Archive for July, 2010

Gotta Have It! 30-Day Book Giveaway

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Over the next 30 days, I will be giving away free copies of my new book, Gotta Have It!  If you are interested, simply comment on any one of my blog posts about the book - 1) in the comments section of the post, 2) on Twitter or 3) on Facebook.

Gotta Have It! examines a phenomenon that I call “excessity” — when our excesses become necessities. Excessities are our reward, our coping mechanism, and the illusory answer to pain. We feel we need their pleasure to insulate us from a difficult world. Yet the more we starve what we really need — such as purpose, hope, and security — the greater our hunger grows for what will never satisfy.

In Gotta Have It! you are invited to discover the truth that is hiding behind your secret desires. With real life stories and sections on self-reflection, Gotta Have It! will help you see your life as never before — and delight in the ways God is longing to fulfill your true needs.

The book touches on:

The Excessity of Food

The Excessity of Alcohol

The Excessity of Caffeine

The Excessity of Electronics

The Excessity of Work

The Excessity of Shopping

The Excessity of Tobacco and Pharmaceuticals

The Excessity of Exercise

The Excessity of Gambling

The Excessity of Sex

The Excessity of Relationships

The Excessity of Money

The Excessity of Anger

The Excessity of Guilt

Again, if you would like a free copy of Gotta Have It! simply comment on any one of my blog posts about the book – 1) in the comments section of the post, 2) on Twitter or 3) on Facebook.

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The Excessity of Guilt

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

In my 25 years of counseling others, I’ve seen guilt pulled out and put on just about as often as anger. It can be much quieter, though, especially when a person wears the guilt instead of placing it onto someone else. Guilt, when thrown over others, has the potential to be noisily, loudly, angrily rejected and shaken off. Guilt, when worn by the person, however, is generally quiet, like a shroud.

Whereas anger is retaliatory, guilt is preemptive.

Guilt says, You don’t need to hurt me; I’ll do it myself. By administering a self-inflicted blow, guilt seeks to control the level — if not the presence — of pain.

Guilt is a way to make yourself responsible for and thus in control of the pain in your life. The guiltier you feel, the more pain you experience. The more pain you experience the more apt you are to attempt to control it through guilt. This is what leads to guilt becoming an excessity for some.

SOURCE: Chapter 2, “Examine Your Excess,” in Gotta Have It! by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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The Excessity of Anger

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Some of you are probably scrunching up your eyebrows at this category. After all, who would want to gather up and surround themselves with an excessity of anger? Yet for some people each expression of anger is as precious to them — to their sense of self and identification in the world — as Imelda Marcos’ espadrilles were to her. Just as Imelda felt more herself and more complete with every pair of shoes, there are some people who intentionally “put on” anger every day as a personal statement and protective covering.

You probably know someone like this.

It’s the person who is able to find fault in just about every person she meets and every situation she encounters. Nothing is left alone to be just what it is. It is always critiqued, criticized, evaluated, and ultimately found lacking. She reacts the same way to people.

Coworkers are incompetent; her kids are a mess; her husbund (or ex-husband) a fool. She considers herself akin to the only sighted person in the land of the blind, constantly amazed at the ineptitude around her. Therefore, she feels duty-bound to continually, incessantly point it out. It is impossible for her to leave well enough alone because, to her, it’s never well enough; the only “well enough” is her “never enough” — her anger, irritation, and annoyance. For her living out her wellspring of anger every day is a necessity for her sense of self and a defensive stance against a hostile world. Yes, her anger is an excessity.

This isn’t an issue just for women; men also can exhibit inappropriate levels of anger.

It’’s the man who doesn’t speak to others as much as he barks at them. Questions and comments are really thinly veiled commands. He always has an opinion, is never afraid to voice it, and rarely has one that is positive. This is the man who attacks his life from the position of adversary. He is convinced that people are out to get him and that only eternal vigilance on his part — sometimes epxressed in a raised and animated voice — keeps him and his family safe.

His family has learned not to question him and the dog wisely stays out of his way.

Like money, anger is a conduit for power and control. Anger is effective. Angry people usually get what they want through the feelings their anger generates in others. More people are afraid of angry people and will attempt to accommodate them or placate them. Usually this means giving up something to the person who is angry, even if what is given up is the other person’s self-control.

Yes, anger is effective and powerful. Because of this, anger has the potential to crowd out other responses in your emotional toolbox until it’s the first thing you reach for, every time.

