Mid-Life Crisis or Male
Menopause?
Published 07/05/2006 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
Okay
guys, we see it in men everywhere. We hit middle age and there is a nearly
irresistible pull to put a charge back in your world. It can take many
forms, some healthy while some destructive. For some men it’s a motorcycle
or sports car, an urge for adventure or the compelling illusion that a hot
younger babe is going to turn back your biological clock. Or the symptoms
are more internalized such as: increased irritability, sexual dysfunction,
loss of interest in life’s pleasures or a diminished sense of drive and
purpose.
When such a profile
presents in a therapist’s office, a critical question is raised clinically.
To what extent does this profile have a psychological or a biological basis?
Resilience Takes "Center
Stage"
Published 11/01/2005 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
A significant shift is
taking place in the training of mental health professionals. Rather than a
focus on defining pathology, which is an unhealthy behavior response to a
situation, research is being directed toward learning what makes people
better able to prevail over life’s challenges. With the terrorist attacks
of 9/11 and now people struggling with the aftermath of the hurricane
disasters, the term, resilience is taking center stage as we witness
together how people cope with loss.
Resilience is the ability
to maintain flexibility when going through what can be difficult times at
any stage in your life or the lives of others. In a resiliency training
presentation I recently gave for a government agency, people spoke of the
losses they have faced and the resources they brought to bear in an attempt
to make sense of these events on their lives. Magellan Behavioral Health, a
leading provider of mental health care, researched and designed the
program. Evidence abounds that ordinary people can reach inside and
uncover an extraordinary adaptability and emotional strength in a crisis
while others are helplessly overwhelmed. It is becoming increasingly
apparent that resilience can be learned and developed as any other skill.
New brain research looks at
mind-body link
Published 06/14/2005 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
Exciting developments are taking place as a new wave of research highlights
the links between the brain and body. Preserving and improving our brain
functioning, and its connection to our memory and emotional and physical
health, is much more under our control than previously thought.
Dramatic evidence of how this research can benefit us is being shown through
colorful pictures called SPECT Scans (Single Photon Emission Computed
Tomography), which vividly show parts of the brain lighting up with
electrical or biochemical activity. Regions of the brain that are
under-functioning or damaged are clearly evident. The scan shows how a
living brain works.
A man without a magazine
Published 04/04/2005 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
A middle-aged executive has
a depressing realization while browsing though an airport newsstand waiting
for a flight. Despite the plethora of magazine titles, everything from
sports to extreme sports to cooking, model trains, coin collecting
antiquing, hunting and gun world magazine, not one interested him. For this
man, the significance of his realization centered on how his life has been
out of balance. For him work and achievement had become the centerpiece of
his world. Like many of us guys, he is living the script sold to us during
our growing up years, which dictates what it means to be a man. So much of
his focus is on being the breadwinner that he has lost touch with the joy
and passion in his life. This is a frustration that characterizes men and
how we were socialized, to find meaning in life from achievement alone.
For this forty-something
executive, the frustration is amplified by having peaked in his climb of the
corporate ladder. He used the image of the old twenty-mule team Borax
advertisement with its picture of the covered wagon being pulled by a team
of mules. In the corporate world, he explained, you’re either in the wagon
or you’re one of the mules. Evidently, he thought that by this time in his
career, he would be riding in the wagon. Instead, he is laboring with the
other mules. Is this man’s experience common to others American males?
The evidence points to a resounding yes.
Don't just do something, stand
there
Published 02/16/2005 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror;
Originally published 07/16/2003
There
is a curious irony about marriage. It seems that women want their husbands
to change while men want their wives to stay the same. While I repeatedly
hear men long for the way their wives used to treat them, I hear women say
how their clueless husbands need to change and become more thoughtful or
caring or understanding. So this is an article for men.
As an
overview of the problem for men, this is how the marital dance step goes.
She wants him to change. He tries more of what he always has done. She’s
not satisfied. He starts feeling like can’t do anything right anymore, so
why try. He withdraws into his “cave” which can be sports, work, TV or
beer. Things get worse as she gets more hopeless about getting her
emotional needs met and he experiences himself as more inadequate. She
turns up the volume on nagging him and the dance then turns into a tailspin
for the couple. At its worst, a crisis erupts in the form of an affair,
sickness, DUI or a violent episode. Let’s name this pathology, the dance of
the wild woman and the passive man. Both parties end up hating their own
behavior.
