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Somethings Fishy

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In Jesus presence, the disciples quarrelled over position in the early ... Hold important meetings midweek. Do not frustrate each other. 9. Cultural differences ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Somethings Fishy


1
www.missionsinterlink.org.au
2
Interpersonal Relationships
  • Marjory F. Foyle
  • MD, BS, FRCPsych, DPM, DRCOG


  • 2009

3
Problems in this area are nothing new
  • In Jesus presence, the disciples quarrelled over
    position in the early church.
  • In the early church Christians of different
    ethnic groups quarrelled over charitable handouts.

4
Major Source of Difficulty-we are all different
  • Secretly we may think we are right.
  • Secretly we may think we are the best.
  • Differences between us threaten us by upsetting
    our organised framework

5
These differences make us feel stressed, with the
following reactions-
  • We become critical of others.
  • We become increasingly rigid and intolerant.
  • We become angry because of the differences.
  • We feel envious or jealous of others.

6
The secret of Coping with Differences
  • Accept yourself and others are unique individuals
    whom God has created.
  • Remember they may be behaving in the way they
    feel God has told them to do, so do not make
    immediate negative judgments. (Romans 14)

7
Practical Implications of being different
  • Physical differences
  • Morning / evening people
  • Monday / Friday people
  • Weak / strong people
  • Quick / slow people

8
Practical Advice
  • Do not make excuses, organise your life
  • Understand the patterns of others
  • Watch Monday absenteeism
  • Hold important meetings midweek
  • Do not frustrate each other

9
Cultural differences
  • Of great importance in our multiethnic societies.
  • Problem is - our reactions based on
  • childhood learning so we feel we are right.
  • Social behaviour. Outside your own culture,
  • never criticise.
  • Ask what it means in their community.

10
Cultural Differences
  • Integration. We need to learn to live
  • alongside other communities in friendship
  • even while disagreeing with much of their
  • thinking.
  • Educational Patterns. Cultural superiority
  • our own education is the best.
  • Implication- ethnic groups education pattern is
    inferior. The truth may be the exact opposite.

11
Cultural Differences
  • Working patterns differ This may create real
  • difficulty in the work place.
  • Ask about their working background so that you
    understand. Help them to adapt if necessary,
    explaining that others have had difficulty here
    too.

12
Cultural Differences
  • Be careful about jokes about their nation of
    origin.
  • Be careful of operating on national stereotypes.

13
Generational Differences
  • Gen X,Y, Z, Millennial, Post millennial etc.
  • operate on different platforms. They are very
  • Community-orientated, like to go to a clear
  • and to complete it. Like to move on, major on
  • personal relationship- building especially
  • Church-related.

14
Generational Differences
  • Older generations need to recognise this and
  • when long term posts remain empty not to feel
  • the young are not as committed as we were.
  • Things have changed!
  • The young need to understand and to respect the
    achievements of the old.

15
Personality Differences
  • These arise because we may be
  • Too similar
  • Too different
  • Too difficult (often due to psychological
    damage).

16
Personality Differences
  • The secret is to try to learn to understand and
  • to accept your own and others basic
  • personality structures.

17
Personality Differences
  • Understanding our personalities and handing
  • them over to God for his work in them makes
  • us their master not their slave.
  • Three areas involved
  • personality structure, protection and
  • maturation.

18
Understanding Personality Structure, Protection
and Maturity
  • Personality Structure
  • Personality is made up of 3 important segments
  • The genes our parents gave us. These may produce
    difficult or easy personality traits.
  • The environment in which the genes develop. This
    is a complicated topic since people from the most
    difficult backgrounds and families often turn out
    marvelous.

19
Personality Structure
  • 3. The work of the Holy Spirit within us as we
    grow in God. To facilitate this we need two
    things
  • To commit ourselves to Him for His perfect will
    in and through our lives.
  • To understand something of our conception and
    development as God sees them.

