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Surviving Divorce & Separation: Coping Skills: Coping & Stress:

What exactly is stress? Stress is the non-specific response of the body to any demand; a condition or situation that imposes demands for adjustment; the mind's message to an organism to adjust; a normal state, either pleasant (eustress) or unpleasant (distress); an excess (hyperstress), or a shortfall (hypostress).

A stressor is the agent producing stress or the source of the stress. Stressors are external events that cause emotional and/or physical reaction, whether positive or negative; or internal commotion in our minds and emotions.

Some common divorce stressors include:

If you claim never to feel stress, let us know what rock you live under. For the rest of us, here are several stress management techniques to cope with the scope of stress:

What will happen if you ignore stress? That's just say you do not want or need to find out. Be able to recognize the signs of stress exhaustion, so you do not ignore them:

Physical

change in appetite
headaches
fatigue
muscle aches
tension

Spiritual

emptiness
loss of meaning
doubt
unforgiving
cynicism
Emotional

anxiety
mood swings
worry
depression
crying spells

Mental

forgetfulness
poor concentration
negative attitude
confusion
negative self-talk
Behavioral

resentment
lashing out
intolerance
distrust
isolation

Relational

hiding
less sex drive
lack of intimacy
using people
less contact with people


Since divorce is your stressor, list all the negative and positive outcomes of your divorce. Make it personal, not what you think might be standard. The only standard that matters here is yours, so be honest. If not sharing bathroom time is a plus, however important or trivial that might be to you, then list it! If your spouse was a good fixer-upper and you are all thumbs, go ahead and list that loss as a negative.

Complete your list and concentrate on the positives. Allow them to give you the confidence you deserve. Now look at the negatives, one by one. If you can learn to be a fix-it person or can afford to hire help, then turn it into a positive or let that negative go. Do the same with each negative. Decide what you can do about it or let it go!

Communication skills - Good communication clarifies view points and reduces misunderstanding. The problem is, most of us are troubled listeners. We give off the signal that we are not really receiving the other person's message. Non-verbal communication is the culprit. Our body language, posture, facial expressions, eye contact or lack of it let the other person know how well we are listening and how interested we are in their message.

You would probably agree that most bad marriages are characterized by poor communication between partners. For many married couples, there is a direct correlation between the deterioration of communication between spouses and problems in their marriages. But, people digress into the past. Our objective is to not cope, get through this period in your life.

Flexibility - How flexible are you to change? Are you open to diverse ideas? Can you appreciate other people's view points, even when they don't match yours? Avoid judging.

Friends - Make relationships a priority and let the people you like know that you value their friendships. Share your feelings and views of the future, rather than always rehashing and trashing the past with them.

Problem-solving skills - Don't procrastinate. Deal with it now. Don't wait until it balloons into a way too serious situation. Separate the people from the problem. Attack the problem, not the people. Separate your emotions from the problem. Strive for clarity of mind. List creative and practical solutions to choose from. Don't fall into the trap that suggests there is only one solution or one way to do something.

Featured Books:The Divorce Bookstore
Healing From Divorce
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When the Vows Break: Surviving Divorce & Separation
Surviving Separation & Divorce
The Divorce Handbook
Getting Divorced Without Ruining Your Life

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Divorce Tip: # 23Marriage is an economic partnership. Much like a business relationship. Each state has unique, but similar statutes that clearly define how the distribution of property occurs when you decide to get a divorce. A lot of these statutes are available right online! Sponsored by: Successful Parenting


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