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Monday, October 26, 2009

STOP TRYING TO FIX PEOPLE

Hi,  I just want to share with you this article by Bo Sanchez.  It's really nice and somewhat enlightens me to accept the people I love just the way they are... I know it's quite long but it's worth reading it... Have fun ^_^





STOP TRYING TO FIX PEOPLE
 
You know what our monstrous mistake is?
We try to fix the people in our life.
Oh, I see it everywhere.
Everywhere I go, I see people complain about the people in their life.
Wives complain about their husbands.
"Bo, please talk to my husband. He eats too much."
"Bo, can you help me? My husband watches too much TV."
One frustrated wife told me, "Bo, please advice my husband. He doesn't have a one romantic bone in his body. Last year, he gave me a bar of soap for Valentines Day. The brand? Mr. Clean."
But husbands complain about their wives too.
"Bo, please talk to my wife. She's gastadora." (spends too much)

"Bo, help me with my wife. My wife is always hysterical and historical. She remembers all my past mistakes, including date, time, and place."
One husband told me, "My wife is so talkative. If the universe paid 1 centavo for every word she said, I'll be the richest man in the world today."
Another man said, "My wife is always angry. When she's angry, she causes global warming and the melting of the ice caps in the North Pole."
Parents complain about their kids too.
"My kids are too messy."
"My kids can't focus on their studies."
One mother said, "My kids are so lazy. If given a chance, they'll ask someone to breathe for them."
And everywhere I go, I also hear many kids ask me to fix their parents.
"My parents are too strict."
"My parents are too corny."
"My parents are too kuripot."
One girl told me, "They allow me to swim only if I wear a long gown."
All over the world, people want to fix people.
Let me tell you why...
Are You Sick Of Comparisonitis?
First of all, you want to fix people because you love them.
But sometimes, our motives aren't pure. Sometimes, we want to fix our loved ones because of shame. We're ashamed of what other people will say about our kids, our siblings, our spouses, and our parents.
 
Another reason of our "fixing other people" tendencies is we're afflicted with the disease called comparisonitis.
Humans like to look to the other side of the fence to see if it's greener.
Someone told me that marriage is like going to a restaurant. After you ordered your dish, you learn what the other table ordered, and suddenly regret what you ordered.
 
Believe me, this urge to compare causes so much misery in marriages.
If you always compare your wife's body with Beyonce or Angel Locsin, she can't compete. Or if you compare your husband's salary with Manny Paquiao's earnings, he can't compete.
         
Many times, we compare our spouse to someone who doesn't exist. For example, we fantasize about Hollywood stars who aren't real. Because all their blemishes were removed by photoshop and a huge PR company.
Even the pretty officemate who seems so gorgeous on the outside may actually be your worst nightmare the moment you live with her.  You really don't fall in love with her. You fall in love with a projection of how you imagine her to be.
Even parents are guilty of this.

Motivate Your Kids In Other Ways

          We have a tendency to compare our kids with other kids.
          We even verbally share our comparisons in the hopes of motivating him.
          I overheard one mother tell her little boy, "Junior, why can't you get good grades like your sister? She gets straight A's in all subjects. But you're highest grades are Recess and Lunch."
          Parents compare their kids to their classmates, their cousins, and even to themselves when they were young. Their sermons begin with this famous line: "When I was young, I wasn't like you..."
Kids cannot flourish in an environment where they are being judged. Kids flourish in an environment of appreciation. They need to know that their parents accept them for their uniqueness.
Parents, stop comparing!
And there's also another disease that causes us to fix people.
 
The Virus of Criticalitis
          I've met people who have a strong critical spirit in them.
          I pity them so much. Once afflicted, they become very miserable people.
These people think God created them to criticize others. All day long, they look for the faults of the people around them.
          But behind this critical spirit towards others is really a critical spirit toward oneself. In fact, the critic pulls down others so that he can hide his own failures.
          Let me now tell you what you should do.
 
