationships and think that you may need to make some changes, please call Relationships Australia on 1300 364 277 or visit www.raq.org.au and we can arrange for you to talk to an experienced counsellor.