How to Save a Relationship From the Financial Storm
If you count yourself among those countless getting distanced from their loved ones amid the current financial storm, you still can ponder over how to save a relationship.
Nothing comes close to financial problems in affecting relationships, divorce rates, domestic violence and suicides.
Financial woes in such volatile times can turn into your biggest mental stress, and you need to learn to protect your loved ones from the fury of this tempest.
First things first: be prepared before you actually get caught up.
You have a blessing if you already have time to balance off the hard financial times ahead.
Start by saving some extra cash, cutting down on expenses and luxuries you are planning to buy.
Do not work in isolation.
Take your spouse into confidence and work out a strategy together that would keep the relationship intact amid the financial turmoil.
We are living in stressful times with stories about lay-offs and cruel downsizing hitting every second neighborhood.
No doubt your partner will see the need to cut down on expenses.
Why not get your hands on some alternative source of income while you have the time? You can save thousands of extra dollars while also adding shinning starts to your portfolio by working overtimes, extra shifts, working over holidays or even keeping a secondary job.
After all, only a committed employee will survive the current downsizing onslaught.
Your partner can acquire more skills that can help raise your family income even further while you are trying to improve your income by taking up extra work.
Office automation, database managements and business correspondence are jobs in demand in every office of the country.
Become good at multitasking, and no employer will want to fire you.
If you have already become caught up in this financial crisis, it is high time you focused on winning back any love lost and regaining your mental and emotional balance.
Do not forget, no single partner is to blame; both of you share a measure of it as a result of habits and personalities you both possess.
Either of you could have done better, but this is not the time to apportion blames.
None of you can be the judge of other's performance and individual circumstances.
Whatever you plan out your finances, it should be fully coherent with your partner's ideas and with mutual support.
Keep in mind that your partner shares the financial distress with you.
So while you may be working out your own plan, your partner may be doing the same with hers.
Do not plan things alone, since this will not only make each of you to follow a separate incoherent financial strategy but it will also put even more distance between you.
Give the well-known statement 'love reigning supreme' a chance.
And hold on to your relationship as much as you can even in the face of an obvious financial turmoil.
To learn how to save a relationship, is actually learning how to never put it at stake no matter how tough the times can get.
Nothing comes close to financial problems in affecting relationships, divorce rates, domestic violence and suicides.
Financial woes in such volatile times can turn into your biggest mental stress, and you need to learn to protect your loved ones from the fury of this tempest.
First things first: be prepared before you actually get caught up.
You have a blessing if you already have time to balance off the hard financial times ahead.
Start by saving some extra cash, cutting down on expenses and luxuries you are planning to buy.
Do not work in isolation.
Take your spouse into confidence and work out a strategy together that would keep the relationship intact amid the financial turmoil.
We are living in stressful times with stories about lay-offs and cruel downsizing hitting every second neighborhood.
No doubt your partner will see the need to cut down on expenses.
Why not get your hands on some alternative source of income while you have the time? You can save thousands of extra dollars while also adding shinning starts to your portfolio by working overtimes, extra shifts, working over holidays or even keeping a secondary job.
After all, only a committed employee will survive the current downsizing onslaught.
Your partner can acquire more skills that can help raise your family income even further while you are trying to improve your income by taking up extra work.
Office automation, database managements and business correspondence are jobs in demand in every office of the country.
Become good at multitasking, and no employer will want to fire you.
If you have already become caught up in this financial crisis, it is high time you focused on winning back any love lost and regaining your mental and emotional balance.
Do not forget, no single partner is to blame; both of you share a measure of it as a result of habits and personalities you both possess.
Either of you could have done better, but this is not the time to apportion blames.
None of you can be the judge of other's performance and individual circumstances.
Whatever you plan out your finances, it should be fully coherent with your partner's ideas and with mutual support.
Keep in mind that your partner shares the financial distress with you.
So while you may be working out your own plan, your partner may be doing the same with hers.
Do not plan things alone, since this will not only make each of you to follow a separate incoherent financial strategy but it will also put even more distance between you.
Give the well-known statement 'love reigning supreme' a chance.
And hold on to your relationship as much as you can even in the face of an obvious financial turmoil.
To learn how to save a relationship, is actually learning how to never put it at stake no matter how tough the times can get.