Question: Do You Want Less Stress and More Joy?
          Do you want less stress in your relationships?
          Do you want less fights?
          Do you want less wrinkles?
          Do you want more joy?
          My solution is really simple: Stop trying to fix others.
 
Big clarification: In my message today, I'm not talking about the big sins. Like marital abuse, alcoholism, adultery, and all the other major violations against the Ten Commandments. I'm also not talking about tolerating the sins of your kids. I'm not teaching you to say, "Wow son, you're very good in stealing. Perhaps you can be a Congressman one day." (I'll talk on "tough love" on the sixth installment of this series, Relationship Reborn.
 
Today, I'm talking about idiosyncrasies, eccentricities, personalities, and persuasions that make your loved one very unique.
If you're not going to fix people, what should you do?
Appreciate them.
          I'll now explain a mystery.

What You Like And What You Don't Like
Maybe One And The Same Thing
I have mixed feelings about my cellphone.
My relationship with my phone is ambivalent.
I like it and I don't like it.
There are days when I think it's the greatest invention since peanut butter. And there are days when I want to fling it into the mouth of a volcano.
Here's what I noticed: The very features that I like are the very same features that I don't like. Absurd but true.
Why do I like my phone? I like the fact that I can call up the 954 people in my phone directory anytime. Useful when I have a flat tire, when I need a prayer, or when I'm on the rooftop because of Typhoon Ondoy.
Why do I not like my phone? I don't like the fact that these 954 people can call me up at anytime-even when I'm lying on a hammock in a tiny island far out in the Pacific Ocean .
Why do I like my phone? Because I can bring it everywhere I go.
Why do I not like my phone? Because I can bring it everywhere I go!
 
Question: Have you ever had the absurd experience of leaving your cellphone at home and having to make a U-turn to come back for it? Nuts, right? Cellphones are now like one of our kidneys. You can still survive if it gets lost, but it'll be risky.
I repeat: The very things that I like are the very same things that I don't like.
Funny, but this is also true with our relationships...
 
Why Did You Fall In Love?
          Don't be shocked, but the very thing that made you crazy for a person will be the very same thing that will drive you crazy in the years to come.
          I'm not kidding.
          If you fell in love with your wife because she was bubbly and the life of the party, today, you want to zip her mouth so that there would be world peace.
          If you fell in love with your husband because he was quiet, strong, and steady as a rock, today, you want to curse him for being so cold and unresponsive-like you're talking to a rock.
          If you fell in love with your wife because of her stunning beauty, today, you find yourself pulling your hair in the car, waiting for her because she takes 3 hours just to dress up and put on her make-up.
          Remember: Every strength has a weakness.
          My friend Jon Escoto says that "a weakness is really a strength applied inappropriately." (As another friend loves to say, "You're right in the wrong way!") You can't have only one side of the coin. You have to have both.
 
Why My Wife Married Me
One day, I had a very serious talk with my wife.
"Sweetheart, I want you to be completely honest with me," I said to her. "Aside from the fact that I look like John Loyd and Piolo Pascual put together, what else made you marry me?"
After laughing out loud and rolling on the floor, she finally said, "Sorry Bo, your looks weren't the reason why I married you. I married you because you have such a big heart for God."
But I bet if you ask her today, "Marowe, what are the difficulties of being married to Bo?" she'll tell you, "Because Bo has such a big heart for God!"
She will explain to you, "Our schedule isn't normal. Our entire married life isn't normal. Bo runs 9 non-profit organizations. He's constantly stretched. He travels a lot." She's accepted that as her lot in life.
 
Here's something she's also accepted: When we have our weekly dates, she already expects it to be interrupted. Many times, a total stranger would approach me, cry on my shoulder, and ask for prayer.   In the middle of the busy mall, I hold an instant mini-healing rally-because the moment people see me praying for one person, people fall in line.
She's come to accept this reality as part of the set package called Bo Sanchez.
She's accepted the fact that when she married me, she also married the people I love-the flock I care for.
Why am I telling you all these?


