Posts filed under ‘relationships’

Watch Deborah as she talks about ……..

Divorce, relationships and more

on Dear Valerie

Relationship expert and veteran journalist Valerie Gibson takes your calls about life, love and the pursuit of self fulfillment. Deborah Moskovitch is this week’s featured guest.  It’s your live mid-day source for instant, honest and realistic advice on any aspect of life, love, sex, marriage, dating and family relationships. Tune in and call in, this Tuesday, June 16, 2009.

Call 416.446.7090 or toll-free 1-800-968-7836 and ask Valerie and Deborah your most intimate questions. Dear Valerie airs LIVE on Rogers TV Ontario-wide on Tuesdays at 2 PM.

June 15, 2009 at 2:20 pm Leave a comment

Nurturing parent/child bonds

The issue of parent alienation has been front and center in the media recently, and deserves the attention. It’s the children who live out the divorce and deal with the toxic reality of conflict.

Justice Harvey Brownstone, a family court judge in Toronto, wrote an insightful essay which appears in The Globe and Mail, on what he described as “a prevalent concern in high-conflict custody litigation.” The link to this article, which every parent should read, is below.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20090425.COESSAY25ART1958/TPStory/?query=harvey+brownstone

Justice Brownstone raises significant issues which parents need to consider. However, it is important for parents to look at their own behavior and consider how this might be affecting the relationship with their children.

My response to this serious issue of parent/child relationships appears in today’s Globe and Mail – letters to the editor.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20090428.COLETTS28ART1951-6/TPStory/?query=deborah+moskovitch


If you are wondering whether or not my comments ring true, read on for a real life example of someone who paid the price dearly, and suffered significant damage as a result of parent alienation.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20090429.LETTERS29ART2018-6/TPStory/?query=deborah+moskovitch

It’s a parent’s responsibility to give their children the best life possible -this means being mature enough to

put your feelings aside

and do what is in the best interests of your children.

April 28, 2009 at 4:04 pm Leave a comment

Happy Valentine’s Day………Installing Love

I received this message via email today. I don’t know who the author is, but the writer’s message is right on –

 

Love yourself before you can love others

 

INSTALLING LOVE

Tech Support: Yes, … how can I help you?

Customer: Well, after much consideration, I’ve decided to install
LOVE. Can you guide me though the process?

Tech Support: Yes. I can help you. Are you ready to proceed?

Customer: Well, I’m not very technical, but I think I’m ready. What
do I do first?

Tech Support: The first step is to open your Heart. Have you located
your Heart?

Customer: Yes, but there are several other programs running now. Is
it okay to install Love while they are running?

Tech Support: What programs are running?
Customer: Let’s see, I have Past Hurt, Low Self-Esteem, Grudge, and
Resentment running right now.

Tech Support: No problem, Love will gradually erase Past Hurt from
your current operating system. It may remain in your permanent memory
but it will no longer disrupt other programs. Love will eventually
override Low Self-Esteem with a module of its own called High Self-
Esteem. However, you have to completely turn off Grudge and
Resentment. Those programs prevent Love from being properly
installed. Can you turn those off?
Customer: I don’t know how to turn them off. Can you tell me how?

Tech Support: With pleasure. Go to your start menu and invoke
Forgiveness. Do this as many times as necessary until Grudge and
Resentment have been completely erased.
Customer: Okay, done! Love has started installing itself. Is
that normal?

Tech Support: Yes, but remember that you have only the base program.
You need to begin connecting to other Hearts in order to get the
upgrades.

Customer: Oops! I have an error message already. It says, “Error -
Program not run on external components.” What should I do?
Tech Support: Don’t worry. It means that the Love program is set up
to run on Internal Hearts, but has not yet been run on your Heart. In
non-technical terms, it simply means you have to Love yourself before
you can Love others.

Customer: So, what should I do?
Tech Support: Pull down Self-Acceptance; then click on the following
files: Forgive-Self; Realize Your Worth; and Acknowledge your
Limitations.

Customer: Okay, done.
Tech Support: Now, copy them to the “My Heart” directory. The system
will overwrite any conflicting files and begin patching faulty
programming. Also, you need to delete Verbose Self-Criticism from all
directories and empty your Recycle Bin to make sure it is completely
gone and never comes back.
Customer: Got it. Hey! My heart is filling up with new files. Smile
is playing on my monitor and Peace and Contentment are copying
themselves all over My Heart. Is this normal?

