Archive for the ‘video’ tag
Brady Bunch

Why Second Marriages are More Likely to Fail: the Challenges of Blending Families
Are you ready for the understatement of the year? Here it is: Kids will make your second marriage a complicated and challenging experience. The reason is clear: In most circumstances, children do not want their parents to divorce. Therefore, the idea of you meeting someone new and finding happiness is not a priority in the appropriately egocentric world of your child. So your children’s view of your new marriage will necessarily be very different from your own.
Children are angry about the loss of their old family and anxious about the creation of a new one. Some children are quite good at hiding these feelings, while others will make their anger known every step of the way. Even if your children genuinely like your new spouse, you should remember that your son or daughter already has two parents. For many kids, the more they like their new step-parent, the more traitorous they feel toward the biological parent they perceive as being “left behind.” Struggles with divided loyalties can lead children to disrupt arrangements between you and your new mate.
Say goodbye to the honeymoon:
Second marriages that include children from a previous relationship start in overdrive. First marriages begin in the bliss of the honeymoon phase of the relationship—just the two of you, getting to know each other within your romantic cocoon. In second marriages that include children, the honeymoon phase is replaced by an adjustment phase. There is little time to bask in the glow of each other’s love when your son is protesting that his new stepsister has the bigger room. Bert, an accountant in Providence, captured this adjustment period aptly: “It felt impossible for me and Judy to feel good about anything. My son locked himself in his room and Judy’s daughter moped around the house, scowling at everyone. We felt like we ruined two lives.”
Say hello to the adjustment phase:
During the adjustment phase of your second marriage, the following issues need to be addressed on an ongoing basis:
Different parenting styles. Couples often experience significant conflict when they do not agree on how to parent each other’s children. It is imperative that you communicate with your partner about parental expectations and develop consistent rules for all the children. If you are inconsistent, the children will see this as a weakness and manipulate these parenting differences to their benefit. If you and your partner vehemently disagree about a particular parenting issue, consult with a child psychologist to get a more objective opinion.
The attention balancing act. Your second spouse wants your attention, your children want your attention, you want your spouse’s attention, your spouse’s children want your spouse’s attention. There is a finite pool of attention to go around, so it is likely that someone is going to feel neglected at one time or another.
It is important that your children receive the time and attention they need. This will differ depending on their age and how well they are adjusting to the new living arrangements. It is also important that you and your partner set appropriate limits with the children and carve out time for your marriage. It is essential to the health of your relationship that you and your partner develop routines and activities that allow you each to nurture the marriage.
Acknowledge your own feelings of jealousy and resentment. It is normal for you to feel jealous of your spouse’s relationship with his/her children—this is difficult to admit, but it’s more common than you might think. You’ve remarried and feel lucky to have found love for a second (or third, or fourth…) time. You want your spouse all to yourself. It can feel like it’s the children who stand in the way of the exclusivity that you desire. Rather than deny these feelings and feel silently resentful, understand them as natural, discuss them with your partner and they will lose their grip on you.
It ain’t the Brady Bunch. The Brady Bunch made remarrying with children look easy. By the second episode all the kids were chummy and there was a quick (and unrealistic) acceptance of their step-parents. Sure, if all the kids get along this makes for instant family harmony. But this isn’t a realistic expectation. Don’t all full (non-Brady) siblings argue anyway? Don’t force the relationship between your children and their new stepsiblings. Your children must accept the loss of their old family before they can accept their new one. This may take a long time, but it is well worth the patience and understanding you’ll need to demonstrate to help your kids get there.
Don’t forget to nurture your marriage. Children in blended families are often given a great deal of power by parents. This is due to parents feeling guilty about disrupting the lives of their children. In order to placate your guilt you may over-compensate by giving your son or daughter too much latitude and abandon the previous parent-child boundaries that were the rule in the past.
Without clear boundaries, children will continuously intrude into the private matters of your marriage. After all, they’ve already lost the only family they’ve known and may want to hold onto you for dear life. One way they might try to accomplish this will be to wedge themselves between you and your new spouse. Children should always feel loved by you, but they also need to learn that you will require time with your new spouse, a person you also love, albeit in a different way. The clearer the boundaries, the faster the children will settle into these new arrangements.