Stop Trying To Fix People
To repeat my million-dollar point: If you want to have happy relationships, you'll have to stop trying to fix people and start appreciating them.
Jesus said, "Love your neighbor"; He didn't say, "Fix your neighbor."
Two reasons why you need to stop fixing people. 
 
First, you can't. 
Second, I've realized that people are like old houses. If one thing gets fixed, another thing gets broken. 
Let me tell you what I mean by appreciate.
 
Two Levels Of Acceptance
          The first level of acceptance is tolerance. 
The second level is appreciation. 
          Let me tell you a story.
Jean came up to me one day and said, "Bo, can I share something with you? My story might help women you talk to."
Jean said that her husband is addicted to watching basketball. She told me that it drove her insane. "Brother Bo, there was a time when his passion for watching basketball made me so angry. I would nag him, I would throw pots and pans in his direction, I would hide the TV remote control-just so he can't watch."
She told him, "I think basketball has become your god. And the churches you attend are NBA, PBA, PBL, NCAA, and UAAP. All you talk about is basketball." And her husband would answer back, "Foul yan."
"But after a couple of years," Jean said, "I just gave up. I realized that nothing was going to happen. That he will never change."
That was the day when Jean began to tolerate her husband's passion for basketball. Whenever she saw him sitting in front of the TV watching a game, she felt less irritation in her heart.
         
But one day, Jean had a bigger epiphany. 
That fateful morning, Jean's best friend called her up crying hysterically on the phone. Through many tears, she said that she discovered her husband was having an affair. After an hour of trying to comfort her, Jean's friend said, "I wish my husband was like your husband, Jean-so faithful to you."
 
That one sentence was like a slap on her face.
She woke up.
Jean realized she was blind to the great blessing that her husband was to her.
Because she was so focused on his basketball addiction, she never appreciated how faithful her husband was to her. 
She also began to count the many ways he was a wonderful husband: He was hard-working, he loved the kids, he went with her to her prayer meetings, and he was sweet in his own manly, clumsy way.
 
Today, she sometimes joins him watching basketball. 
She still doesn't appreciate the game. She told her husband once, "Why don't they just give one ball to each team?" But she enjoys being with her wonderful husband now.
That day, Jean moved from tolerance to appreciation.
And that was the day her marriage became very happy.
 
Are You A Judge Or A Painter?
What I'm sharing with you is so earth-shaking, I should be charging you a million for divulging this secret to you.
Believe me, if you apply this secret into your life, you will change your entire life-radically. You'll have less stress. You'll have less fights. You'll have more peace.   You'll be more joyful. You'll feel and look younger by ten years.
 
It was Dr. James Dobson who said that before you get married, you should have both eyes wide open. But after the marriage ceremony, close one eye.
What does he mean? Before you get married, you should be very careful in evaluating your future spouse. Check everything. Values. Background. Preferences. Reactions. Beliefs. Examine everything!
But when you get married, stop evaluating. Stop critiquing.
It's now time to stop fixing the other person and start appreciating the entire person in his totality.
Remove the robes of the courtroom judge. Instead, put on the robes of a painter capturing the beauty of a scene. An artist simply accepts what is and nurtures a gratitude for what is there.
 
When you accept the other person and become grateful for him, a great miracle happens: The person learns to accept himself too and thus bring healing of his Heart Wound. Changes begin to take place spontaneously.
          You can never fix anyone.
          Because fixing is an inside job. Never forced from the outside.
          Yes, you should inspire. You should guide. You should teach. But you cannot force.
          At the end of the day, the only thing you can do is to love the person by creating space for the other person to fix himself.
 
Your Assignment
One of the ways to show gratitude is to simply say it.
Here's your assignment for this session: Go to 1, 2, or 3 people in your life and thank them for the blessing that they are to you. 
Be specific. Write them a letter of gratitude. 
Thank your wife for the small things she does for you. 
Thank your husband for going to work everyday.
Thank your mother for the way she serves you.
Thank your child for being a wonderful child.
The next time a loved one presses your clothes, or takes out the trash, or fixes the car, or takes care of the baby, appreciate them in your heart and in your words.
          I promise: Gratitude will be like oil in the engine of your relationship.
          Your relationship will function in a whole new level.
 