SOURCE: Chapter 2, “Examine Your Excess,” in Gotta Have It! by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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The Excessity of Money

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Money is a huge “never enough” for many people — and not just for our current materialistic culture. It was also an issue back in King Soloman’s day; he notes the following in his book outlining his search for wisdom and meaning of life: “Whoever loves money never has money enough; whoever loves wealth is never satisfied with his income. This too is meaningless” (Eccl. 5:10).

Clearly, it’s possible to be head over heels in love with money. Jesus put it pretty bluntly when He said, ‘No one can serve two masters. Either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and Money” (Matt. 6:24). The writer of Hebrews warns, “Keep your lives free from the love of money and be content with what you have” (Heb. 13:5a). When you fail to heed this warning, money has the potential to become a powerful “never enough” in your life.

But is it really the jingle of coins or the snap of a crisp dollar bill that’s so gratifying? Is it money itself or what money represents that’s so compelling? In my experience, money is just an avenue to power and and control. Power and control are heady commodities, as seductive and addictive in their own ways as the most potent of drugs. Money is the conduit through which power and control flow. It’s been that way since Solomon’s time.

Just a word of clarification: You don’t have to be wealthy to be a lover of money. Nowhere in Scripture does it say it is only the wealthy who love money. First Timothy 6:10 says, “For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil. Some people, eager for money, have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.” It is the attitude — not the amount — that is important. As you consider whether or not money is an excessity in your life, the answer will more likely lie in your heart than in your bank ledger.

SOURCE: Chapter 2, “Examine Your Excess,” in Gotta Have It! by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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The Excessity of Relationships

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Relationship excessities aren’t always of a sexual nature. Sometimes, the excessity relationship I see is between parent and child. It is a disturbing distortion of the natural bonding that should occur, where one appears unable to detach and function without the other.

Bonding becomes bondage.

This kind of enmeshment between mother and daughter often manifests itself in an eating disorder — the daughter’s symptom of the mother’s relational stranglehold. I have also seen it in opposition defiant disorder between a father and son, where the son assumes a constant position of hostility in order to avoid the suffocation of his father’s need for control over his life.

Relationships can also become an excessity when it is the fact of the relationship, not the face of the relationship, that matters most.

I’ve seen people jump from relationship to relationship, refusing to grow and learn from each other, in order to perpetuate a deep-seated pattern. For these people, the faces change but the circumstances do not.

He’s forever looking for someone who needs him so much she’ll be afraid to leave. She’s forever looking for someone who is wounded more than she is so her hurt won’t seem so bad. I’ve seen people who needed to be in a relationship so badly — who could not tolerate being alone — they compromised just about everything.

If you keep looking in the mirror when it comes to relationships and say to yourself over and over, “I can’t believe I keep doing this!” it’s time to determine if being in relationships has become an excessity in your life.

SOURCE: Chapter 2, “Examine Your Excess,” in Gotta Have It! by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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The Excessity of Sex

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

If pleasure has the ability to turn activities into excessities, it’s not difficult to understand how sexual activity could become one. When sex becomes an excessity, fulfilling that desire is all-encompassing.

I’ve seen couples married for decades blown apart when sex with someone else becomes more important than the marriage. I’ve seen devastation wrought on families when sexual desire is hijacked by pornography over the Internet. I’ve seen the pain and humiliation when one person’s sexual proclivities become paramount in the sexual relationship.

I’ve watched the tears and recriminations, the anger and blame, hurled by couples at each other with lethal force, bringing about the death of relationships — all over sex. I’ve seen the act God intended to enhance intimacy and love used to sow discord and distance, tearing apart relationships.

Sex becomes an excessity when what you want becomes more important than what God wants, what your spouse wants, or what you need. If you throw caution to the wind where sex is concerned and adopt a whatever-feels-good mentality, there’s a storm brewing in your life, if it hasn’t hit already.

SOURCE: Chapter 2, “Examine Your Excess,” in Gotta Have It! by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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The Excessity of Gambling

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

I wrote a whole book about this particular excessity years ago: Turning the Tables On Gambling. I continue to be surprised at how few resources are available for those struggling with compulsive gambling.

For those hooked, gambling is not a harmless hobby.

It is not a night at the casino twice a year with friends or the monthly poker get-together with the crowd from work and a three-raise, quarter limit. It’s not a yearly trip to Vegas with your high school buddies, mostly for the shows.

