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EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT EX * Group #18 Kathryn Popp- [email protected] Jessica Rakus- [email protected]
17
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Page 1: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT EX *

Group #18Kathryn Popp- [email protected] Rakus- [email protected]

Page 2: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

INTRODUCTION

• Main Points:• Who holds the power in

your Ex relationship & how you can recover your power over a toxic Ex

• Whether your addicted to your Ex and how to break that addiction

• How to get resolution with any Ex & how to learn from your Exes so you can make a better choice for next time

• In 1969, David Reuben, MD,. Wrote the book Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex*• This book primarily

focused on sex education

• What do we do when the sex is over–and you’re left with an Ex?

Page 3: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

INTRODUCTION

• This book will help you to stop getting stuck in the past and to:• Gain personal insight• Erase the negative effects of Exes• Manage past relationships better• Look for the right person• Focus on your self worth and social

relationships• * According to research, social relationships have been

shown to be a big factor in an individuals’ post-divorce adjustment (Krumeri, 2007). *

Page 4: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

DATA

Data was collected through anecdotes and stories from:• Clients• Friends• Strangers• Own experience with past relationships

• Claim to be relationship experts at this point• Comparisons to other books

• Reference to He’s Just Not That into You

• Only statistical data the authors provide:• There are at least twenty-five million divorced people and

one million more each year (Belle and Fiordailso, 2009). • No real source provided

Page 5: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

DATA

Source: CDC/ National Center for Health Statistics National Vital Statistics System

Year

Divorces & annulments

20091 840,000

20081 844,000

20071 856,000

20061 872,000

20051 847,000

20042 879,000

20033 927,000

20024 955,000

20015 940,000

Provisional number of divorces and annulments and rate: United States, 2000-2009

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009750,000

800,000

850,000

900,000

950,000

1,000,000Divorce and Annulments

Page 6: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

DATA

• Signs your ex is ruining your self-worth:• Living in the past• Your ex is the best

you’re ever going to get• Accepting abusive or

inappropriate behavior• How to gain your self-

worth back:• Volunteer• Go out with people who

make you feel good• Take care of yourself

• Scholarly research states that:• Certain social relationships

may actually hide your real emotions

• Network relationships are better for one to over come divorce• Examples: Support groups,

church community

• Network relationships seem to promote all forms of positive adjustment, including global adjustment, coping, well-being, positive affect, overall happiness, and life satisfaction (Krumeri et all., 2009).

Page 7: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

DATA

Also, research has been found that trying to constantly

increase your self-worth and self-esteem can lead toundesirable side-effects; we should not necessarily

focus onconstantly trying to fix ourselves (Burr &

Christensen, 1992).• Be careful!

Page 8: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

RESULTS

• Does the data you find refute or support the data used to support the book thesis?• In some ways, but they don’t have any credible sources to back their

claims up.

• Is this book actually helpful? Why or why not?• It may be good to get a good laugh from reading about people’s

experiences, but it is not actually that helpful.

• Is the author properly trained to write a self-help book? Why or why not?• Yes. Their degree’s are in the same field of the books topic; besides

from their credentials they claim that they are “experts” in dealing with past relationships because they have dealt with their own relationships and heard from their clients.

Page 9: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

RESULTS• Heather Belle,

MFC• Counseled children

from divorced families.

• Contributing columnist for eHarmony’s advice site.

• Career in the entertainment business

• Michelle Fiordaliso, MSW• Undergraduate degree and

master’s degree in Clinical Social Work from New York University

• Writer, psychotherapist, certified nutritional consultant, and a former private chef

• Currently the clinical director of www.shrinkyourself.com- has been scientifically proven to help people lose weight

• Contributing writer on eHarmony’s advice site on Single Mom’s Advice for Dating

Page 10: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION

• Basically, the book wants you to:• See your past relationship(s) as an

opportunity to start fresh• Move forward with your life• Don’t be obsessed• Try to be civil with an ex• Love again in a new and improved

passionate way than before

Page 11: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION

Future research and book ideas• Don’t use bias data collected from friends/own

experience • Perform a study on the topics in the book• Collect real & reputable data

• Real data would make the book more believable and reputable

• Include statistics from study• Make reference to valuable data

• Biased answers- not much reference to a man perspective

Page 12: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION

• Are Exes really a problem?• In some cases, they can be. Can they destroy your self

worth? Of course. The authors tell you to surround yourself with people who make you feel good about yourself.• What if they’re just lying to you to make you feel better?

• The authors also suggest that women are crazy and obsessive after a relationship?• How is this so? Are all women actually like this? Has there

been a study on it? It seemed as if most women mentioned in this book were a bit crazy.

• Having better sources in this book other than anecdotes would have made this book a much better self-help book!

Page 13: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION

• 10 Signs You're More Than Just Friends*

Are you over your ex?Check out the video above!

Page 14: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

FINAL EXAM QUESTION

Who are the authors of Everything You Always Wanted to Know About an Ex?A. Dr. Phil and Dr. OzB. Heather Belle and Michelle FiordalisoC. Patricia Fason and Lisa AngeletteD. Professor Gager and Heather Belle

Answer: B

Page 15: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

FINAL EXAM QUESTIONS

What is an example of a network relationship?A. Your best friendB. Your co-workersC. Religious communityD. All of the Above

Answer: C

Page 16: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

FINAL EXAM QUESTIONS

Which year from 2001-2009 had the lowest number of divorces?A. 2005B. 2009C. 2008D. 2001

Answer: B

Page 17: Group #18 Kathryn Popp- poppk1@mail.montclair.edu Jessica Rakus- rakusj1@mail.montclair.edu.

REFERENCES

● Belle, H, & Fiordaliso, M. (2009). Everything you always wanted to know about an ex. Naperville, Illinois: Sourcebooks Casablanca.

● Burr, W, & Christensen, C. (1992). Undesirable side effects of enhancing self-esteem. Family Relations, 41(4), 460-464.

● CDC/National Center for Health Statistics. (2011). National marriage and divorce rate trends. Retrieved from

http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/marriage_divorce_tables.ht m● Kramrei, Elizabeth , Coit, Carissa , Martin, Sarah , Fogo,

Wendy and Mahoney, Annette(2007) Post- divorce adjustment and social relationships.Journal of Divorce & Remarriage. 46 (3,) 145 -166.