Final Story:
"I Love The Perfection Of Your Imperfections."
          Let me end with one of my favorite stories.
          One day, a wife came to her husband with a magazine in her hand, "Darling, this article is wonderful. It describes a little activity that we can both do to improve our marriage. Can we do it together?"
          "Sure," her husband said.
          "It says here that for one day, each of us will separately write a list of what areas we want the other to change. Little annoyances, little irritations, etc. And then tomorrow, we share this list to each other. Deal?"
          "Deal!" the husband smiled.
          That day, the man sat on the living room with paper and hand. The wife went to the bedroom and did the same thing.
          The next day, over breakfast, the wife said, "Game? Can I start first?"
          "Yes," the husband said.
         
The wife pulled out three pages. Single spaced. Font 8. It was a long list. She began to read her list. "Darling, I don't like it when you do this..." On and on, she read the little ways her husbands annoyed her.
          The man felt a sting in his heart. The wife noticed this and asked, "Do you want me to continue?"
          "I can handle it. Go on," the man said.
          So the wife continued to read.
          Finally, the woman said, "Okay, it's your turn."
         
The husband pulled out his piece of paper and said, "Yesterday, I asked the question what are the changes I want in you. But hard as I tried to think, I couldn't think of one thing." He then showed to her the empty piece of paper in his hand. "Because to me, you're perfect in your imperfections.   I've accepted who you are-strengths and weaknesses. And I love the whole package. I love the mix. You are a wonderful person and I love you so much."
          The wife began to sob, rolled up her three pages in her hand, and beat her husband on the head and hugged him tight for a very long time.
         
May your dreams come true,
          Bo Sanchez

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow :)


Wow it’s snowing!  Believe it or not, I’m happy to see snow again. Hmmm…  I know something is different with me.  Last January, I never felt any excitement seeing the snow even it was the first time I experienced it. Maybe that's what they call culture shock.

 Now, it’s completely different… I can't say I'm fully adjusted but whatever happened to me, I hope this feeling will never fade until the snow went away.  And here's my favourite song when it snows :)


Oh the weather outside is frightful,
But the fire is so delightful,
And since we've no place to go,
Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!

It doesn't show signs of Pauseping,
And I've bought some corn for popping,
The lights are turned way down low,
Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!

When we finally kiss goodnight,
How I'll hate going out in the storm!
But if you'll really hold me tight,
All the way home I'll be warm.

The fire is slowly dying,
And, my dear, we're still good-bying,
But as long as you love me so,
Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!
 

 

^_^




Sunday, October 11, 2009

Happy Thanksgiving :)

 


This is the first time that I am going to spend Thanksgiving holiday for real.  Even though there’s no thanksgiving holiday in the Philippines my family and I thank God during New Year's Eve for all of the blessings we received throughout the year.  


I have so many things that I have to thank for this year…


It was January when I got here in Canada, it is the peak of the snow and most of the headlines during that time were all about plane crash, I am thankful that we arrived here safely.  Also,  I am very grateful that my husband and I are finally together ^__^



