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How to make your holidays happier and less stressful with a stepfamily!
December 23, 2011
Hosted by Eleanor Alden, LCSW, BCD
[Download MP3] [itunes] [Bookmark Episode]
Are you like one-third of the people in the U.S., i.e., in a blended or stepfamily celebrating the holiday season and looking for some support and/or solutions? The holidays can bring about challenging situations for families in general, but this season can be particularly stressful for blended and stepfamilies. Join Eleanor Alden and her guest Paula Bisacre, publisher of www.RemarriageWorks.com, the go-to resource for remarriage and stepfamily living, as they discuss some helpful ways to make your holidays stress-free and happy!
StepWisdom
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Half of the children in the United States today will have at least one stepparent before they are fifteen. So it is likely that everyone in the western world will either be a stepparent, a stepchild, or be in a family with such relationships. We all know them, live with them, work with them, and the vast majority of them are happy, relational, successful people. History tells us that stepfamilies have been with us always, and that most children throughout history have been raised with stepparents.
This show combines a look at what works well and what doesn’t in the complicated, complex, challenging, and often rewarding world of step-relationships. History and present day research on families often seem to point to the same wisdom showing patterns of family interaction that makes some successful and some disastrous.
Eleanor Alden, LCSW, BCD
Eleanor Spackman Alden, LCSW, BCD is a psychotherapist in private practice who has worked with StepFamilies for over 40 years. She taught psychology at the graduate level at Naropa University for over a decade, teaching classes in family therapy, marriage counseling and Jungian therapy. Prior to that she taught behavioral science to physicians in a Family Medicine Residency program. During this time she became increasingly concerned at the negative perspective that so many people have. The media and professional communities have often emphasized stepfamilies as second best or even worse: a sign of a declining culture. This viewpoint did not fit Eleanor’s knowledge of cultures in history, nor her experience as a therapist, teacher, or friend to so many who came from stepfamilies and are developing them now. StepWisdom grew out of the frustration with the present day mis-informed attitudes and prejudices about stepfamilies, and from growing up as a stepchild herself. As so many become parts of wonderful dynamic and healthy stepfamilies the need to change the cultural attitude is becoming clearer to an increasing number of professionals working with families and the media in general.
The mis-informed shaming and guilt producing attitudes of much of society have made it more difficult than it needs to be to have a successful stepfamily. The attitude and prejudices need to be examined in the light of research and history, and modified for everyone’s benefit.
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