20
Personality Structure
  • Psalm 139 explains it. God was present at our
  • conception and during our development.
  • 1. Conception It was you who formed my inward
    parts, and knit me together in my mothers womb.
    I praise you for I am fearfully and wonderfully
    made. Wonderful are your works, I know that very
    well. My frame was not hidden from you when I was
    being made in secret, intricately woven in the
    depths of the earth. Your eyes beheld my unformed
    substance (vs 13-16)

21
Personality Structure
  • 2. Development In you book were written all the
    days that were formed for me, when none of them
    yet existed. How weighty to me are your thoughts
    O God (vs16-17).

22
Personality Structure
  • These verses are both a strength and a
  • problem. Why does God allow tragedy to
  • strike in the antenatal period? Why does God
  • allow very difficult childhoods and later life
  • problems?

23
Personality Structure
  • These tragedies are a part of the continuance
  • of suffering and evil on the earth yet I do not
  • believe we submit passively to Gods
  • permissive will. There must be something
  • actively creative emerging from the tragedy,
  • although we may not understand it in this life.

24
Personality Protection
  • Certain in-built mechanisms protect our
  • minds from overload,
  • ego defence mechanisms. Usually operate
  • unconsciously, but we can learn to protect
  • ourselves by using some of them consciously.
  • They may have a negative or a positive use.

25
RegressionBehaving as if we were much younger
thanwe really are
  • Unhealthy (negative) use. Can drive our
  • colleagues nuts. Can originate in failure to
  • mature adequately, or in illness or too much
  • stress. May lead to-
  • Clinging dependent behaviour
  • Temper tantrums of the childish kind
  • Obstinacy and rigidity

26
Regression
  • b. Healthy (positive) use. A holiday from
  • adult life. This is essential to maintain good
  • mental health.

27
Displacement
  • Transferring painful emotion from its place of
  • origin onto another person or object. This
  • new location is called the displacement
  • object.
  • a. Unhealthy negative use. Can cause
  • interpersonal friction and a chain. May also
  • result in bodily symptoms.

28
Displacement
  • b. Healthy positive use. Good first-aid
  • treatment, used for dealing with stress-
  • overload quickly. If practised regularly can
  • also prevent us from becoming overloaded.
  • c. Biblical displacement. We must be
  • prepared to become displacement objects for
  • each other. People use us to get rid of their
  • own tensions.

29
Repression
  • Pushing things out of the conscious mind into
  • the subconscious and keeping them there.
  • Unhealthy (negative) use. Handling unhealthy
  • emotions and unpleasant realities by pushing them
  • into the subconscious and never examining them at
  • all. This may have started in childhood, but can
  • happen by an adult ostrich policy (it will go
    away
  • if I dont think about it).

30
Repression
  • b. Healthy (positive) use.
  • During emergencies-look at the emotions
  • after the emergencies are over.
  • During busy working days-pending tray.
  • Prayer lists.
  • NB. There is no need to unrepress
  • everything. Most of it does us no harm.

31
Personality Maturity
  • The traditional concept explains two other
  • divisions of the structure of the mind which
  • influence personality maturity.
  • The conscious mind. Contains all that is
  • currently going on, plus memories from about
  • the last ten years.

32
Personality Maturity
  • b. The unconscious mind contains all other
    significant memories. These important memories
    remain in a sort of a little parcel in the
    unconscious mind, which may give out some of its
    contents when something happens that kindles the
    old memories.

33
Personality Maturity
  • Erikson taught that personality develops in 9
  • stages, starting at birth and ending when we die.
    At
  • each stage we have a task to accomplish, such as
  • basic trust which is learned in the first 2 years
    of life.
  • He believed that if any of these development
    stages
  • were severely damaged by the environment, then
  • failure of learning that particular task occurred
    which
  • was detrimental to our personality development.

