The LifeQuake Blog

Posts Tagged ‘recession’

Pakistani Style Career Transition

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Global Family dinner table Pictures, Images and Photos

In an article coming out of The Telegraph, a British newspaper, a journalist reported that a prominent Pakistani doctor and his 93 relatives, most prominent professionals in Saidu Sharif, Swat had to flee from the Taliban and live with a family member packed into five rooms spread between two houses. Now it's true that they had all previously lived together in a compound consisting of seven houses but do you know anyone who has two homes who would take in 93 relatives in exile?

As we move farther and farther away from a tribal mentality, most Americans do not have that kind of loyalty or generosity toward their own families. What struck me about this article though that does relate to the average American is that in this time of economic upheaval and recession, at any given moment in time, people can go from an upwardly mobile position in society to losing everything. In some ways, the working class are at an advantage. Historically, they have deeper roots in tribal responsibility for their own. The upper class tend to think that if one of their own loses their fortune, it might be contagious and therefore distances themselves. Ask any divorced, single ( formerly upper middle class) mother whose husband managed to hide money in the Caymans or had a great lawyer and left her penniless how or if her friends continued to be supportive.

I hear their stories in my office too frequently. But I digress. The point is, regardless of your socioeconomic status, how are you supporting your relatives and friends who are going through hard, economic times? I think the lesson that goes beyond the Pakistani people that we were given during 9/11 and Katrina is that everyone is your family. The responsibility for each other is not codified by tribal affiliation but one of recognition that we really are one family. We move around our worlds not knowing who in front of you in the grocery line is struggling to make ends meet, or the post office or the dry cleaners. As corny as it sounds, sometimes what allows a person down on their luck to brave another day is that someone was kind to them that day - shared a smile, let them go in front in the grocery line, took a dollar out of their pocket and shared it with the guy trying to get coffee who had come up short at Starbucks.

No, you don't have to let 20 relatives live with you to be a humanitarian. Just take the time to make eye contact with as many people as you can today. How many great sages have said, being present with others is the highest form of spiritual practice. We all need connection during this great time of global transition.

Dr. Toni Galardi is a psychotherapist, author and public speaker. She can be reached at 310-712-2600 or her website, http:www.LifeQuake.net.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/5340852/Pakistani-family-makes-room-for-93-relatives-in-Swat-refugee-crisis.html

Marriage Effects of Economic Crisis

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

marriage-in-a-down-economyThere has been a lot of press coverage on couples staying together for economic reasons that were planning to divorce prior to the recession,  including Anderson Cooper’s piece on CNN.  I even received a call from New York Times reporter on this subject. 

Truth be told, I am consulting with a couple who are sleeping in separate rooms and claim to be together for their son, but I surmise that the real reason is economics.  I did a session with their fourteen-year-old son and he is completely dismayed as to why his parents are still together.

It got me thinking; is there an upside to people hesitating to divorce these days? 

Yes, in a perfect world you shouldn’t live with someone you don’t love anymore, but, perhaps, these challenging times provide a way to rewrite the contract so that you live in a more tribal or community way rather than an ideal we have of romantic love.

Two cases from my practice illustrate how the current economic climate can help or hinder people staying together.
In one case, a couple came to me separately and, although the husband wanted marriage counseling, the wife did not. She was not in love with her husband anymore and had previously had an affair that he knew about. Her reason for staying was their child but as therapy progressed, it became clear there was more here. She knew the value of their home had diminished drastically and was concerned about what she would end up receiving in a property settlement, given the current economic decline. Her solution was to avoid her husband at night, spending hours at her computer watching YouTube videos. My treatment approach with this person was to work on her boredom at her job and help her discover a passion she could turn into her vocation of destiny so that money was no longer her consideration for staying.

In the second case, the couple I was seeing was fighting a lot because of money stressors, but it was clear to me that, although they had threatened each other with divorce, there was still a lot of love left in this marriage. So, we worked on downsizing their lifestyle and being more creative with their finances, spending more time at home with each other and their children and, soon enough, the fighting diminished significantly.

So, as you can see, change and crisis management as it applies to marriage can sometimes mean changing the contract and sometimes it is time to revoke the contract and trust that with greater authenticity, your life will thrive as a single person.

Dr. Toni Galardi is a licensed psychotherapist, columnist, and author of her new book  The LifeQuake Phenomeonon: How to Thrive (not just survive) in Times of Personal And Global Upheaval.For more information, visit www.lifequake.net.