Project 12 of 12 toward high-nurturance families and relationships

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How Well-balanced Is Our Home?

Checklist 3 of 4

By Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

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        This is one of over 150 articles focused on building high-nurturance family relationships and preventing divorce. This introduction describes the Web site's purpose and the best ways to use its resources. Each article is part of a mosaic of ideas, so the more you read, the more sense they'll all make. These articles augment, vs. replace, other qualified professional help.

        Before continuing, reflect: why are you reading this - what do you need?

        This is one of a series of articles focusing on Project 12: co-parents keeping balanced enough - and enjoying doing all ten other ongoing family projects, within the dynamic kaleidoscope of warp-speed daily life. Related checklists focus on assessing the personal balances of you and your partner as individuals, and the balances in your relationship together, and between your relatives' several homes.

        The directions for these other checklists apply here too. Some options for using the results from each and all three of these Project 12 worksheets are noted at the end of this page.

Symptoms of Nuclear-stepfamily Balance

        Here "balance" refers to stepfamily adults and kids consistently getting key emotional + mental + spiritual + physical needs met, in ways that everyone involved feels good enough about. Use these two checklists to raise your awareness of the level of recent wholistic balances in your home, and between your two or three nuclear-stepfamily (co-parenting) homes. These balances are usually proportional to the personal and re/marital balances of your three or more co-parents.

        These are representative questions, not all that could apply - so invent some others that you feel are relevant to your unique situation. Ultimately your co-parents’ judgments about the levels of your personal, re/marital, and stepfamily balances are what counts, not checking these boxes.

        As I begin this checklist, I'm aware of ...

 

 

Recent Balance In Our Home

        Answer the following about those adults and kids who reside full time or part time (like visiting kids) in your primary home. If you feel unclear or ambivalent about an item, use "?", "+" or "--". Unchecked boxes are opportunities to grow your balance, not problems or flaws - do you agree?

__  1) All our residents and visitors usually enjoy being in our home.

__  2) Each of our kids and adults usually feels respected and cared about (i.e. included) enough by other residents.

__  3) Residents in our home usually feel safe enough in asking each other for help.

__  4) All our residents feel content that they have enough privacy and personal space.

__  5) There is usually a healthy balance of work, play, and rest in our home.

__  6) Our residents usually have a sense of teamwork about sharing household chores.

__  7) No adult or child feels like an "invader" ("This is their house") or "invaded" by other residents or visiting kids.

__  8) People in our home generally feel comfortable in asserting their feelings, needs,   preferences, and boundaries to other residents, including saying "No."

__  9) Disputes among our members are usually resolved promptly and amicably enough.

__  10) All our adults and kids are _ clear enough on, and _ comfortable enough with, who makes the major decisions in our home.

__  11) We all _ usually enjoy eating meals together, and _ get well-balanced, adequate food.

__  12) All our kids are comfortable being children (vs. little adults) in our home.

__  13) We’re all clear on our roles (who does what), and are making progress on evolving a set of household rules (how and when) that all residents are usually comfortable with.

__  14) The child discipline in our home is usually felt to be fair and effective enough by all involved.

__  15) All our residents usually trust that no other full-time or part-time resident will ridicule, harm, steal from, or lie to them.

__  16) Our residents generally feel respected by each other about noise, personal belongings, sharing appliances (like phones and TVs), and personal hygiene.

__  17) Residents usually call this "our house," not "their / your house."

__  18) Each of our residents enjoys asking friends into our home.

__  19) There is at least one place in our home where residents can be alone, or talk privately with each other without distraction or interruption.

__  20) Our residents usually feel safe expressing irritation or anger with each other, and do so respectfully enough.

__  21) The kids living in and visiting our home are clearly "on track" (for their age) in developing healthy personal and social skills, confidences, identities, and independence.

__  22)  Each of our residents and visiting kids feels they have enough personal space in our dwelling.

__  23)  Each of our full-time and part-time residents feels physically, financially, socially, and spiritually safe enough in our home.

__  24)  We’re developing a set of enjoyable rituals together, including holiday and special celebrations, vacations, outings, birthdays and anniversaries, and family times.

__  25)  We have an effective "good grief" policy, and usually encourage each other to grieve our losses well.

__  26)  The leaders of our home _ have clear goals for us all, and _ are implementing effective ways of achieving these goals _ in ways we all understand and can cooperate with.

__  27)  There’s often spontaneous healthy (vs. shaming) kidding and laughter in our home.

__  28)  We’re clearly developing a sense of "us-ness" (identity) and family pride, over time.

__  29)  Everyone in our home is comfortable enough with what they are called (their names and family titles), and what to call other members.

__  30)  Our residents and regular visitors each usually feel listened to well enough by each other.

__  31)  No-one in our home is sexually attracted to – or active with - an inappropriate partner.

__  32)  No-one in our home uses physical violence – or the threat of that – to get their needs met.

__  33) We regularly affirm and praise each other - genuinely - for thoughtful- nesses and achievements.

__  34) Our adults and kids are allowed to feel sad, quiet, or depressed, if they need to.

__  35) Each of our residents promptly gets the medical, dental, optical, and spiritual care that they need.

__  36) No-one in our home has an unhealthy dependence on a substance (including sugar, fat, carbohydrates, alcohol, nicotine, caffeine, or "hard" or prescription drugs), another person, an activity (like work, sex, or spending), or a "cause."

__  37) All our residents are clear on, and comfortable enough with, our identity as a multi-home stepfamily (vs. "We're just a family").

__  38)

__  39)

__  40) People who know us all would say our household is generally "well balanced." On an overall spiritual-emotional-mental-physical "balance" scale of 1 to 10, I’d say our home feels about _____ recently.

__  41) I feel clear that most of these things are true enough for our other co-parenting home/s, recently.

        I _ took my time with this checklist, and _ feel pleased, calm, and satisfied as I finish it. _ There is nothing here that I’d feel uncomfortable sharing with my partner or key others in our stepfamily.

  Thoughts / Learnings

 

 

 

 

Continue with ranking the balance between your homes.

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Updated  August 25, 2008