06 September 2013

Post, Virate, Repeat

POST, VIRATE, REPEAT

I just finished demolishing an ottoman. Just reaffirming my manliness. I was going to say I just finished disassembling an ottoman, but that sounds like I used my brain. I was just out there smacking stuff with a hammer. I smell like man.
I’ve been thinking a lot about country music lately (should country be capitalized? Am I being disrespectful to the whole genre by lowercasing it?). I don’t think about country very often, as I have never much cared for it. It’s not like it’s the worst thing ever (I’m looking at you Ke$ha), it’s just not my favorite type of music. I admit, I am not-so-secretly in love with Taylor Swift’sTrouble, and she counts as country, right? It’s just that I could never stand the whole slide guitar/twang thing. And I never really understood this:
Lawnmower and snowblower and classical music. See, I can do it too.
Lawnmower and snowblower and classical music. See, I can do it too.

Or this:

I mean, that takes Marcia-Brady-nightly hair brushing.

And especially not this:
I've never seen a saxophonist so excited to just be included, let alone get a blue jacket.
I’ve never seen a saxophonist so excited just to be included, let alone get a blue jacket.

But, I listen to punk, so I guess that means I understand this:
But really, we can ALL identify with this.
But really, we can ALL identify with this. In fact, I almost put this on my business card.

I haven’t been reflecting on Country (capital C, nothing but respect) music because I think I’ve made poor life choices, but I have heard one song a lot lately. It’s by a dude named Aaron Tippin. Now, for all you country music fans out there who can’t recall who Aaron Tippin is, allow me to refresh your memory with this all-too-classic pic:
Hey babe, I gotta go pump some iron. Can you help me tie on my Mickey Mouse tank?
Hey babe, I gotta go pump some iron. Can you help me tie on my Mickey Mouse tank?

If that doesn’t jar your memory (then something’s wrong with you), he is the dude who sings “You’ve Got to Stand for Something (or You’ll Fall for Anything).” The local ESPN radio station here in Austin plays clips of that song a lot during the B & E show, so I’ve been hearing it a lot lately. You know me, demolishing stuff, listening to sports radio, punchin’ nerds…dude stuff.
I agree completely with Mr. Tippin (sounds like a failed British sitcom). You have to stand for something. Each of us needs to know where our principles lie and stand up for those principles. We need to have integrity, honesty, and conviction for the things in which we believe.
The problem is, lately, we stand for everything. There are a lot of blogs, articles, and videos going viral lately. Each one of them has an incredibly important message that must be shared: genetically modified food is killing all of us, Miley Cyrus is psychotic so I need to write a letter to my kids, Mitt Romney was right all along. Unfortunately, the more we buy in and virate (that’s the verb for viral) these videos/blogs/etc., the less meaning and substance everything has. Everything is a big deal! Hannah Montana has us in an outrage this week, and with Facebook as our guide, we won’t stand for it…until next week when we are viraled (past tense) by something else. We spend so much time in outrageous support/opposition of the most recent viralion (that’s the noun version), that we have little time left to figure out or understand what is truly of lasting significance to us. We lose focus of what matters most and become unsure of what’s worth standing for. Suddenly, everything is passing; nothing is permanent.
So this week, spend a little less time in viralation and a little more time discovering what really matters. Spend more time understanding your own principles and values and make them mean more than they already do; don’t worry so much what Amanda Bynes is teaching your kid, worry what you are teaching your kid. Ignore the next “must read” post you see (except this one…it really is a must-read). Worry less about all the outrageous info on the internet/news/etc. and a little more about immovable and unchangeable values: honesty, integrity, character, kindness, compassion, charity. Stand for those principles, or continue to, but leave Miley Cyrus out; we don’t have to devote time and attention to the vice in order to stand for our virtues. So, stand for something, not everything, or you may fall for everything.
Now, go put on a little Country Music and make this post go viral.
Rob Porter, Ph.D., LMFT

