Keeping your love strong in FIFO Relationships

Keeping your love strong in FIFO Relationships

Having worked in the Mining and Resources sector for the past 7 years and spending extended periods of time in remote parts of Australia, living in camps and being away from loved ones, I know all too well the stressors and strains that this cocktail can create.

There are so many wonderful opportunities that come from a family choosing to live a FIFO lifestyleextended time at home on breaks; more holidays each year and a chance to ‘get ahead’ financially. These advantages also come with risk, if not managed consciously, openly and immediately.

Challenges of the FIFO lifestyle

I have been fortunate to work alongside many couples in FIFO situations and the main challenges consistently shared include:

  • Disruption of routine with the children, to the point where the home-based parent begins to resent the partner coming home
  • Loss of connection (emotionally, mentally, sexually, proximity)
  • Frustration from the home-based person who feel they never get a break from full-time parenting and that there social life often suffers as they have the children when partner is on shift and the need to maximise time with the partner when home
  • Frustration from the FIFO person that they feel they can’t relax in their home when they come off of shift and that they don’t have the freedom to catch up socially with their friends as often feel pressured to spend all the time at home
  • Breakdown in communication due to shift times and long times between coming home
  • A feeling of growing apart and perception that it takes several days to settle back into being a couple when the partner first comes home and then only have a short time before the focus shifts to them going back to site
  • The agreed timeframe to work in a FIFO role gets extended indefinitely once the family is used to the higher income – leads to having no end in sight for having a bonded family unit
  • Perception from the stay-at-home partner that while away on site their partner has plenty of free time with no responsibilities and resentment that they have all of the family responsibilities to shoulder alone

However, you can maintain a loving, connected and bonded relationship while living a FIFO lifestyle.

 

Suggestions for keeping the love alive

  • Set clear boundaries with each other before the start of each trip away. Both share your needs, concerns and expectations that are aligned with you feeling loved and connected
  • Make a plan for how often you will contact each while away – commit to a minimum and honour it
  • Plan your ‘at-home’ time so that each of you has the time you need to feel nourished together AND also have time to engage in the independent activities and social events that you each desire. Agree in advance – no surprises
  • Have child-free date nights each time you are home from site (plan in advance if you need babysitters) and make creating quality intimate time a priority
  • Be aware when your buttons are being pushed and when you are being triggered by the time away from each other. Once you are aware your frustration, sadness or whatever emotion has kicked in, talk calming and truthfully to your partner about it
  • Actively ‘check-in’ with each other about how you are feeling. Do not assume that silence means all is well. It is too easy to get ‘a niggle’ and let it fester into a full-blown argument.
  • Avoid over-committing financially with investments – it is very useful to know you can exit the FIFO lifestyle if your relationship becomes compromised
  • Communicate from the heart with integrity and honesty

To learn more about how to create balance and maintain love in your family life while having a FIFO work-life, you can book an In-house or phone or skype session with Christine.

Author: Christine McKee, B Psych (Hons 1), Accredited Trainer of NLP, AMAPS.

 

 

 

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How you can Change Your Brain to Maximise Your Potential

If you want to be the most effective, visionary, inspirational, productive person (and to be the best in any of the roles you ‘play’ in your life), it’s useful to become conscious about why you do what you do in the different roles you have; to be aware of the habits you operate from and to recognise your attitudes, values, judgements and assumptions you have toward yourself and the relationships you are a part of.

It is in the gap between what you currently do; and the vision you hold of the most brilliant version of yourself as a person; that you can make growth based choices to expand your magnificence.

To know who and why you choose to be the person you are right now, you will need to get up close and personal with your brain as it is the most magnificent thing you will ever own, and you do own it!

You can be in control of it every conscious moment, with the aid of a few simple tips.

Why am I a creature of habit?

To start with, let’s talk about why you are at times a creature of habit.

Basically, as humans, we allow our brains to adopt some efficient strategies for taking shortcuts when drawing conclusions about what events, experiences, interactions, and relationships with different people in our lives mean.

Ever noticed how in your adult life you do so many tasks and respond and react to people in your life in set ways?

For example you drive, eat, get dressed, shower, answer phone calls, and talk to your team/peers/colleagues/partner/parents/kids in an automatic way.

You will lead a certain way.

Also notice how once you have had an interaction or two with an individual you have ‘summed them up’, made your opinion up about them, and you bring that opinion into future interactions or life decisions.

Creating mental shortcuts

You create shortcuts at the brain level to save mental energy —your brain is hardwired for laziness based on your survival instinct. Bottom line, your brain wants you to create habits, automatic responses and repetitious behaviours so you can have as much energy available at any moment in time in case you need to run for your life (flight) or fight for your life (fight).

Lucky for us in civilised countries, we don’t have a lot of threats to our life on a daily basis.

What does this mean? You can take control back of our brain.

In all aspects of life you can think fresh in every moment.

You can be much more creative and respond to current information available to you in the moment.

You can make your mind up about something or someone based on what is ‘real data’ in this very moment; instead of letting your past views, impressions, decisions and habits guide your behaviour.

How do I rewire my brain?

Through self-directed Neuroplasticity, where you make in-the-moment choices to re-wire the neural pathways in your brain.

Neuroplasticity is the brain’s life-long ability to change based on new learning and new ways of thinking; and you are in charge.

All you need to do to choose what you want to focus on and then pay attention to it repetitively.

When you were a child you learnt new skills (such as walking, using cutlery, putting puzzles together, cleaning your teeth) through repetition. This is no different.

