Ron & Tina Konkin- Founding Directors

Ron & Tina Konkin- Founding Directors
Ron & Tina Konkin- Founding Directors, Key Note Speakers, Registered Professional Counselors - Photo by Capturing Moments

Living Above the Line

Relationship Help Centers - RON & TINA KONKIN, - Living Above The Line is the legacy we want to create for every man, woman, and child because we believe life was meant to be lived abundantly. To learn more about how you can live a fulfilled life both personally and in your relationships then Living Above The Line with the Konkins is a blog you will want to follow.

Visit The Relationship Help Centers Website Here!

Relationship Help Centers offers the renown Exclusive Couples Retreat & the intensive Relationship BootCamp. Both are recommended by Dr. Phil and used as a resource on his website. Gene Simmons & Shannon Tweed-Simmons attended the Exclusive Couples Retreat before they decided to tie the knot. Visit www.RelationshipHelpCenters.com www.RelationshipBootCamp.com www.CouplesRetreat.com for more information on all of our programs.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

"Marriage is an Anti-Poverty Program"



With National Marriage Week just around the corner in the USA, this is a very compelling article to demonstrate the destruction that divorce is costing this nation. It is time that we begin to find healing and fight for happy and healthy marriages, not only for ourselves but for our children and our country. 

We all know that marriage isn't going to be a walk in the park, but it seems that when push comes to shove, more than half of us are just giving up! Reach out for help, work hard and save your marriage. Now is the time to invest in what really matters... your family! Register for the Relationship BootCamp or Couples Retreat today and be a part of starting a MARRIAGE MOVEMENT in our nation! 

 Get more info or register here today!


Marriage is an Anti-Poverty Program—
As important a Campaign as Recycling or Anti-Smoking

Plan Now—Hundreds of events during National Marriage Week USA (Feb. 7-14) where couples can now get help!

NEW YORKN.Y. During the week leading up to Valentine’s Day, a national campaign to strengthen marriage, reduce divorce, and promote marriage prior to childbearing, is stirring up hundreds of events nationwide to help couples. The first collaborative National Marriage Calendar is now provided by National Marriage Week USA (NMWUSA) (www.NationalMarriageWeekUSA.org)

Small town stories across the nation are exciting!” says Sheila Weber, executive director of the national campaign. A group in Kankakee CountyIllinois is setting up a booth in a shopping mall from February 7 to14, offering free marriage counseling services. A team in the Chicago area has 500 churches sponsoring Date Night events.  A Louisiana group is seeking its state’s top 10 longest married couples to be publicized as was last year’s honoree couple, who were married for 81 years!  A Sweetheart Dinner and Dance in Ohio will offer a renewal of vows ceremony.

United Marriage Encounters and NMWUSA are co-sponsoring a 2-Minute Video Contest with a Winner’s Free Trip to Hawaii for the couple with the winning marriage story.  Folks can get info and submit their video stories at this link: www.NationalMarriageWeekUSA.org/videocontest

“It has been long proven that children fare best at every level if they can grow up with both their father and mother,” said Mrs. Weber.  “Since more than 40 percent of U.S. babies today are born out of wedlock, which is the greatest predictor of poverty for women and children, and we have an alarming drop in marriage rates—nearly 80% of all adults were married in 1970, only 52% today—the need is greater than ever for a positive campaign to strengthen marriage,” she continued. 

The Brookings Institution says that if the U.S. had the marriage rate today that it had in 1970, there would be a 25 percent drop in poverty.  The Heritage Foundation says that marriage drops the probability of a child living in poverty by 82 percent, cites Mrs. Weber.

The NYC Human Resources Commissioner was recently reported to be planning a local campaign about the benefits of marriage “for the outcome of the child,” motivated by the fact that 70 percent of all babies born in the Bronx are to unwed moms—news Weber cited as “quite an extraordinary development.”

“We encourage citizens, organizations, and houses of worship to launch marriage strengthening classes and events, list them on the National Calendar at www.NationalMarriageWeekUSA.org., and for individuals to find an event near them to help their own marriage, or help others,” explains Mrs. Weber.  A 4-minute video provides the campaign overview at www.NationalMarriageWeekUSA.org.

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Sheila Weber
Executive Director, National Marriage Week USA

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Saving Marriage Could Save the Country- Divorce is costing Taxpayers $112 Billion/Year


Save your Marriage & Save a Fortune! What is Divorce Costing this Country? 

We have all heard the horror stories, or possibly even experienced them ourselves, of how much a divorce can cost, but have we looked at how much it costs the country? This research shows just how important it is that we start to truly invest in our marriages, not only for the sake of ourselves and our children, but for the sake of the economy. The numbers are staggering and there are many other studies that have shown that children who grow up in healthy, two-parent homes are more likely to continue their education, stay out of legal trouble and be more successful in their jobs. 
At Relationship Help Centers, we teach the importance of investing in your relationships for the benefit of you and your family. The small investment of time and money to attend a Relationship BootCamp, Couples Retreat or work with a coach will have a huge payoff (both financially and emotionally) in the end! 

