Welcome to a family friendly blog that presents popular family issues and provides advice on family conflict. From dramas left behind by ancestors to generational curses, this family blog covers challenging issues. The more you know, the more empowered you will be when it comes to dealing with family problems, relationship challenges, and more! Solve family struggles and gain respect! Welcome to a site that puts family secrets on blast, so one can find spiritual healing!
Tuesday, June 30, 2020
Sunday, June 21, 2020
Wednesday, June 3, 2020
Thursday, May 14, 2020
Wednesday, February 19, 2020
Tired of the Emotional Pain Caused by Relatives? Choose Your New Family
Too often people put up with so much from others because of titles, past favors, old gifts, fond memories, and more. But when do you ever reach that point when you are free--totally free from the pain these people have caused you?
One-by-one my stable-minded relatives let go of the toxic kinfolk. There was the uncle who often drank too much, bye! The aunt who was out doing who knows what with who, bye! The cousin who was often in trouble with the law, bye! The beggar, the liar, the abuser, all gone! The victims had enough of the pain. It hurts to argue with a stubborn relative who refuses to see his own destruction. It is exhausting reaching into the fire to pull someone out. Heroes get tired of saving the damsel in distress. Family eventually burn out from protecting family.
I recall there were relatives who looked much better when I bumped into them away from the family holiday events. The survivors were no longer dealing with certain relatives. Sure, they missed them from time-to-time, but they knew that of they let these people back into their lives, they would pay for old and new offenses. It didn't help that the trouble-making relatives didn't let go easily. They would lure their victims back in every now and again with a party invite, a sad story, a funeral announcement, a gift, or an offer to baby-sit.
What did it take for the survivors to finally let go and welcome new "family" into their lives?
1) They found lives of their own. They stayed involved with activities they personally enjoyed rather than go along with family tradition/programming.
2) They found people who supported them mentally, financially, spiritually, etc. outside of the family circle.
3) They refused to do what relatives wanted when they wanted and how they wanted; instead, they put themselves first.
4) They stopped making excuses for disrespectful relatives. They stood up to the bullies.
5) They went low and no contact when boundaries were not respected.
6) They didn't subject their children and grandchildren to toxic relatives and their lifestyles.
7) They changed phone numbers, addresses, avoided online connections, etc.
I admired those who got free from my dysfunctional kinfolk. I saw early on that they had been troubled far too long by them. The survivors had chosen a different path, one of peace, prosperity, and protection. They were deserving of their new found family and friends! I am proud of them for it. I too, had left, moved on. It's a great feeling not to be shackled by others' dysfunction.
Nicholl McGuire
Sunday, February 16, 2020
Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Tuesday, January 14, 2020
Sunday, January 12, 2020
Wednesday, December 11, 2019
Monday, November 4, 2019
5 Things to Do Stay Out of Family Dramas Before the Holiday Season Approaches
Here are a some things you can do to keep the family drama at bay. Remember, the more involved you are with certain family members, the more likely you will find yourself in the middle of some nonsense!
1) Stay busy with your own task list. Don't offer service and don't expect others to help you with your holiday plans.
If you are busy, you won't have any idle time to participate in the latest family drama. You also won't be available to offer service or ask for help. In some cases, no good deed goes unpunished. Picky, petty and controlling types will not be satisfied with your assistance no matter what you do! Lazy, rude or manipulative relatives may appear helpful initially, but in time they will make a mountain out of a molehill regarding your holiday planning requests.
2) Avoid answering the phone or visiting those relatives who merely want to talk about what everyone else is doing.
So much time is wasted because someone wants you to be available to listen to their comments, complaints, concerns, etc. about someone else. Is it any wonder why unflattering information gets passed around by the gossips? Feed into the b.s. and you will surely be caught in their web of destruction sooner rather than later.
3) Safeguard your wallet by not offering or promising to buy any items for anyone when you know that your funds are running low. Don't expect others to buy you and your family members anything.
You will surely be let down if you are relying on petty people to make you and your family happy this year with their cheap gifts. When you know that money is tight, why upset a spouse or children by trying to impress others with pricey gifts? Stay quiet about buying anything or wanting anything in return. Meanwhile, you just might hear how others are such a burden for expecting relatives to buy them as well as their children.
4) Opt out of preparing holiday meals when once again you know you can't afford it.
The irritation and anger shows up out of nowhere when you are spending money you really don't have on things that will bite you in the butt later! Just because someone else wants to holiday plan, doesn't mean you have to.
5) Don't involve anyone in past or current conflict concerning your relatives. Teach children to stay out of grown folks business!
Children, believe it or not, can be a source of confusion and misery during holiday seasons. They are desiring any number of things: a new pet, divorced parents reconciled, expensive gifts, lots of money, college funds...whatever someone has manipulated them into believing. When the negativity begins to arise in children, put a stop to it quickly! Explain your situation as well as scold rebellious children. Difficult young people can easily be used by mean-spirited adults to carry negative information about you as well as others, don't fuel the fire!
When people are getting along, the holiday season comes and goes without conflict, but when people are at war with one another before a holiday season, all hell breaks loose sometimes sooner rather than later. Know who your family foes are and avoid them like a plague!
Nicholl McGuire
Tell Me Mother You're Sorry
Have you ever felt suffocated by your own mother, stepmother or in-laws? Difficult mothers can be a challenge! In the book by author, Nicholl McGuire, "Tell Me Mother You're Sorry", you will learn about the mental games controlling mothers play to get their way, how you can beat them at their own games, and why it is important to go low contact or no contact from these narcissistic women.
Free Sample Buy NowADVERTISE HERE!
It's All in the Family by Nicholl McGuire is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at familyarticlesbynicholl.blogspot.com.
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