February, I terribly missed home. 
I missed my friends, my lifestyle and most of all I missed my family specially my dad.  I know that when I got here in Canada I have to get out from my comfort zone. Leaving my dad is the hardest part. I promised mom before she passed away that I will never leave him…  I keep that promise and I’m determined to take my dad here as soon as possible whether he likes it or not. ^_^
I’m not only adjusting to this country, I’m also adjusting to married life.   
Moreover, I’m desperate to get a job that I want.  I had several interviews but didn’t make it.   shoot! Is it the recession or is it just me??? :'(
Despite of the challenges I am thankful my husband and his family are very supportive to me. And I am so thankful that dad is doing fine w/our relatives and his friends who are there to accompany him.
 March- Yey! I got a job, even if it is not my dream job at least I have some earnings and I’m gaining Canadian experience.
But my hubby got laid off (oh no! Is this a cursed???)  Our dream of buying a home was vanished. :(
Still, I am thankful we had the courage to face that problem and I know our relationship grew stronger. 
April- My brother in Singapore was laid off too! Noooo! Sobbed… sobbed… sobbed… I felt sorry for him.  I don’t know what’s happening in the world.  With the expensive cost of living in Singapore it would be difficult for him to survive.   Still, God loves him. I am thankful he got his separation pay, I have a job and dad’s business is running smoothly.  Dad and I can send him his allowance if ever he ran out of cash. And thank God his girlfriend is there to comfort him.    
May-June - There’s a good effect of my husband being unemployed.  We spent so much time together, I felt so pampered, he accompany me everywhere I needed to go and I was pretty sure the government will grant my funding for my Accounting bridging program J I am thankful for the quality time I spent with my husband…Does it mean I’m thankful he doesn’t have a  job??? Hmmmm
July – Woohooo!!! My brother got a job again and it is a better and higher position in engineering.   I was worried he couldn’t make it because of the economic crisis.   Praise God.  
 August - Yehey!  I was accepted in the Accounting program…It was really hard to start at first knowing there’s a test in accounting, English test and panel interview.  But I made it and I am so thankful for that.   
September - I started my school, it was fun I learned a lot everyday, I met different people and the best part is that I’m studying for free.  All I need to pay is some portion of my books…. Thank God for the opportunity of studying and my hubby drops me to school everyday.
October - My husband was offered a job.  Wow! It’s a mixed emotion.  I don’t know if I’m happy or sad.  I’m glad to see him happy but surely things will be different.  He’s going to spend less time with me, I need to wake up early because he can’t drop me to school anymore and I’m pretty sure I will pay for my tuition fee.  However, we prayed for this job.
So, I am thankful my husband finally got a job. I hope this is the start to save again for our dream house. 
I can’t believe a lot of things happened.  One thing I realized, certain things good and bad happens for a reason.  It was hard for me to accept all the trials as it is, but I didn’t give up.  I trust God and he didn’t forsake me. This thanksgiving I want to thank God not only for the blessings I received but also for all of the trials that passing by because I know He is just moulding me to become a better person.   ^_^    

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Summer Lovin' :)

Summer is over and I'm glad I made the most of it.  Way back in Philippines, I spent summer in one or two travels... Going to the beach is my favourite after that I'm done, I just want to stay at home and spend my time with my family and friends nearby.  Despite of my laziness traveling, my husband takes me wherever he goes.

June was the month when I experienced camping almost every week.  It was nice. I love the nature and the barbequed marshmallow. I haven't set up a tent in my whole life and it is a good thing to experience that.  But the cold nights, sleeping at a sleeping bag isn't fun at all.:(



Last July we went to Banff, it is such a nice place, the mountains and lakes are perfect. I wish I could go back there for winter to try ski.





Also, this summer I had a chance to play paintball although most of the time I'm just hiding so I won’t hit by anyone. Moreover, my husband taught me how to play golf and tennis.  We also play badminton, biking at Hawrelak Park and enjoy walking at legislature.






Just this September we went to Vancouver, we drive there for fifteen hours but it is worth it, that city is amazing.  I found out that there's a nice weather in Vancouver, it is rare to have a snow there unlike here in Edmonton.

Now it is certainly fall, I'm glad I had a chance to go to some of the nice places in Canada.  I definitely enjoy this summer but what makes it more special is the quality time I spent with my husband that I will cherish forever.




Thursday, September 17, 2009

My friend Cathy

I found everything in Cathy what I like most in a friend. She listens when I have problems and gives me a good advice. She never fails to be my shoulder to cry on and never leave my side until I am feeling well. Our friendship started when we both work at the accounting department, we worked together as a team, and we learned to depend to one another. Since we enjoy each others company we are still together even outside the office. Cathy and I love to hang out to the mall, eat dinner and enjoy watching movies. I am so lucky to have a friend like her who is willing to listen and someone I can lean on.