For those hooked, gambling is a serious activity; it is the exhilaration of the win and the agony of the loss. It is the promise of an end to all your problems or at least a temporary reprieve. It is the only activity where your desire and need to win somehow seem strong enough to bend the laws of chance and physics.

When gambling reaches this level, it isn’t about fun; it’s about faith: the faith that with this race, this game, this throw, this hand — this time — the world will right itself, and you’ll win once again.

SOURCE: Chapter 2, “Examine Your Excess,” in Gotta Have It! by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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The Excessity of Exercise

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Some of you will look at this category and wonder how in the world it ever made it onto the list. Others of you will cringe and wish it could somehow disappear. The first group is made up of those for whom exercise is a foreign, distasteful concept. The latter group is made up of those for whom exercise is an excessity, an absolute way of life.

Please don’t misunderstand — I think regular exercise should be part of everyone’s lifestyle, in whatever form is appropriate for your current condition and situation. I know it is for me. I enjoy exercise, and it enhances my life and my health. There are also days when, honestly, it’s the last thing I really want to do.

Exercise becomes an excessity when its position on your priority scale is so high that you’ll forgo just about everything else in order to do it. You’ll exercise when sick or injured. You’ll exercise even if it interferes with other responsibilities, including family obligations. Exercise is an excessity when it becomes too tightly tied to your feelings of self-esteem, when you feel anxious, guilty, and irritable if you don’t exercise.

When exercise becomes a source of inordinate pride and self-identification, it’s a problem.

SOURCE: Chapter 2, “Examine Your Excess,” in Gotta Have It! by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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The Excessity of Tobacco and Pharmaceuticals

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

TOBACCO

The nicotine in tobacco products is an additive substance. It alters in your body chemistry so that you’re different with it than you are without it. Without it, you can become irritable, anxious, hostile, depressed, impatient, and restless. Smoking, with its physical effects, is definitely a Gotta Have It! activity. But tobacco isn’t just smoked; it’s also snorted, dipped, and chewed. Whatever its form, tobacco has nicotine as a powerful, addictive hook.

PHARMACEUTICALS

I’m glad to live in a time when understanding and research have advanced to the point where so many chronic conditions and symptoms cna be relieved or even eliminated through the use of pharmaceutical medications. These pharmaceuticals are like a two-sided coin — each has its positive, beneficial side and its negative, harmful side. If something is strong enough to help you, it’s also probably strong enough to harm you if not used properly.

The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) says the following: “The nonmedical use or abuse of prescription drugs is a serious and growing health problem in this country.” Abuse comes when these wonder drugs are used outside of their narrowly defined prescribed-use parameters.

Any prescription drug has the potential for abuse, but there are certain categories that appear more at risk.

NIDA identifies the following: “Commonly abused classes of prescription medications include opiods (for pain), central nervous system depressants (for anxiety and sleep disorders), and stimulants (for ADHD and narcolepsy).” According to the same report, “In 2008, 15.2 million Americans age 12 and older had taken a prescription pain reliever, tranquilizer, stimulant, or sedative for nonmedical purposes at least once in the year prior to being surveyed.”

This study was based upon prescribed medications and did not even investigate the abuse that goes on with over-the-counter products and medications, such as sleeping aids, laxatives, and appetite suppressants. When dealing with these substances, a little may be good, but a lot is definitely not.

SOURCE: Chapter 2, “Examine Your Excess,” in Gotta Have It! by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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The Excessity of Shopping

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

For some people, shopping is arduous work. Just ask me how much I like going to the mall a week before Christmas.

For others, shopping is pure pleasure, so much so that making a purchase elicits the same physical reaction as a lover’s caress or a hot fudge sundae. Remember Imelda Marco’s shoes? I would guess she experienced a burst of pleasure every time she bought another pair.

Shopping can be a way of escaping the tedium of reality. Whether it’s the latest electronic gadget or clothing style or hobby hardware, each purchase comes with a whispered promised: Your life somehow will be better once you have whatever it is. Often, it is to shop even when you don’t really have the time, the money, or the need for the things you buy.

It becomes an excessity when you’re run out of things to buy for yourself — and room to store all that stuff — and begin to purchase things for friends and family without being asked or encouraged.

It’s an excessity when you feel deprived, depressed, or anxious when prevented from shopping. When the mall is the only place you really feel at home and in control, there’s a problem.

SOURCE: Chapter 2, “Examine Your Excess,” in Gotta Have It! by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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