Find out more information about our programs at www.RelationshipHelpCenters.com or call 949.510.1075 today! 



"Marriage Breakdown Costs Taxpayers at Least $112 Billion a Year"

First-Time Research Reveals Staggering Annual Taxpayer Costs for Divorce and Unwed Childbearing

WASH. D.C. In first-ever research, a new report quantifies a minimum $112 billion annual taxpayer cost from high rates of divorce and unmarried childbearing. It identifies national, state and local costs which account for more than $1 trillion in the last decade. This landmark scholarly study, entitled “The Taxpayer Costs of Divorce and Unwed Childbearing: First-Ever Estimates for the Nation and All 50 States,” was released on April 15th at the National Press Club by four renowned policy and research groups—Institute for American Values, Georgia Family Council, Institute for Marriage and Public Policy, and Families Northwest.
“This study documents for the first time, that divorce and unwed childbearing—besides being bad for children—are also costing taxpayers a ton of money,” said David Blankenhorn, president of the Institute for American Values. “Even a small improvement in the health of marriage in America would result in enormous savings to taxpayers,” he continued. “For example, a 1 percent reduction in rates of family fragmentation would save taxpayers $1.1 billion.”
“These costs are due to increased taxpayer expenditures for anti-poverty, criminal justice and education programs, and through lower levels of taxes paid by individuals whose adult productivity has been negatively affected by increased childhood poverty caused by family fragmentation,” said principal investigator Ben Scafidi, Ph.D., economics professor at Georgia College & State University.
“Prior research shows that marriage lifts single mothers out of poverty and therefore reduces the need for costly social benefits,” said Scafidi. “This new report shows that public concern about the decline of marriage need not be based only on ‘moral’ concerns, but that reducing high taxpayer costs of family fragmentation is a legitimate concern of government, policymakers and legislators, as well as community reformers and faith communities.”
“This report now provides the basis for a national consensus that strengthening marriage is a legitimate policy concern,” said Blankenhorn. “The report’s numbers represent an extremely cautious estimate, a lower-bound figure, and have been vetted by a group of distinguished scholars and economists who have attached their names as advisors to this report.”
“These numbers represent real people and real suffering,” said Randy Hicks, president of Georgia Family Council. “Both economic and human costs make family fragmentation a legitimate public concern. Historically, Americans have resisted the impulse to surrender to negative and hurtful trends. We fight problems like racism, poverty and domestic violence because we understand that the stakes are high. And while we’ll never eliminate divorce and unwed childbearing entirely, we can certainly be doing more to help marriages and families succeed.”

Press Release found at:
http://www.americanvalues.org/coff/pressrelease.pdf

Mitchell S. Muncy, Chief Operating Officer, Institute for American Values, muncy@americanvalues.org, cell: (212)-246-3942 Institute for American Values, 1841 Broadway, Suite 211, New York, NY 10023, Tel: (212) 246-3942, Fax: (212) 541-6665
www.americanvalues.org www.georgiafamily.org www.imapp.org www.familiesnorthwest.org

Institute for American Values Georgia Family Council Institute for Marriage and Public Policy Families Northwest
Embargoed until Contact: Mitchell S. Muncy, Chief Operating Officer 12:01 A.M., April 15, 2008 Muncy@americanvalues.org; 212-246-3942


For more information on how to find healing in your relationship visit www.RelationshipHelpCenters.com or call us for a free 30 minute coaching session at 949.510.1075




Tuesday, January 15, 2013

How to have "Till Death Do Us Part" Without Killing Each Other!


It's not 50/50 according to these over-50's!

At the Relationship BootCamp, we do an exercise where we send the couples out on an "Amazing Love Race". They have to complete certain tasks as a couple. One of the tasks on their list is to find an old couple who have been married for over 50 years and ask them the secret to their success. When I found this article on Huffington Post, it caught my eye because they survey over 1000 older people to find out the same thing! 

There's something to be said for seeking wisdom from those who have made their marriages work... till death do they part. I recently learned that the second most Googled "How to" in Canada in 2012 was "How to love?" so it is evident that we are looking for answers on how to have more successful marriages. There are some amazing nuggets in this article and needless to say, after 50+ years of marriage, it seems these couples have figured things out on how to make it last! 
One of my favourite quotes from the article is:
People always say you have to be more assertive and you have to take what you need but I could never relate to that. I have a friend who keeps going through one marriage after another and saying: 'Well, I didn't get what I needed in that marriage.' And I thought, 'Well, did you give anything out?'"

This is a great example of the 100/100 marriage and precisely what we teach at Relationship Help Centers (Relationship BootCamp & Couples Retreat). 