Blended families can work, but not without large doses of information, support, and patience. If you and your spouse work as a team (and feel like a team), you will be able to navigate the complexities that are involved in blending families.
Is your relationship worth protecting? Are you ready to make your marriage everything it can be?
Find out how to create the relationship of your dreams: Sign up for the free Relationship Toolbox Newsletter at http://StrengthenYourRelationship.com/ and immediately receive two FREE reports that will help you achieve your relationship potential.
About the Author
Richard Nicastro, Ph.D. is a psychologist and relationship coach who is passionate about helping couples protect the sanctuary of their relationship.
Brady Bunch TV Show Opening Theme Season Five
|
|
The Brady Bunch Television Poster Print, 24×36 $2.80 Art.com is the world’s largest retailer of art prints, posters, photographs, and framed artwork. With our huge selection of over 400,000 prints, you’ll easily find the perfect piece for your home, office, or classroom. Our art is printed on quality paper. When you order framed artwork, the piece is built by our team of in-house professionals. Visit our Amazon store today at www.amazon.com/artdotco… |
|
|
Westland Giftware The Brady Bunch Magnetic Marcia and Greg Salt and Pepper Shaker Set, 3-1/2-Inch $12.75 Join Carol, Mike, and the whole gang in celebrating the classic family sitcom with our groovy collectible! Marsha/Greg shaker set is 3.5″…. |
|
|
THE BRADY BUNCH 8X10 COLOR PHOTO $5.99 Robert Reed as Mike Brady, Florence Henderson as Carol Tyler-Martin-Brady, Ann B. Davis as Alice Nelson, Maureen McCormick as Marcia Brady, Eve Plumb as Jan Brady, Susan Olsen as Cynthia ‘Cindy’ Brady, Barry Williams as Greg Brady, Christopher Knight as: At Moviestore we have an incredible library of celebrity photography covering movies, TV, music, sport and celebrity. Our exclusive photographs… |
|
|
TV Land Presents: Favorite Tv Theme Songs $9.97 TV Land brings you 40 of your favorite evening show theme songs. Highlights include ‘Happy Days’, ‘The Greatest American Hero’, ‘Dukes Of Hazzard (Good Ol’ Boys)’, ‘Laverne & Shirley’, ‘I Dream Of Jeanie’, ‘I Love Lucy’, ‘Welcome Back, Kotter’, ‘The Love Boat’, ‘Hawaii Five-O’, ‘The Golden Girls’ and many, many more. 2002. Rhino…. |
|
|
It’s a Sunshine Day – Best of the Brady Bunch $4.97 … |
|
|
Come on Get Happy: Very Best of Partridge Family $7.99 It doesn’t happen all the time, but occasionally kitsch burrows itself into the popular consciousness and stays put because it’s timelessly, compellingly good. Such is the case with The Very Best of the Partridge Family, which at long last allows pop aficionados who have closeted their dirty-little-secret obsession with the fictitious TV group to come clean. Never mind the ruffles and dove-wing la… |
|
|
Very Brady Christmas [VHS] $9.95 … |
|
|
The Brady Bunch Movie [VHS] $3.95 The big-screen version of the hugely popular 1970s television sitcom takes an original angle: instead of simply re-creating the old series, the film spoofs it by presenting the merged family as blithely unaware that fashions and customs have changed in the ’90s. Shelley Long and Gary Cole are hilarious as the ultra-square yet libidinous Mr. and Mrs. Brady, Christopher Daniel Barnes is an ideal Gre… |
|
|
A Very Brady Sequel [VHS] $0.59 This second ironic send-up of the old Sherwood Schwartz sitcom is even funnier than The Brady Bunch Movie. Shelley Long and Gary Cole return as the married heads of the merged family known as the Bradys, and Christopher Daniel Barnes and Christine Taylor reprise their roles as eldest stepsiblings Greg and Marcia. As with the first film, the clever premise finds the Brady clan caught in a kind of ‘… |
|
|
The Brady Bunch – The Complete First Season $14.08 BRADY BUNCH:COMPLETE FIRST SEASON – DVD Movie… |