Tech Support: Sometimes. For others it takes awhile, but eventually
everything gets it at the proper time. So LOVE is installed and
running. One more thing before we hang up. LOVE is Freeware. Be sure
to give it and its various modules to everyone you meet. They will in
turn share it with others and return some cool modules back to you.

February 14, 2009 at 8:02 pm Leave a comment

Deborah’s upcoming media appearances

Learn more about being smart about divorce with Deborah

Hear Deborah talk about

The Smart Divorce – Live

I have been invited to speak about The Smart Divorce and dealing with the many issues surrounding divorce and relationships on both television and radio this week. Tune in and hear lots of informative information.

 

Watch Dear Valerie – Tuesday January 13 at

2pm on Rogers Cable

How fluent are you in the language of love? Beginning Tuesday, January 13th at 2 PM, Rogers TV presents Dear Valerie, with relationship expert and veteran journalist Valerie Gibson. Dear Valerie is a LIVE source of instant, honest and realistic advice on love, sex, marriage, dating and family relationships. Valerie will take calls from viewers and answer their most intimate questions. Viewers are encouraged to call 416.446.7090 and ask about life, love and the pursuit of self fulfillment. The number for those wishing to call the show outside of the Toronto area is 1-800-968-7836.

I have been invited to be Valerie’s very first guest – an honor and a thrill for me!

 

Wake up with ‘A’ Morning – Wednesday, January 14

 

If you live in Southwestern Ontario, you are able to watch Southwestern Ontario’s #1 Breakfast show. Broadcast live from the heart of downtown London and throughout Southwestern Ontario on Atv; airs weekdays at 6am. I will be appearing around 7:15 am to talk about The Smart Divorce.

 

Have your copy of The Smart Divorce signed by Deborah

 

If you want to meet me personally, there will be a book signing from

12 – 1:30 at Chapter’s north London location at Richmond Centre, 86 Fanshawe (519)672-6781. Please feel free to ask your questions.

 

Tune in to hear Deborah on Midlife Mojo Radio –

Thursday, January 14

 

Author of the best selling book Midlife Mojo, the Unstoppable Frankie Picasso host Midlife Mojo RADIO. This show feature guests who are passionate about midlife and all the possibilities that exist for an amazing life during this time. I will be the featured guest Thursday, January 14. Listen in at 11:00 am EST, 10:00 CST, 9:00 MST, 8:00 PST.

 

You can tune in online at: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/midlife-mojo

 

Please call in and ask your questions at (646) 716-9430

January 11, 2009 at 11:04 pm Leave a comment

When your ex has somone new

When you ex has someone new

 

Feeling at peace with singledom when your

ex has a new partner

 

 

The emotional tide experienced through divorce doesn’t always end when your divorce becomes final. Just as you are moving forward, feeling positive, you’re faced with a new reality……..your ex has a new partner. Although you may or may not have a new relationships too, sometimes new emotions or old wounds surface.

 

Evaluating what you need to do to achieve happiness and hope in a new relationship requires thought, evaluation and introspection. Please click on the link to read more about tips and strategies as to how to navigate this new phase in your life postdivorce.

 

http://more.ca/relationships/single-life/when-your-ex-has-someone-new/a/18818

 

I wrote this article for More magazine’s online edition. More magazine is a publication which celebrates women over 40. Men should also feel comfortable reading this article as it offers great insight into moving on and how to prepare yourself for new relationships postdivorce; tips that apply to both men and women. If you would like to browse through this magazine click on the following link: www.more.ca

November 16, 2008 at 3:25 pm Leave a comment

10 frequently asked divorce questions

 

The divorce process is often fraught with many questions. How do you know it’s the right thing to do? Do you stay together for the sake of the kids? What if I don’t trust my spouse any more and so on.

 

Many of these questions are answered in an article appearing in Homemakers magazine. Please click on the link to have some of your questions answered.

10-frequently-asked-divorce-questions

 

Being smart about divorce means asking lots of questions so that you are informed – and doing the research to answer these questions, so that you can answer for yourself – how to move forward with focus hope and confidence.

November 4, 2008 at 5:53 pm Leave a comment

All alone for the holidays?