34
Personality Maturity
  • No one accomplishes any of these tasks fully,
  • nevertheless most of us do not have serious
  • personality problem. However, the situation
  • can change should we come under severe
  • stress, in which case the problems of today
  • may be aggravated by recurrence of older
  • buried problems which have hindered personality
  • maturation at that stage.

35
Practical steps in coping with our own and
others personalities
  • Remember that we are all different.
  • If other personalities grate on us, remember ours
  • probably grate on them too. When opportunity
    rises
  • discuss it as your fault, not theirs. This opens
    doors
  • to sharing and not anger. Mutual sharing of old
    loads
  • and current problems may lead to longstanding
  • friendship.
  • In forming teams, remember that certain
  • types do not mix well in the same group.

36
Practical steps in coping with our own and
others personalities
  • 2. Deal with longstanding negative emotions.
  • These include bitterness, wrath, anger, malice,
  • (Ephesians 4.31), and jealousy and envy
  • (Gal 5.20).

37
Practical steps in coping with our own and
others personalities
  • Current negative emotions may be
  • resolved by
  • Thinking about why they occurred
  • Confession to and forgiveness from God
  • If necessary meet other persons involved. Try to
    set things right
  • Take time away to relax

38
The Act of Forgiveness- the Forgiveness Technique
  • Make a note of the time and place you
  • made this act. The emotions and thoughts will
  • not go away at once, but having this as a fixed
  • date in your life speeds the healing process.

39
Practical steps in coping with our own and
others personalities
  • Meeting other persons involved if necessary, in a
  • spirit of love desire to set things right. This
    increases
  • mutual compassion.
  • Taking time away to relax form the heavy work
    load, and
  • similar health giving things.
  • Longstanding overloads of negative emotions may
    emerge
  • in great force during current stress, and we come
    to realise
  • that they are blocking our personality
    development. There is
  • a helpful technique to deal with them which
    involves a
  • definite act of forgiveness.

40
Preliminary steps to making an act of forgiveness
  • Set aside a little time, daily if possible, in
  • as much detail as possible about the people
  • that hurt you. Write it down if it helps. Do not
  • try to dig around your mind. The Holy Spirit
  • will remind you of things you should deal
  • with.

41
Preliminary steps to making an act of forgiveness
  • Try to get into their skins and think why they
  • hurt you. If the hurts were in childhood,
    remember
  • that children cannot think their way into adult
    minds,
  • but as adults we can. It is amazing how much
    insight
  • God can give you. This starts the flow of the oil
    of
  • compassion for them.

42
Preliminary steps to making an act of forgiveness
  • Decide if you wish to forgive them, but
  • understand what forgiveness means. It implies
  • forgiving the debt they owed you because
  • they failed to give you what they should have
  • done in childhood or later life.

43
The Act of Forgiveness- the Forgiveness Technique
  • Write down who you want to forgive, and why.
    Mention
  • briefly every significant event.
  • Write down what you have understood of their
    problems
  • that made them take it out on you.
  • Prepare a time and place to make an act of
    forgiveness.
  • Some use the communion, preparing themselves by
    reading
  • over the list before God, and then taking
    communion. Others
  • use a pastor for a private healing service which
    includes a
  • time of reading over the list.

44
The Act of Forgiveness- the Forgiveness Technique
  • Make a note of the time and place you made this
  • act. The emotions and thoughts will not go away
    at
  • once, but having this as a fixed date in your
    life speeds the
  • healing process.
  • Accept responsibility for your negative
  • emotion, and ask forgiveness for yourself at the
  • same time and place. As adults we are instructed
    not
  • to harbour negative emotions yet we have done so
  • till now. Get it out before God and let Him
    forgive
  • you.

45
The Act of Forgiveness- the Forgiveness Technique
  • Such an act will not cause the memories to go
  • away at once. Memories will probably remain
  • but the painful emotion withers away.
  • The end result. This sort of act enable the
  • overload hindering our personality
  • development to be removed, and helps us to
  • progress toward maturity.

46
www.missionsinterlink.org.au
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