The Myth of the 50/50 Marriage

What makes for a long marriage? It's a question that social scientists and clinicians have tried to answer for many years, with limited results. We still don't really know why, after the joy of a wedding, one couple ends up on the rocks after a few years and another stays together for five or six decades. 

I decided to seek an answer by trying something new: Asking over 1,000 older people about their experiences in marriage. In the Legacy Project (and a related book), our research team invited these oldest Americans to share their lessons for young couples hoping to stay happily married "until death do us part."
When asked about what makes for a long and satisfying marriage, I was surprised at how many elders used the expression "give and take." Typical comments were: "Well, it's a lot of give and take" and "You can't just give or just take, it has to be both."
Trying to understand the underlying lesson behind what seemed like a cliché, I asked Alvin (87 and married for 63 years): "So you mean that marriage has to be a 50-50 kind of thing, right? A 50-50 proposition?"
He nearly bellowed his disagreement -- that was precisely not what he was saying. "Don't consider a marriage a 50-50 affair! Consider it a 100 percent affair. The only way you can make a marriage work is to have both parties give a hundred percent every time."
It began to make sense: The common belief that marriage is a 50-50 affair is a myth. You can't spend your time calculating "50 percent in, 50 percent back." The attitude has to be one of giving freely. And according to the elders, if you start keeping score you're already in deep trouble.
For long-term success, couples have to orient themselves to giving more than they get. Both individuals are contributing to a relationship, the benefits of which transcend immediate interests on a given day. What couples must avoid -- if they wish to remain together as long as the elders we interviewed -- is keeping score about who is getting more and who is getting less. This kind of economic attitude works with a vending machine: If I put in my dollar, I will get a candy bar of equal value. According to the oldest Americans, this definitely does not work in marriage.
Fifty-four years ago, Kay graduated from college in the morning and was married on campus in the afternoon. She made this point quite clearly.
"Okay. It's not a 50-50 proposition. It's a 90-10. Sometimes you're on the 90, and sometimes you're on the 10. That can vary, depending on where you are, what's the issue on the table. But anybody that goes into marriage saying, "Oh -- this is going to be 50-50," it doesn't happen. You can't live in the same house with the same person all those years and always divide it down the half."
Crystal's long and happy experience of being married to Todd hinges on the idea that marriage is more than a calculated balance of give and take.
"I think we both are not waking up in the morning and saying: 'Oh, am I getting what I need out of this?' We are waking up saying often: 'What can I do for him, or what can I do for her?' For example, my husband's gone through retirement since we've been married, and that was very difficult at first. He didn't know who he was, so his sense of his own usefulness was very tenuous for a while. I remember thinking okay, now I need to wake up in the morning and think: 'He really needs something. He needs a little extra right now.'

Then when I had cancer, he was amazing and I never felt frightened or abandoned. I was in the hospital, I think 25 times or something during a year, and he just drove up and drove back. I used to worry with all these bodily functions -- because you just disintegrate -- but he was fine, he wasn't grossed out or anything. So this is how it goes, it kind of goes up and down like this. Because there's times when one person is taking and needing, and then it's the other person. 

People always say you have to be more assertive and you have to take what you need but I could never relate to that. I have a friend who keeps going through one marriage after another and saying: 'Well, I didn't get what I needed in that marriage.' And I thought, 'Well, did you give anything out?'"
So these long-married elders tell us to stop thinking of marriage as a 50-50 proposition; for decades of life together, you have to throw away the score card. Some elders used the image of a team to make this point, using colorful examples drawn from the past.
Albert, age 80, told me: "[I've been] married 59 years to a very good wife. Instead of worrying about who is winning and who is losing in a marriage, the key is working together, unconcerned about that kind of thing." Albert then provided an image that reveals the core of elder wisdom about marriage.
"Well, there's a local museum here in town. In it there's a life-sized statue of a team of work horses obviously pulling a large load. And at our last anniversary, the kids asked us 'How do you characterize your marriage?' I said, 'Go look at the sculpture, that team of horses. Both of them laying into the harness together.' And written underneath it was: 'As of One Mind.' That sculpture characterizes our marriage. We came through some very hard times. There were times when we didn't know if we were going to make it. But we did it together. If one person goes off and thinks he's going to do it by himself, it isn't going to work.'
The last word goes to Antoinette, married 60 years, who offered this lesson for getting beyond "50-50 thinking" in marriage -- and it works.
"When you wake up in the morning, think 'What can I do to make her day or his day just a little happier?' You need to turn toward each other, and if you focus on the other person even just for that five minutes when you first wake up, it's going to make a big difference in your relationship. That's likely to really work for many years. So start each day thinking about what you can give that special person in your life."
Article written by:

Karl A. Pillemer, Ph.D.



Article found at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/karl-a-pillemer-phd/marriage-counseling_b_1860595.html





For more information on any of our programs (The Relationship BootCamp, Couples Retreat or Coaching, please visit us at www.RelationshipHelpCenters.com or call 949.510.