JocelynGreen.com Logo

RSS  |  Facebook  |  Twitter  | Contact

Gary Chapman

5-book Give-away! Growing Up Social: Raising Relational Kids in a Screen-Driven World

Fri, 2014-11-07 08:14 -- Jocelyn Green
[[{"type":"media", "view_mode":"media_large", "fid":"1084", "attributes":{"class":"media-image alignleft size-full wp-image-2349", "typeof":"foaf:Image", "style":"", "width":"317", "height":"475", "alt":"GrowingUpSocial_RD3"}}]]Friends. Let me tell you, this book, Growing Up Social by Dr. Gary Chapman and Arlene Pellicane, is the best book for parents I've read in at least a year. It is NOT anti-technology, it does NOT impose unreasonable rules and principles. Instead, it acknowledges that we live in a screen-driven world, and makes the reader aware of what that means for children, and then shares what we can do to foster five key relational skills in our kids that screens do not cultivate. The following, from ArlenePellicane.com, describes the book very well: In our digital age, children are spending more and more time interacting with a screen rather than a real person. Technology has the potential to add value to our lives, but is it possible that too much screen time could be robbing our children of something much more valuable—namely, the emotional and social skills needed to succeed as they grow towards adulthood? In Growing Up Social, you’ll learn how to take back your home from an over-dependence on screens.  Discover the five A + skills needed to give your child the relational edge: The Skill of Affection – How do you show real love to another person? The Skill of Appreciation – How do you cultivate a grateful heart? The Skill of Attention – How do you focus and be a good listener? The Skill of Anger Management – How do you express anger in a productive way? The Skill of Apology – How do you mend a relationship after you make a mistake? Today’s screens aren’t just in our living rooms; they are in our pockets.  Now is the time to equip your child to live with screen time, not for screen time.  Constant entertainment is not the goal of childhood.  No phone, tablet, or gaming device can teach your child how to have healthy relationships; only you can.    Growing Up Social will help you: Equip your child to be relational rich in a digital world Replace mindless screen time with meaningful family time Establish simple boundaries that make a huge difference Read what’s working for the screen savvy family down the street Prepare your child to succeed down the road in relationships and life Learn healthy ways to occupy your child while you get things done For more, visit Arlene's Web page here. Let me also point out that there is a chapter dedicated to the challenges of single parenting. Military spouses, you can relate to this when your spouse is deployed. It's so easy to allow a screen to be a babysitter when the parent is already so drained. The authors understand that, and speak directly to this situation. Also, at no point did I feel "judged" or defensive by this book. Mostly, I was too busy underlining and dog-earing, and telling my husband that he'd really like to read this book when I'm done. :) I really appreciated the scientific studies the authors referenced. I found it fascinating and helpful to learn how our brains work--which sections are used for deep thinking, and which are used for skimming, how we rewire our brains based on our activities, and the implications of that in daily life and relationships. I'm going to be focusing on nurturing the five "A" skills (affection, appreciation, anger management, apology, and attention) in our family for sure. We have already started, and I'm already seeing positive results. Northfield Publishing is generously offering FIVE copies of Growing Up Social for readers of this blog! Please enter the drawing by using the Raffflecopter form below. I'm giving you several ways to enter--you need only choose one of them, but choosing more than one gives you more entries. Five winners will be notified by email when the drawing closes, and will have three days to respond with mailing addresses. a Rafflecopter giveaway

Chatting with Chapman on Focus on the Family Radio!

Wed, 2014-07-02 11:25 -- Jocelyn Green
Listen in as Dr. Gary Chapman and I talk about Keeping Love Alive During Deployments on the Focus on the Family Jim Daily broadcast! Follow this link and listen any time. Please note this is a two-day series, so don’t miss either one! These programs are based on our book, The 5 Love Languages Military Edition. In the photo above, from left to right: John Fuller, Gary Chapman, Jocelyn Green, and Jim Daly, in the broadcast studio in Colorado Springs. (The photo in the bottom right is me in the Green Room with my souvenir mug!) Visit my Web site for military wives at www.faithdeployed.com.

What Happens to Love in a Military Marriage? (Plus GIGANTIC give-aways!)

