Saturday, April 29, 2023

Thai Boat noodle - Saveur

 

FOR THE BROTH

  •  2 12 lb. boneless pork shoulder
  •  2 oz. Thai rock sugar or 1/4 cup granulated sugar
  •  10 cups pork stock or water
  •  34 cup light soy sauce
  •  1 tbsp. dark soy sauce
  •  1 tbsp. whole black peppercorns
  •  10 sprigs cilantro
  • 4 bay leaves
  • 3 stalks lemongrass, thinly sliced
  • 2 fresh or frozen pandan leaves
  • 2 stalks Chinese or regular celery, cut into 3 inch pieces
  • 2 whole star anise
  • 1 (1 1/2 9nch) piece fresh or frozen galangal, peeled and thinly sliced
  • 1 stick cinnamon
  • FOR THE SOUP

    •  3 tbsp. canola oil
    •  3 cloves garlic, minced
    •  10 oz. frozen Thai pork balls
    •  10 oz. thin, flat rice noodles, soaked in warm water for 15 minutes and drained
    •  8 oz. boneless pork shoulder, sliced into 1-inch strips (about 1/8-inch–thick)
    •  2 stalks Chinese or regular celery, leaves and tender stalks roughly chopped
    •  2 oz. Chinese or regular spinach, stemmed and chopped
    •  1 12 cups bean sprouts
    •  4 tsp. pig's or beef blood
    •  14 cup packed cilantro leaves
    •  14 cup Thai fish sauce
    •  14 cup vinegar-pickled Thai chiles, thinly sliced, plus 1/4 cup pickling liquid
    •  4 tsp. chile powder
    •  4 tsp. granulated sugar
  • Instructions

    STEP 1

    Make the broth: Boil ingredients in an 8-qt. saucepan. Reduce heat to medium-low; cook, covered, until pork is tender, about 1 hour. Strain broth into a bowl. Using tongs, transfer pork, discarding aromatics, to broth; keep warm.

    STEP 2

    Make the soup: Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Meanwhile, heat oil and garlic in a 1-qt. saucepan over medium-low; cook until garlic is golden, 6–8 minutes. Boil pork balls, rice noodles, sliced raw pork shoulder, and celery until pork is cooked through, 4–6 minutes. Add spinach and bean sprouts and cook 30 seconds more; divide mixture between bowls. Top with reserved broth and pork and garlic oil. Stir blood into each bowl; top with remaining ingredients.

Monday, April 24, 2023

How to Set Boundaries With a Difficult Family Member

 

How to Set Boundaries With a Difficult Family Member

It’s tricky but doable, says Nedra Glover Tawwab, a therapist and best-selling author. Here are her strategies for getting started.

Nedra Glover Tawwab knows deep in her bones that you cannot choose the family you are raised in.

Ms. Tawwab, 39, grew up in a bustling home in Detroit where she “experienced it all,” she said, “from substance abuse to neglect in family relationships.” She scores a seven out of 10 on the Adverse Childhood Experiences Survey, a tool commonly used by health care providers to measure the severity of trauma that a child has faced.

That background led to her career as a licensed clinical social worker focusing on relationships. She is also a best-selling author of the book “Set Boundaries, Find Peace: A Guide to Reclaiming Yourself” and a popular Instagram therapist whose 1.7 million followers devour her pithy nuggets. (A recent example: “The silent treatment isn’t teaching them a lesson; it’s showing you can’t handle conflict.”)

In Ms. Tawwab’s newest book, “Drama Free: A Guide to Managing Unhealthy Family Relationships,” she offers practical strategies for dealing with toxic family dynamics — and ways to successfully disconnect from a person when you decide to do so.

“As a child, relationships are put on you, but as an adult you get to choose who you want to be in relationships with and how,” Ms. Tawwab said. “Even with family.”


Setting and maintaining boundaries in relationships is difficult, enduring work, especially when it involves a parent, sibling, child or some other family member who has played a significant role in your life for as long as you can remember.

Ms. Tawwab shared some strategies to help start this emotional process.

You’ll never have a perfect relationship with anyone in your family, Ms. Tawwab said. With a difficult family member, it helps to step back and consider what a “successful” connection means to you.

To begin, identify the issues that are affecting your dynamic with this family member, she said. Then decide what type of relationship you can realistically have, and want to have, with that person, taking those dynamics into account.

For example, perhaps you are struggling in your relationship with your in-laws. “If you come from a close-knit family and your partner has a family that’s a bit more distant, sometimes we try to arrange things, we try to invite them in, and when we get that pushback we’re upset,” Ms. Tawwab said. In that scenario, “success” may mean that you accept the way your in-laws are and stop trying to change the family culture, she said.

