Author Topic: Values Clarification and Balance  (Read 1162 times)

Certain Hope

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Values Clarification and Balance
« on: July 29, 2006, 01:30:08 PM »

Prioritizing has always been a difficult challenge for me, so in the process of working to grow through all of the challenges of plain old daily life along with specific areas of needed growth, I can get pretty far out of balance. Much of my personal time is devoted to relationships... husband, children, church family, and friends... so I can sure see the need to prioritize where relationships are concerned so that nobody winds up feeling left behind. Hope this article will help some others as it's given me a clearer focus on how to proceed with all this.

Hope

Maintaining all your varying relationships is certainly a full time job and can be very difficult to accomplish. You can easily start to feel like you are playing a zero sum game at times; There are many relationships, actual and only desired, all requiring your attention. The time you spend on one relationship is time taken away from another. Alternatively, time invested on an existing relationship is time you don't have to spend on developing a new one that might prove more satisfying For these reasons it is very important that you take time to prioritize your relationships so as to make sure that the most valuable among them (e.g., your most intimate and supportive relationships) receive adequate attention and are not starved or neglected to any great degree.

If you are struggling to balance work and home relationships, ask yourself if you are happy with the manner in which you have prioritized these two important domains of your life. You may have no strategy for addressing this balance, and instead just reacting to whatever pressing needs come up in the moment. Alternatively, you may have a strategy in place that isn't working for you. There is no easy formula for deciding how to keep this balance, but we do advise basing a flexible formula for determining how to apportion your time and attention on your values. For example, if your involvement in work exists to put food on the table so that you can enjoy your family, then you should prioritize family needs first, being flexible enough to accommodate work needs on an emergency basis. If on the other hand you live to work, then you need to design your home life so that it can accommodate your work life. There is no right answer (so long as you don't actually neglect your dependents), but you do have to become clear on what is important to you and be okay with your choices.

From  http://www.mentalhelp.net/poc/view_doc.php?type=doc&id=9782