 

The Jewish High Holidays are just days away, Thanksgiving is just around the corner and I’m sure many are counting down the shopping days until Christmas. Celebrating holidays can be a stressful time when you’re divorced – but it doesn’t need to be.

 

I’ve written about this before, but I know it is top of mind for many, so I felt I should blog about it again. If you find yourself without your children or extended family at a time when you traditionally celebrated with them, it can be a sad and lonely experience without them now.

 

Here’s a little reminder of what I have previously posted and tips to get you though.

 

Who says you have to celebrate those days the traditional route or the way you celebrated when you were married? If you find yourself alone, create new meaning for these celebrations and enjoy them on your own terms. Here are some tips to get you through these celebrations.

 

 

  • Create new traditions. If the old traditions are too painful to follow, let them go. Instead of trying to re-create the past, create your own positive future.

  • Throw your own party and invite friends or family who have nowhere to go during this time.

 

  • Make a special effort to take care of yourself physically and emotionally. Don’t try drowning your sorrows with alcohol or food.  Doing anything to excess when you are sad or worried is rarely a smart move.

  • Be good to yourself. Go for a manicure or massage, buy a great CD, catch up on your favorite hobby. Treat yourself the way you would treat a good friend or family member.

 

  • If you are feeling overwhelmed and vulnerable, speak with a trusted friend, therapist or someone in your support group.

  • Plan ahead. If it looks like you’re going to be spending the time on your own, find an interesting activity or a place to travel so you can be with other people.

 

  • Surround yourself with people, whether from your support network, your family, your church or synagogue. You may even be able to attend a special support group holiday function.

  • Contemplate how you would like your life to look like post-divorce and write down what you need to do to get there. Start doing one of those things now.

  • Stay in control by making lists of what you need to do and checking each item off as you accomplish it.

  • Use any time alone to do the things you’ve been putting off — catching up on paperwork; catching up on sleep; reading the great book that’s been sitting unopened for weeks or months; calling the friend you’ve been meaning to reconnect with.

  • If putting on a dinner or party in the family home doesn’t feel right, try doing something for others off site. For example, you could visit a retirement home and read to those whose families can’t be with them during the holidays.

  • Continue to make the holidays special for your children. Include them in developing new traditions. Ask them how they would like to celebrate.

 

  • Plan ahead how your children are going to spend the holidays. Avoid the stress of figuring things out last minute. This will give you a sense of comfort, relief and control.

  • Be creative and flexible. If your children are not celebrating the holidays with you, think about making another day during holiday time a special day together.

  • If your children are going to be with their other parent, phone them and wish them a happy holiday. Let them know that you are thinking about them.

  • Don’t make your children feel that they have to take care of you during this special time. Send them the message that the holidays are a special time and you want them to enjoy themselves.

  • Spare the occasional good thought for your ex.  Your marriage likely had some good moments. Remembering those times occasionally will help you lift yourself out of your bitterness about your current situation.

 

Wishing everyone good health, happiness and prosperity; peace and love.

September 22, 2008 at 2:59 pm Leave a comment

From dam to glam: dating after divorce

 

The dating game, and how to ensure you are putting

your children’s best interests first.

 

 

It’s been said that dating is something that is good for you but can be hard on your children, because it pulls you away from them and may be confusing for them. There are no specific rules for dating when you have kids; there’s no right or wrong way to do it. Of course, your priority should still be your children, and sometimes you have to sacrifice your needs for them.

 

Dating postdivorce, achieving balance in your life and putting your children’s best interest first can be a challenge. Please click on the link to read more about tips and strategies as to how to navigate this new phase in your life postdivorce.

 

http://www.more.ca/relationships/married-life/from-dam-to-glam-dating-after-divorce/a/1800

 

I wrote this article for More magazine’s online edition. More magazine is a publication which celebrates women over 40. Men should also feel comfortable reading this article as it offers great insight into dating postdivorce; tips that apply to both men and women. If you would like to browse through this magazine click on the following link: www.more.ca

 

Knowing how to put your children’s best interests first
will give you a sense of comfort, calm and
the freedom to enjoy yourself.

September 15, 2008 at 2:52 am 1 comment

Help, my teenager doesn’t want to spend time with me!