Fri, 2014-05-09 07:10 -- Jocelyn Green
[[{"type":"media", "view_mode":"media_large", "fid":"1001", "attributes":{"class":"media-image alignleft size-full wp-image-1889", "typeof":"foaf:Image", "style":"", "width":"245", "height":"340", "alt":"5LLMilitary3D-245"}}]]Happy Military Spouse Appreciation Day, AND Military Appreciation Month! To celebrate, Dr. Gary Chapman and I are teaming up to offer some amazing give-aways--seriously, the coolest grand prize I've ever hosted. But first, we want to share with you the first chapter of our latest release: The 5 Love Languages Military Edition. I hope you'll read the chapter below, and be encouraged! There is hope for marriages in every stage! Stay tuned--the give-aways will be offered just below the chapter. Take it away, Gary! What Happens to Love in a Military Marriage? I first met Chuck in Germany. He had a successful military career—twenty-three years under his belt. However, in his own words, “My marriage is in shambles. I don’t understand love and I’m not sure you can keep love alive in a military marriage. I was madly in love with my first wife. We were high school sweethearts. We got married right after graduation, and a month later I joined the military. The first couple of years were exciting, but eventually our love grew cold. We seemed like roommates living in the same house. On the day after our tenth anniversary she went home to visit her mother and never returned. I didn’t feel all that bad about it because by this time neither one of us loved each other.” “What about your second marriage?” I inquired. “It was about a year after our divorce that I met Cathy. At the time, she was also in the military. It was one of those ‘love at first sight deals,’” he said. “It was great. We had an awesome marriage until we got assigned to different bases. That was tough. So a year later, she left the military so we could be together. Then, the baby came along and things changed. We never rediscovered the connection we had in the first year of our marriage. It was like our love evaporated. She and our son left last Tuesday to go back to the States, and I know it’s just a matter of time until she files for divorce..” “When things were going well, how did you express your love to Cathy?” I asked. “I told her how beautiful she was. I told her I loved her. I told her how proud I was to be her husband. But after three or four years, she started complaining about petty things at first—like my not taking the garbage out, or my not hanging up my clothes. Later she went to attacking my character, telling me she didn’t feel she could trust me, accusing me of being unfaithful to her. She became a totally negative person. When I met her she was one of the most positive people I had ever known. That’s one of the things that attracted me to her, she never complained about anything. Everything I did was wonderful, but after a few years, I could do nothing right. I really think I tried. I honestly don’t know what happened.” I could tell Chuck was experiencing internal struggle over what was going on in his marriage, so I said, “You still love Cathy, don’t you?” “I think I do,” he said. “I don’t have the kind of love I had when we first got married, but I certainly don’t want a divorce. I think we could have made it, but I don’t think Cathy wants to work on the marriage.” I could tell this strong warrior had a wounded heart. “Did things go downhill after the baby was born?” I asked. “Yes,” he said. “I felt like she gave all of her attention to the baby, and I no longer mattered. It was as if her goal in life was to have a baby, and after the baby she no longer needed me.” “Did you tell her that?” I asked. “Yes, I told her. She said I was crazy. She said I did not understand the stress of being a twenty-four hour nurse, and I should be more understanding and help her more. I really tried, but it didn’t seem to make any difference. After that we just grew apart. After a while there was no love left, just deadness.” Chuck continued the conversation and I listened. “What happened to love after the first year of marriage?” he asked. “Is my experience common? Is that why we have so many divorces in the military? I can’t believe this has happened to me twice. And those who don’t divorce, do they learn to live with the emptiness, or does love really stay alive in some marriages?” The questions Chuck asked are the questions thousands of military couples are asking. Sometimes the answers are couched in psychological research jargon that is almost incomprehensible. Sometimes they are couched in humor and folklore. Most of the jokes and pithy sayings contain some truth, but they are often like offering an aspirin to a person with cancer. The desire for romantic love in marriage is deeply rooted in our psychological makeup. Books abound on the subject. Television and radio talk shows deal with it. The Internet is full of advice. So are our parents and friends. Keeping love alive in our marriages is serious business. With all the help available from media experts, why is it so few couples seem to have found the secret to keeping love alive after the wedding? The Truth We’re Missing The answer to those questions is the purpose of this book. It’s not that the books and articles already published are not helpful. The problem is we have overlooked one fundamental truth: People speak different love languages. My academic training is in the area of anthropology. Therefore, I have studied in the area of linguistics, which identifies a number of major language groups: Japanese, Chinese, Spanish, English, Portuguese, Greek, German, French, and so on. Most of us grow up learning the language of our parents and siblings, which becomes our primary or native tongue. Later, we may learn additional languages—but usually with much more effort. These become our secondary languages. We speak and understand best our native language. We feel most comfortable speaking that language. The more we use a secondary language, the more comfortable we become conversing in it. If we speak only our primary language and encounter someone else who speaks only his or her primary language, which is different