Everything I Know About Relationship Success I Learned At The Playground

Written by Stanley J. Leffew


It happened again!

I was enjoying an evening with my little 2-yr. old son atrepparttar playground when, BAM, it happened. You ever have one of those moments in life when you know you are being taught an important lesson?

Picture in your mind a chaotic atmosphere of over fifty little children battling for their turn to play on a handful of playground rides and objects.

Recipe for disaster, huh? That's what I thought, too, until my observations quickly picked up something else.

Sure, they were running into one another, crying and trying to get ahead of each other forrepparttar 101533 rides. They were walking across other children who had fallen down in front of them and were pushing one another to get their turn. They were running to their parents for comfort after getting their feelings hurt.

As I stood there taking inrepparttar 101534 scenery before me, those little blessings of life showed me some important lessons about relationship success. If you will indulge me a moment, I will share with you what I found out.

Relationship Success Lesson #1 - The Principle of Fun:

Not much to say here! It's simple; these kids loved to have fun.

In adult relationships, life throws curves at us constantly. Responsibilities come at us from every angle. It takes conscious effort to remember to have fun together in life. I emphasizerepparttar 101535 word, "together". I'm not talking aboutrepparttar 101536 type of fun whererepparttar 101537 husband plays golf andrepparttar 101538 wife shops.

The "heavy" takes it toll on relationships, and we do well when we give our relationship a time-out fromrepparttar 101539 heavy and lighten up. Couples who play together, stay together.

Relationship Success Lesson #2 - The Principle of Fascination:

As I stood there watching, it was interesting to see howrepparttar 101540 younger children reacted torepparttar 101541 older kids. It didn't take much observance to see that they were taken by and fascinated with them.

Fascination! While it is not a word often associated with relationship success, if you want thriving relationships, you may just want to give it some precedence.

What ARE “Good Manners”?

Written by Susan Dunn, MA, Emotional Intelligence Coach & Consultant


Interesting question, isn't it? Inrepparttar Age of Rudeness, we may be losing touch with what etiquette and good manners are all about. In fact there may be those among us who haven’t experienced it. According to a recent survey, more than 50% of Americans are concerned aboutrepparttar 101532 growing rudeness inrepparttar 101533 U. S.

We assault each other more allrepparttar 101534 time with upsetting noises, sights, sounds, smells, and attitude. It’s getting to where we need to protect ourselves from one another! Maybe it’s getting a little too wild out there.

Good manners are, first of all, civilized behavior. That’s as opposed to wild behavior. “He acts like he was raised in a barnyard,” my mother would say, about some hapless boy who pulled up in front of my house for a date and just sat inrepparttar 101535 car and honked.

Whether that was a particular rule in your household, or culture, all cultures have “rules” and they are learned, not innate. It Italy it’s good manners for a man to greet another man with an embrace and a kiss on each cheek. Not so in South Texas, where men stand 3 feet apart and at 90 degree angles to converse with one another.

All cultures have rules and if you violate them, you’ll be excluded. Excluded from what? Well, what we all want more of now – to be whererepparttar 101536 polite and pleasant people are. Yes?

Emily Post,repparttar 101537 Diva of Etiquette, by virtue of her book ofrepparttar 101538 same name, “Etiquette” ( http://www.bartleby.com/95/7.html ) defined this certain set of people as "Best Society."

"Best Society," she wrote, "is not confined to any one place or group, but might be better described as an unlimited brotherhood which spreads overrepparttar 101539 entire surface ofrepparttar 101540 globe,repparttar 101541 members of which are invariably people of cultivation and worldly knowledge, who have not only perfect manners but a perfect manner."

“Cultivated,” you see, as opposed to “wild” or “weed-ridden” or “out of control”.

“Manners” she says, “are made up of trivialities of deportment which can be easily learned if one does not happen to know them.” “Manner,” onrepparttar 101542 other hand, “is personality –repparttar 101543 outward manifestation of one’s innate character and attitude toward life.”

Manners must be really ingrained; a matter of who you are, not how you are. The attitude must be without thinking, butrepparttar 101544 particulars require great thought. It’s always easier to revert torepparttar 101545 feral state. Askrepparttar 101546 cat! Miss Post suggests that once we’ve learned it, etiquette becomes – to those ofrepparttar 101547 Best Society – “a matter of instinct rather than of conscious obedience.”

There are those among us who still blurt out “thank you,” “you’re welcome,” “excuse me,” and “May I?” But there are a lot more among us who don’t!

Good manners and etiquette are based on a concept that’s somewhat in disfavor today – being selfless. “Unconsciousness of self,” says Miss Post, “isrepparttar 101548 mental ability to extinguish all thought of one’s self – exactly as one turns outrepparttar 101549 light. Hmmm. You mean putrepparttar 101550 other fellow first occasionally? Now there’s a novel idea.

And so “one” – that would be you and I – one does not burp because it feels good, acting as if no one else was there; or elbow throughrepparttar 101551 queue, because WE are in a hurry and WE matter most; or talk about our sex lives on cell phones in restaurants as if others would find it interesting; or shout profanity and throw tantrums because we’re entitled to our anger, to indulge it and to “let it all hang out,” as if it didn’t stressrepparttar 101552 listener as much as it stresses us. (Second-hand hostility is as dangerous to our health as second-hand smoke!)

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