Flexibility is especially important as your children enter their teen years. Teenagers are self-centered. Teenagers are fickle. Teenagers tend to see their parents for what they can offer–a wallet (money), a fridge (food, food, and more food), a bed (a place to sleep all day) and a car (with you as either their personal chauffeur or the “giver of the car keys”).

Don’t mistake your teenager’s struggle for independence, or his or her desire to spend more time with friends or on the Internet, for symptoms of your divorce. As children reach their early or mid-teens, their peer groups become essential to their lives. They don’t care about Mom’s time or Dad’s time; they just care about their own time. Their whole life focuses around their friends, which is normal–their primary focus is on themselves.

Many parents also complain that their children never let them know ahead of time what they will be doing, but that may be because the children themselves do not really know; that’s not how children make their plans. They get on their computers, they instant message each other, and the plan emerges, sometimes within a space of fifteen minutes. All of a sudden, they are busy and on their way to join up with friends.

Teenage behavior can be hard to take sometimes. The teen years can be especially hard for noncustodial parents. If you live an hour away from your child’s primary residence, where his or her school and peer group are, that makes it tough for the teenager to really enjoy his or her time at your home. As difficult as it may be for the noncustodial parent, most times that parent needs to take a backseat role to the person who is the custodial parent.

Here are some tips to stay connected with your teens:

  • Offer to drive them to their friends.
  • Check in with your kids via their cell phones and e-mail accounts to just to say, “What’s up?”; “How was your day?”; and so forth. Checking in helps ensure that you have as much input with your kids as their friends do.
  • Be flexible; be an open door. Invite kids over either after school or for a few hours on the weekend, or just to have dinner, rather than for the full evening or weekend. You can say, “You are welcome the entire weekend, but I won’t be upset if you want to be with your friends; you tell me if it fits in. If not, and you want to be with your friends, I’ll drive you.” If you pressure your kids to give up time with their friends in order to be with you, it will only backfire, causing your children to avoid you.

Try not to think in terms of minutes and hours;

think in terms of the quality of the relationship

you are building and sustaining.

September 1, 2008 at 1:57 pm 13 comments

All alone on a Saturday night?

Feeling like the fifth wheel?

Many people at the beginning of their separation or divorce often feel abandoned or sidelined by their married friends. I tend to think of it as the fifth wheel bug. Don’t worry, it’s not something you catch but, the discomfort is there. The dynamics of socializing often change upon separation and divorce. While the situation of being the odd person out in a Noah’s Ark society – a couple’s world, is not uncommon, it can be unnerving. Suddenly single, it’s at this time in your life when you need the love and support of your friends like never before. It’s not that you are not welcome as a friend, it’s that you are no longer part of a couple.

I not only hear about this situation frequently from my clients and friends, but experienced this first hand when I first separated. Now, not every couple excludes the single person, but there are many who do. I’ve learned that this situation occurs mostly because of discomfort. It is easier to fit four or six around a table then three or five. Balanced, even. What you need to understand is that this not about you, it’s about the way your friends feel about your situation. It’s not that your friends are afraid of you fraternizing with their husband or wife, it’s that they are used to socializing with you as a couple or they feel uncomfortable being confronted with divorce.

We all know how emotional divorce can be. And, because of your turmoil and grieving it can also take over how you express yourself in a social setting. So imagine then, a couple(s) going out for dinner on a Saturday night, wanting to keep the evening conversation light and easy. While I’m sure many of your friends are extremely supportive, the last thing this couple wants to hear after a long week of work and their own stress is your anger, bitterness or sadness.

So, what do you do about this to build your confidence and life and deal with this situation?

  • Make new single friends –ask your friends if they know of someone single to introduce you to, not for a romantic relationship but friendship.
  • Go to a therapist – venting about this situation to friends will only alienate you from your friends.
  • Build your support network – support groups, clergy, friends, therapist, and so on.
  • Go to lectures or programs which are of interest. You can find many things to enjoy advertised in the paper or at your synagogue or church.
  • Start doing things outside of your comfort level for entertainment; enjoy a movie on your own, go to the bookstore, enjoy an exhibit at a museum or art gallery. This can make you a more interesting person with experiences to share and have fun in the process.
  • Recognize that this is going to happen. Don’t take it personally.

July 7, 2008 at 1:43 pm Leave a comment

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