If you want to become the most effective and fantastic person you can be, choose what characteristics, traits, attitudes, communication styles, you admire and put your energy into giving them a ‘pulse’.

Breathe life into these things through your focused attention on being the way you want, through your intentions, thoughts, feelings, words, and actions.

Let’s be clear on one thing. You’ll have thousands of awesome habits and patterns and repetitious behaviours that lead to awesome outcomes in all areas of your life. Keep them; allow your brain to repeat those ones when appropriate.

What I am suggesting is to be in the moment, every moment and make fresh choices that will lead to the best result for you and anyone else you are interacting with or influencing; be it your team members, colleagues, peers or with the precious people in your personal life.

If your old habits lead to mediocre results, choose a different thought, emotional response, behaviour or words that will create the potential for great outcomes for all. Do this repetitively and your will rewire your brain.

How do I create new habits in situations where I am not creating the best results?

There are 3 easy steps!

1. Pause, you need to do this to be able to be in the moment.

When you pause to consciously consider what high quality outcomes you desire for any relationship or other area of your life, it enables you to alter any habitual behaviour, like procrastination or lack mentality such as ‘I don’t know how to communicate effectively?’ or ‘I don’t have enough time to deal with the demands in my life’ and you will create better results.

So basically, when you pause, you will create the space to catch yourself in old thought patterns, habits and beliefs that may not be generating successful life outcomes.

Only then you are in a position to change the way you go about being the best version of yourself, moment by moment.

 2. Set a clear Intention/s.

Setting intentions are simple…… state what you want.

So, let’s say you need to have an honest discussion with your partner of a family member, and you have found it challenging in the past.  You need to set a clear intention for the outcome you now desire. For example you may intend to have a respectful conversation with the person, where you transparently discuss the issues together and reach an agreeable outcome.

Notice how the intention is CLEAR and SPECIFIC: respectful conversation, transparently discuss relationship issues; reach an agreeable outcome.

Okay, so you have paused, set your intention and asked lots of rich questions to stimulate healthy leadership behaviour, now all that remains is to:

 3. Take action. Think thoughts, speak words and choose behaviours that will lead to getting awesome results. The great thing here is you have unlimited possibilities available to you. This where you pay attention to your choice through action.

When creating news ways of being, you need to be consistent.

Remember, your brain needs repetition to strengthen the neural pathways of your new, more effective choices.

Author: Christine McKee, B Psych (Hons 1), Accredited Trainer of NLP, AMAPS.

 

 

 

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Mars and Venus: The Differences between Men and Women

 

There is something wonderful about the connection between men and women….

the balance and play of the masculine and feminine energies and the headiness and intoxication of first meeting and falling in love.

Then as time moves forward and the ‘honeymoon’ period settles, differences between the sexes begin to emerge.

This is the time you may find yourself asking questions like:

  • ‘I don’t know if this relationship is for me; we seem so different?’
  • ‘How can we make this work, we don’t seem to ‘hear’ each other?’
  • ‘We have a great physical connection, but just can’t seem to talk about things that matter. Am I in the right relationship?’

I have had the pleasure of working alongside couples for many years, taking on the role as ‘tour guide’ for them learning to speak each other’s language…in many ways.

To build connection and understanding

Some useful tools and tips to be aware of when you want to build strong connection and have genuine understanding and appreciation of the differences between you and your partner are:

  • Being mindful of body language cues and knowing when to ask what is going on for your partner
  • Being conscious of the pitch, speed and volume that you speak to each other with. Men need to match the pitch, speed and volume that women’s eardrums vibrate at and likewise, women need to match men’s
  • Speaking your truth as soon as (or as close as possible to) when you feel frustration of concerns arise. The more you ‘sit on’ things that are bothering you, the greater they become. When you let things build, they become disproportionate and your perception starts to make the issue greater than what it needs to be. There are simple skills for having wonderful and heart-felt conversations, even when you may be feeling a little raw and vulnerable.
  • Setting time aside to spend quality time together where you make it a priority to ‘check-in’ with each other and discover each other’s needs, desires and any challenges that may be coming up
  • Discovering from each the things that genuinely make each of you happy inside the relationship. Openly share wants, needs, fears, desires, and fully express how you best feel loved in a relationship (e.g. it may be through sharing quality time; appreciative words being spoken; lovely surprises; knowing you have the support of your partner to still have other people and activities in your life that are meaningful to you)
  • Discussing with your partner how you genuinely feel heard and then comparing it with how they genuinely feel heard. The desire by women to talk through things is more prevalent than with men, so it important to negotiate and understand each other’s needs and then both parties choose what will work for the relationship to flourish. Be honest and DO NOT compromise your values – you both have the right to be who you are. The key is to be able to honour yourself and your partner
  • Learning to unconditionally love and accept yourself and each other – all qualities, characteristics and traits without judgement and criticism. All aspects of you are what makes you unique and is to be embraced inside relationship

Author: Christine McKee, B Psych (Hons 1), Accredited Trainer of NLP, AMAPS.

 

If you are in Sydney and looking to resolve your differences check out our Sydney Relationship Psychologists.

 

 

 

OUR MAJOR MARRIAGE COUNSELLING LOCATIONS:

See all of our Relationship Counselling Melbourne locations.

See all of our Relationship Counselling Brisbane locations.

See all of our Relationship Counselling Perth locations.

See all of our Relationship Counselling Adelaide locations.

See all of our Relationship Counselling Canberra locations.

See all of our Relationship Counselling Sydney locations.