Coaching for Life:
The power of group therapy
Published 12/14/2004 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
For the past
three and a half years I have witnessed an unfolding miracle that has taken
place weekly among a group of women ranging in age from 31 to 45 years. Over
this time, a group of strangers has welded themselves into a team whose
members are dedicated to their mutual personal growth, satisfaction and
empowerment. For this group of women, these are not simply empty concepts
but represent a core of learning that has had a transforming effect on their
lives. They have laughed together and cried together as they have faced
threats to their marriages and their health.
While there is much written and shown on screen about
individual psychotherapy, the power and value of groups as a therapy format
have been surprisingly unannounced.
Coaching for Life:
Bonds between battered women and violent men
Published 11/09/2004 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
This is a
controversial subject. For women, the painful realities of domestic violence
trigger a primal outrage and survival response. Men, on the other hand,
experience themselves as “set up.” The dance in which a violent couple engages
churns up a profound and gut-wrenching inadequacy for men. Violence then
becomes a wholly inappropriate and destructive attempt to make the pain stop.
Domestic violence is much more widespread than believed, partly
because of the shame surrounding spousal abuse. Couples and families will go
to great lengths to hide violence from outsiders. It is the couple who
presents the squeaky clean image to the community that struggles with the
shame of domestic violence. This shroud of secrecy and anguish prevents
families from getting treatment and distorts community statistics on the
problem.
Coaching for Life: Anger relationships and health: Part II
Published 07/29/2004 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
I would like to
invite you to look at anger differently. While most of us regard angry
feelings as bad and something to be avoided, there is much to be gained from
learning to give and receive anger. Couples and families who have developed
resources to productively talk over resentments, annoyances and behaviors that
trigger angry feelings are stronger and come to relationships more
competently. This may be so because they accept a broader range of what it
means to be human. Learning to “do anger” also conveys mutual respect. It
avoids the harmful and undermining indirect expressions of anger that lead to
more trouble in the form of unresolved conflict and buried resentments. When
the only outlets for anger are indirect or shadowy, the resulting undercurrent
of tension can eat away at relationships. It is this “slow burn” anger that is
so damaging to our health.
If the only
outlets for anger are indirect, then physical, emotional and behavioral
symptoms destructively become the language of our anger.
Coaching for Life: Anger
relationships and health: Part I
Published 06/08/2004 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
Even though
our anger is the first emotion we experience as infants, it is the last we learn
to manage effectively as adults. Internalized and misdirected anger is at the
root of many health, behavioral and relationship problems. Yet most of us spend
a lifetime denying, suppressing, avoiding, displacing, projecting or
anesthetizing our anger with alcohol or drugs.
So it makes
sense to pause and reflect on our style of expressing or internalizing our
anger, and its effect on our lives and health.
The silent scream: Teens who cut themselves
Published 03/02/2004 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
There has been an
increase in the number of teens who self-mutilate, and hardly anyone is
talking about it. Some young people usually beginning at age 15 seek to
relieve tension by putting a blade to their arms or legs and making repeated
slices in their skin.
These lacerations
are deep with significant bleeding and are often deliberately hidden by
clothing.
Coaching for life: Clues about life
satisfaction
Published 02/23/2004 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
My
16-year-old son, Peter, has designed a behavioral science research project
that touches on a profound question: "What makes people happy in life?"
He invited
people over 60 to comment in a questionnaire on the degree to which they are
satisfied with their lives. The questionnaire evaluates life satisfaction in
relation to a variety of factors, including wealth, health, history of
addictions, marriage and career, and prayer.
The Affair: Marriage’s weapon of mass
destruction
Published 12/09/2003 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
Infidelity
strikes at the jugular vein of a marriage, violating the fundamental trust
that a couple holds sacred. The psychological and emotional impact of an
affair can be devastating.