from ours, our communication will be limited. We must rely on pointing, grunting, drawing pictures, or acting out our ideas. We can communicate, but it’s awkward. Language differences are part and parcel of human culture. If we are to communicate effectively across cultural lines, we must learn the language of those with whom we wish to communicate. In the area of love, it is similar. Your emotional love language and the language of your spouse may be as different as Chinese from English. No matter how hard you try to express love in English, if your spouse understands only Chinese, you will never understand how to love each other. Chuck was speaking the language of words of affirmation to Cathy when he told her she was beautiful, he loved her, and he was proud to be her husband. He was speaking love, and he was sincere, but she did not understand his language. Perhaps she was looking for love in his behavior and didn’t see it. Being sincere is not enough. We must be willing to learn our spouse’s primary love language if we are to effectively communicate love. My conclusion after thirty-five years of marriage counseling is that there are five emotional love languages—five ways people speak and understand emotional love. In the field of linguistics a language may have numerous dialects or variations. Similarly, within the five basic emotional love languages, there are many dialects. That accounts for the magazine articles titled “10 Ways to Let Your Spouse Know You Love Her,” “20 Ways to Keep Your Man at Home,” or “365 Expressions of Marital Love.” There are not 10, 20, or 365 basic love languages. In my opinion, there are only five. However, there may be numerous dialects. The number of ways to express love within a love language is limited only by one’s imagination. The important thing is to speak the love language of your spouse. Seldom do a husband and wife have the same primary emotional love language. We tend to speak our primary love language, and we become confused when our spouse does not understand what we are communicating. We are expressing our love, but the message does not come through because we are speaking what, to them, is a foreign language. Therein lies the fundamental problem, and it is the purpose of this book to offer a solution. That’s why I dare to write another book on love. Once we discover the five basic love languages and understand our own primary love language, as well as the primary love language of our spouse, we will then have the needed information to apply the ideas in the books and articles. Once you identify and learn to speak your spouse’s primary love language, I believe you will have discovered the key to a long-lasting, loving marriage. These languages can be spoken even when you are separated by deployment. Love need not evaporate after the wedding, but in order to keep it alive most of us will have to put forth the effort to learn a secondary love language. We cannot rely on our native tongue if our spouse does not understand it. If we want them to feel the love we are trying to communicate, we must express it in his or her primary love language. *Learn more about The 5 Love Languages Military Edition!  Pssst. If you're not military, check out the original The 5 Love Languages! The Give-Aways! Here's what we're dying to give away: Grand Prize: [[{"type":"media", "view_mode":"media_large", "fid":"1002", "attributes":{"class":"media-image aligncenter wp-image-1881", "typeof":"foaf:Image", "style":"", "width":"560", "height":"560", "alt":"Grand military prize"}}]] The Marriage You've Always Wanted Event Experience. This is Dr. Chapman's full conference (five hours) on DVD, which includes the book of the same title as well as a Participant's Guide. (Retail $199.99) Watch it alone, as a couple, or with a group. Paperback edition of The 5 Love Languages Military Edition The Love Languages Devotional Bible, SoftTouch edition Keurig coffee machine (for real) Box of K-cups for said Keurig coffee machine Second Place Winner: [[{"type":"media", "view_mode":"media_large", "fid":"1003", "attributes":{"class":"media-image aligncenter wp-image-1882", "typeof":"foaf:Image", "style":"", "width":"560", "height":"560", "alt":"second place military"}}]] The Marriage You've Always Wanted Small Group Experience. The Small Group Experience features the same 5 lessons as the event experience, outlined in a provided leader and participant guide, along with video clips to enhance and support each segment. Daily devotionals for couples are also included. A set of every book I (Jocelyn Green) have ever written or co-authored, both fiction and nonfiction. Includes: The 5 Love Languages Military Edition; Faith Deployed: Daily Encouragement for Military Wives; Faith Deployed . . . Again: More Daily Encouragement for Military Wives; The Military Wives New Testament with Psalms & Proverbs; Stories of Faith and Courage from the War in Iraq & Afghanistan; Stories of Faith and Courage from the Home Front; plus Civil War novels Wedded to War and Widow of Gettysburg. The Love Languages Devotional Bible, hardcover $50 Amazon gift card Third Place Winner: [[{"type":"media", "view_mode":"media_large", "fid":"1004", "attributes":{"class":"media-image aligncenter size-full wp-image-1883", "typeof":"foaf:Image", "style":"", "width":"330", "height":"248", "alt":"BookStack prize"}}]] Complete set of my eight books (see list above) $25 Amazon gift card Can you believe this? I am so pumped. To enter the give-away, use the Rafflecopter tool below to rack up entries. I'm going to give you lots of ways to do it, so read carefully. The give-away will remain open from today until Armed Forces Day, May 17. Once the winners are chosen, I'll email them. Winners, you'll have three days to get back to me with your mailing address, so watch those inboxes! I'd hate for you to miss out on your prize, but if I don't hear from you, I'll have to select new winners. Also, if you have never left a comment here before, I will need to "approve" it before it shows up. Never fear, I'll be checking throughout the day to try to keep up. Thanks and good luck! a Rafflecopter giveaway
Subscribe to RSS - Gary Chapman