Marriage and Family Therapist and country music lover?, Austin TX

21 June 2013

Ah, Home Crap Home

It's been a while since I have graced the pages of another blog, much to the disappointment of at least 13 people. In fact, I have had literally 2 requests that I return to the pages of the internet (they have it on computers now). You can only ignore such demands so long ("Hey Rob. You haven't blogged in a while." I get it. You need me).
It has been 4 months since I posted anything...I'm not sure how anyone's relationship is surviving. To be honest, I did make numerous attempts to blog. Unfortunately for you, my attempts usually went from this:
abcore
Marty, I always wear a tie while I work my abs.
To this:
Oh Margie, well you came and you found me a turkey.
Oh Margie, well you came and you found me a turkey.
To this:
How does he get his hair so feathered?
How does he get his hair so feathered?
I would generally get about 1 or 2 paragraphs into a decent blerg, only to realize that I was veering off course. Nothing I was writing was coming out funny or helpful and I would spend a good 20 minutes looking at random pictures on the internet (there has to at least 1,000 pictures on the interweb nowadays) only to give up in frustation that I had lose my touch, man...did you ever have a touch to lose, man? (warm hug to whomever can name that movie without google). Ultimately, I reached a point where I avoided my blog like
the plague a Dave Matthews Band concert.
Then, after a month or two of not even acknowledging my blog, I went back and read over some previous posts. I don't know if you guys realize this, but I think I am really funny. I don't mean like slight chuckle funny, I mean grab your neighbor and punch him in the eye funny. As I read over my blogs, I was so impressed with myself. My humor really spoke to me. It motivated me to get out there and try again to make me laugh. And then it occurred to me. I write my blog for me. 
No offense. I like people reading my blog, but when I write it to make other people laugh or to inspire other people, I get too in my head. I lose focus on what really matters. Like this: 
There is so much right in this photo.
There is so much right in this photo.
Or this: 
Oh Roger. How can I resist that dimple....or sparkly, opened-chested collar-shirt thingy.
"Oh Roger. How can I resist that dimple....or that sparkly, opened-chested collar-shirt thingy. Wait, is that a cape?"
My efforts to write something really amazing made me stop saying anything at all. And let's not forget, there is an alarming shortage of blogs on the internet. So this blog is a return to excellence in my own mind. And I've got to tell you, it feels great. As far as I'm concerned, this is the best blog I have ever written. Yup. Best ever.
Now, if you have not yet been able to relate to my condescending arrogance, allow me to tie together Dawson's Creek, Homer Simpson, and Roger Troutman for you. Sometimes, we get too in our heads. When we talk with our partners or spouses, we worry how what we say will be received. So, we fumble around with our words, or we don't say anything at all. Our anxiety immobilizes us and we end up crying in the corner (Dawson's Creek style...that guy is from Dawson's Creek, right?). 
When we have arguments with our significant others, we are responsible for our own feelings. If we can't express them honestly (not meanly...like you're an idiot), then we will eventually end up avoiding our relationship like a Dave Matthews Band concert. We stop talking all together because anger or frustration becomes something terrible, rather than an acceptable emotion we all experience. 
So, in your next argument, be more open...not mean, open. Tell your partner what's going on for you, because it's what's going on for you; not to try and get some sort of response from them. They can like or not like what you said, but you got your Luke Perry and Roger Troutman out there. 
Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to go see if I can find some random photos to tie into a blog....Hey! There's an idea. You send me some random photos and I'll see if I can work them into some sort of therapeutic/relationship message. 
Rob Porter, Ph.D., LMFT
Marriage Therapist, Couple Counselor, Family Therapist, Man of Excellence
robportermft@gmail.com

26 February 2013

The Cure for the Sickness of El Dorado

This week, I am posting an article by a personal friend, Stephen Palmer; an inspired and talented man. This article by Stephen Palmer is an issue of his “Inspiration Weekly” newsletter.

*********************

When the Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés arrived in the Americas in 1504, the territory governor offered him a land grant. He scoffed, “I came to get gold, not to till the soil like a peasant.”
He, like hundreds of adventurers and treasure-seekers, was bedazzled by tales of gold and treasure. Over the next two centuries, invaders obsessed with finding the legendary kingdom of El Dorado combed the Amazon. Most of them died of disease and hunger.
El Dorado has never been found, but the legend has not died, nor will it ever.
El Dorado is an idea, a twisted hope embedded in the soul of man. It is the incessant quest for a free lunch, the foolish search for greener pastures, the deluded yearning for quick and easy shortcuts, the childish desire to get something for nothing.
As Cortés sneered at the offer of land, we reject exercise and nutrition in favor of drugs and liposuction. Preferring overnight riches to earned wealth, we buy lottery tickets, gamble in the stock market, speculate in risky ventures promising high returns.
The illusory gold of romance gleaming in our wandering eyes, we pursue one relationship after another, only to become disenchanted with each when it becomes hard work. We abandon the fields of marriage to muck around in the mines of superficial passion and selfish lust.
Anxious for something new and exciting to enliven our daily routine, we frantically comb Facebook and check email. Wanting an easy path to open up for us, we wait for inspiration before acting.
For all such malcontent treasure-seekers, happiness, fulfillment, and success lie always around the next bend in the road, ever slipping through their fingers. They may not die of disease or starvation, but their hunger is never satiated and the sickness of El Dorado rots their soul.
We have been given soil to till, a purpose to fulfill. Our fields of purpose lie fallow as long as El Dorado makes our hearts beat faster and lifts our eyes to distant horizons.
The beginning of success is the realization that El Dorado has not, does not, will not ever exist except as dark and perverted fantasies posing as glamorous legends — the acceptance that there are no shortcuts, that nothing worthwhile comes quick and easy.
The end of success is the harvest gleaned from cultivating our fields of mission over years of dedicated, persistent effort.
Far too many naïve whippersnappers have been set to a frenzy by the old man’s breathless declaration, “There’s gold in them thar hills.” They should have listened to Napoleon Hill instead, who said,
“More gold has been mined from the thoughts of men than has been taken from the earth.”
Wealth is not found in gold and treasure, but rather in the satisfaction of a job well done, the knowledge that we are fulfilling our unique purpose to the best of our ability, the joy of blessing the lives of others.
We need not travel to exotic destinations to encounter adventure. We need not discard our spouse to find passion and romance.
Adventure, passion, and romance are not found out in the world, around the bend, over the horizon. They are chosen and created in our hearts.
Your wife is an awe-inspiring, worship-worthy goddess — if you choose to perceive her as such. Under his work clothes and mild-mannered alter ego, your husband is an amazing superhero just waiting to be discovered.
Your home is a gold-encrusted kingdom bursting with knights in shining armor, princesses worth dying for, battles to fight, dragons to slay, conquests to win.
Gaze not at the horizon yearning for a mythical El Dorado. Look inside your heart, till the land you’ve been granted, and in every mundane day, discover the adventure.