In my experience
as a marital therapist, an affair can either drive a stake through the heart
of a marriage or lead to a growth crisis that can ultimately strengthen the
union between two people. Whichever way it goes, an affair thrusts a couple on
a risky and unpredictable white-water rafting trip driven by dangerous
emotional crosscurrents.
Panic disorder mimics heart attack
Published 04/29/2003 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
The attack comes
without warning. A person may be online buying groceries, sitting in a movie
theater or asleep in bed, when suddenly chest pains, difficulty breathing and
a pervasive sense of impending death grips him or her.
The person may
experience weakness in the legs and tingling or tightness in the arms -- other
telling signs of a heart attack. But when the individual seeks urgent medical
care, the nightmare may become even worse.
Helping young adults make career choices
Published 03/26/2004 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
How we earn a
living is a crucial determining factor for satisfaction or frustration in
life. Yet the process that leads most of us to decisions about work and career
are far from clear and deliberate.
More commonly, we
make educational or career decisions based on what our families expect or
based on notions about ourselves and the work world that are fuzzy and not
well thought through. The cost of mistakes can be high. Not only the rising
cost of college tuition but also the more devastating loss of time, momentum
and self-confidence can provide painful setbacks for both young people and
parents alike. We have all known young adults who seem to flounder at the task
of establishing themselves either in finding the right college major or
hopping form job to job without direction. The fruits of successful life-work
planning, as I call it, are wonderfully evident when our work really reflects
our passion in life.
Coaching for Life: Is there romance after
children?
Published 02/11/2003 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
Falling in love
is easy, but staying in love is perhaps the most significant challenge that we
face in our lives. It is also a challenge for which we are ill prepared.
Our growing-up
years doesn’t necessarily teach us the skills and resources necessary to
establish and maintain a loving relationship. Conflict resolutions,
communication skills, the art of negotiation, assertiveness are all
inter-personal resources for which there is little if any classroom learning.
Navigating a job loss: The three challenges
Published 02/04/2003 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
Like all of life's
crises, a job layoff presents us with the classic paradox of danger and
opportunity. As a new chapter in our life is, perhaps, forced upon us, we are
confronted with multiple challenges.
The most powerful
is the psychological challenge. Studies on mental health emphasize that a
feeling of being in control of our lives is crucial to our well-being. Yet the
painful reality is that often there is precious little over which we do feel in
control, and losing a job certainly represents a "survival level" threat. Hence,
the psychological stakes are potentially high.
Paying attention to attention deficit
disorder
Published 01/21/2003 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
For children
struggling with attention deficit disorder, a common learning disability, as
well as their families, teachers, physicians and friends, ADD can be a source
of enormous frustration and anguish.
People with ADD
have difficulty focusing attention and completing tasks. They are easily
distracted, seem scattered and disorganized, and are somewhat impulsive. The
dilemma of attention deficit disorder is a pervasive experience of failing at
tasks but feeling powerless to fix it. Without treatment, this chronic
helplessness and inability to measure up can lead to anxiety and depression.
Holiday blues: The flip side of festive cheer
Published 12/10/2002 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
While the
holiday season is "the most wonderful time of the year," as the song goes, for
many of us it can be the most hazardous emotionally. By examining the
underlying factors that contribute to the holiday blues, we are more likely to
avoid or minimize their impact.
Also, as we
recognize how those around us may be affected by the emotional undertow of
holiday frenzy, there is a marvelous opportunity to strengthen friendships and
families. Offering our understanding and support is the most powerful and
meaningful of holiday gifts. These are truly the gifts that keep on giving.
And they're on sale every day.
The sniper crisis: Overcoming fear and
anxiety
Published 10/22/2002 Times Papers - Loudoun Times Mirror
The unsolved
serial sniper attacks have had an effect on our emotional well-being like no
other crimes in the last year. While the chances of becoming a victim are far
less than, say, being injured in an auto wreck or contracting a
life-threatening illness, our nervous systems are reacting as though we are in
the gunman's sights everywhere we go.
Why is our sense
of feeling threatened so pronounced and seemingly irrational? Here are some
reasons why and some suggestions how to protect ourselves. Remember two
things: Knowledge is power and talking can help enormously.