Lovesick - All Your Eggs in One Basket
I saw this too much in college, a guy so lovesick that when his girlfriend was not around he was barely functional. He even had to have help to make it through the line in the Caf. Some girls might think this is sweet, its cute, the problem is, she’s his everything and he’s lost without her. Our lives need balance; our lives need to be lived creatively. If all of your life is in one boy or one girl then it is unbalanced. Relationships take creativity, and the more varied relationships we have – family, friends, co-workers, etc. – the more and varied creativity it takes to maintain those relationships. How you solve conflict between yourself and a co-worker will help you solve conflict with your boyfriend/girlfriend. So build relationships with other people, and don’t let one relationship be your one and only.
Lovesick - Obsessed
Just like your Facebook relationship can be complicated,
your real life relationships can be complicated. You like a girl, and you wonder if she likes you. She acts like she likes you, she laughs
at your jokes and she twirls her hair and then she says “you’re a great friend,
I know I can always talk to you.” Ouch,
smacked back into the friend zone.
You thought she was into you, and then she made it clear that she’s just
not that in to you. Why are we
interested in relationships, why do Myspace and Facebook have that as an option
for your profile? Why do people
think that anyone over 20 who is single needs to be setup with someone –
quick fast in a hurry? It is
because our society is in love with being in love. The largest genre of movies on the market are ‘romantic comedies,’
it is difficult to find songs on the radio that are not about
relationships. We are in love with
being in love. But what is our
response to all of this as Christians?
We know that anything that takes the place of God in our lives is an
idol. As such, we should rethink
it.
The Good Fight - Behind Enemy Lines
The past two weeks we have been discussing how to grow your relationship with your parents, this week is the last lesson on that subject. Our parents may not be the kind of parents we want, they may be harder on us then we think we deserve, or they might be too lax. Either way they are our parents, and we do have a responsibility to grow our relationship with them. Growing it will be hard because you might need to begin by forgiving them. You might need to forgive your dad or mom for walking out on you. You might need to forgive them for checking out on you; they are physically present, but emotionally distant. Or, you might need to ask for forgiveness, perhaps you are not working at your highest potential and this creates fights in your life. Perhaps you are the one checking out because you go hide in your room and play video games, or text, or Myspace all night. Only you know where you need to start. Remember fighting for a relationship with your parents is a fight worth having.
The Good Fight - Surveillance
We know that all families fight. This week’s lesson is about why we fight. We fight over differences in perspective. We fight because our parents are looking at a situation differently than we are; we fight because we are looking at a situation differently than they are. We say; “I want to go to this party because all my friends are going to be there and we are just going to hangout and play charades.” Your parents see a different perspective “I know for a fact that there will be college boys there because I talked to Lyric’s mom who had talked to Cada’s mom who said Derrick’s brother was coming home and bringing a carload of his friends, so no you can’t go.” Why do your parents’ not want you to go to a party with college boys? Well, college boys are really good at charades, and they would ruin all the fun, and also, because your parents’ probably went to college, so just trust them on this one.
Part of building a relationship with your parents is by choosing your rights. Yes you have the right to go to a party, but you also have the right not to be grounded. So choose that one. As you continue to fight for a relationship with your parents understand they have a different perspective, and seek to understand it.
The Good Fight - The Home Front
Every family fights, some fight actively - yelling, slamming doors, punching holes in the wall; some fight passively - ignoring each other, doing stuff to get on the other members nerves, or sometimes just pretending like everything is fine (trying to smile through the pain, which in this instance is very unhealthy). Families fight for emotional reasons and real reason. Emotional reasons like mom and/or dad had a bad day, so they start yelling at their kids, or real reasons like you went to a party when you were told not to go. Sometimes you get so mad at your parents' that you want to run away. This would only create more problems then it will solve. These are the moments when it is very important to work on your relationship with your parents. Begin by honoring your parents. The more time you spend honoring them, the less time you will spend arguing with them.
Now I have to make something very clear here. If one or more of your parents' are abusing you (physically or sexually) then you need to report it. You need help. Do not allow yourself to believe that you have to take it because it is honoring your parents. Also, if your parents' are asking/telling you to do something illegal - you need to report it. Honoring your parents does not involve breaking the law.
Honoring your parents does involve stopping those petty arguments you start - your dad is not going to buy a new sweatshirt to mow the grass in, your mom thinks her hairstyle is hip and is not going to change it. Let it go. Honoring your parents' means when they make a decision that you think is unfair - abide by it. It may be unfair, or it might be that your parents' love you and do not want you to get hurt. These lessons are to help you stop fighting with your parents, and start fighting for a relationship with your parents. Step one is to start honoring them.
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