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Stephen Palmer is a New York Times best-selling writer and the founder of Life Manifestos, which creates inspirational posters and products for people who live with passion and purpose. Subscribe to his Inspiration Weekly newsletter to get his articles every Monday morning.

12 February 2013

Tonight...I Celebrate My Love


I've been spending a lot of time lately getting myself ready for Valentine's Day. Nothing out of the ordinary--picking out my favorite outfit, manscaping, honing my Rick Astley (that sounds dirty fella)--you know, dude stuff. I like Valentine's Day. Of course I like it. What's not to like? There's candy, love, flowers, this:
If this Valentine's is going TO Mr. Cena, it's a little creepy.
...You're welcome 

Unfortunately, I have been noticing a lot of hatred towards V-Day going around lately. For the past couple of years, I have noticed friends, articles, news reports that focus on why we should stop celebrating the holiday d'amour (that's sounds romantic, right? I am dreamy). The main argument seems to be that we shouldn't need a special holiday to show each other we love each other, that if we truly loved each other, we would show each other every day of the year. Love is not about chocolate hearts, flowers, and John Cena, it's about truly expressing our love for each other as often as possible.
Sure, they have a point; we shouldn't wait until February 14th to show our love to those we care about most. We shouldn't need Hallmark to be our voice in expressing how much we love our significant others. We shouldn't wait until Valentine's Day to treat our partners to a fancy dinner followed by Kenny G and rose petals. But just because we shouldn't wait until then to do it, does that mean we should cease all celebration of the holiday? If my wife never questioned that I loved her--if she always knew how much she meant to me because I was constantly showing her--does that mean I should protest a day when it's expected that I show her a little more?
See, I guess I take some offense to some of the anti-valentine-ist propaganda. Every time I read one of the articles or hear someone speak out, they tend to say it like this, "My husband doesn't need a holiday. He dotes on me every day of the year." The problem with that is, it implies they are above showing their love on V-day, that those of us who do are affectionately moronic and need the calendar to tell us when to buy flowers. Just because I celebrate Valentine's Day, that doesn't mean I don't love my wife every other day. If I celebrate Christmas, does that mean I don't think about Christ every other day? If I celebrate Festivus, does that mean I don't air my grievances the other 364 days of the year?
Yes, we should focus on how much we love each other every day; that should be our baseline. But a holiday can create opportunity to express it in a way that might be a little more special. I think there cannot be enough holidays that remind us to focus on how much we love each other. Sure, Valentine's Day is a little commercialized (luckily, otherwise I may not know that every kiss begins with Kay...or how creepy love can be...), but it can still be a holiday that can give us the opportunity to strengthen our relationships. It helps us focus on making our relationship a little bit better. It can make us a little more aware. Plus, it can provide us lots of romantic moments:
ahhh, romance
It was then that I knew it was meant to be.

I can't tell where your face ends and mine begins.
I can't tell where your face ends and mine begins.
  
I...um...I got nothin.
I...um...I got nothin.

So please, celebrate Valentine's Day.  Take some time to be a little more focused on your relationship. A full commitment's what I'm thinking of. You wouldn't get this from any other guy...Curse you Rick Astley. So poetic, and so true.
Rob Porter, Ph.D., LMFT
Therapist/Marriage Therapist/Couple Counselor/Romantic Dude, Austin TX