Throughout her new book, Ms. Tawwab emphasizes her belief that you cannot change your family members.

“When the solution to the problem is ‘they need to change,’ the problem will never go away,” she writes. “You can only control your side of the street.”

Ms. Tawwab recommends asking yourself: If this person did not change a single thing, what — if anything — could I do to make the relationship different? Write it all down in a list, she said: “These are the issues in this relationship. These are the parts of those issues that I can change, and these are the parts that are not my stuff.”

In the book, Ms. Tawwab offers the example of “Kelly” (she uses only first names throughout), who has been emotionally “burned” by her brother, time and again. Instead of dwelling on how much she would like to change his behavior, Kelly could jot down coping strategies within her control, like letting his calls go to voice mail so she can return them if and when she is ready, and letting him know that certain topics, like rants about siblings or parents, are off-limits.

Changing a dysfunctional relationship will invariably require you to say hard things to a family member. But that is a skill that anyone can develop, Ms. Tawwab said.

Start with a pep talk. Remind yourself that being assertive about your needs and your boundaries is not rude, she said.

Then, when it’s time to address your family member, keep your script simple, Ms. Tawwab said. People often put off difficult conversations because they are searching for the “right” words. It’s OK to say something like “I don’t want you yelling at me anymore,” she offered as an example, adding, “There’s not a more ‘beautiful’ or perfect way to say that.” (Therapy can also help you identify and connect to your needs and learn to express them, she said.)

“We have tricked ourselves into thinking that we’re supposed to always feel comfortable, so even as we’re saying hard things our goal is to say it without the other person feeling upset or mad or wanting a further explanation,” she said. “And that’s not realistic.”

In dysfunctional families, change is almost always seen as a rejection, Ms. Tawwab said. She writes in her book that “boundaries in unhealthy families are a threat to the system of dysfunction.”

Your call for change might be met with disapproval (“You’re wrong for changing; everything was going well until you intervened”), shame (“You’re a terrible person”), or resentment (“I’m upset because you want something different”), she writes. You could also encounter general pushback, which might involve your family member continuing to behave as though you said nothing or pressuring you to change your mind.

Anticipating those responses can help you steel yourself so you are not hurt by your family member’s reaction.

Ms. Tawwab said she was struck by the number of people she encounters who overlook the strategic power of distance and its importance in preserving certain bonds while still establishing a healthier dynamic.

Distancing yourself from a family member is not the same as ignoring that person, she writes. Distancing might mean putting time and space between you and your relative (for example, declining invitations or staying in a hotel during family holidays). Distancing could also mean engaging less with the person on an emotional level (for example, steering the conversation away from topics you’re not comfortable with or simply excluding that person from certain areas of your life).

If you want to maintain a relationship with a difficult family member because it ultimately feels worth it to you, acceptance — and strategic distancing — can give you some peace, Ms. Tawwab writes, but it won’t be easy.

“You will have to do the work to accept situations, and build patience for what is outside your control,” she writes. “Remember that dealing with certain problematic behaviors is a choice.”

Monday, April 3, 2023

Invest in your relationship

 



Invest in Your Relationship:

THE EMOTIONAL BANK ACCOUNT

According to Dr. John Gottman, there’s another bank account that many people may not even be aware of and, hence, not managing correctly. This is the Emotional Bank Account.

An Emotional Bank Account works essentially the same as a financial bank account. When you turn toward your partner’s bids for connection, you are making a deposit in your Emotional Bank Account. When you turn away from your partner, you make a withdrawal.

Just like a real bank account, a zero balance is trouble, and a negative balance is the real danger zone. An Emotional Bank Account grows when partners make more deposits than withdrawals.

 

DEPOSITS

When you build up enough positive interactions with your partner, your emotional bank account is flourishing.

 

You feel relaxed and safe in the relationship.

If you have to withdraw (i.e. you have a fight or a bid fails), it doesn’t feel too bad and you recover easily.

You give each other the benefit of the doubt during conflict.

You know you have enough positive interactions saved up that you won’t end up in the red.



WITHDRAWLS

When you start to get too low on positive interactions, some anxiety in the relationship may set in.

 

You begin to feel that your relationship is in trouble.

You might start to question each other’s intentions and feel disconnected or even lonely.

You become extremely concerned and perhaps even frantic as to how you will build the relationship back up—just as we would feel frantic if our financial bank account dipped below $0.



The Emotional Bank Account can be managed with the 5:1 ratio. This is a very specific ratio that makes love last. It means that for every negative interaction during conflict, a stable and happy marriage has five (or more) positive interactions. Having a ratio below 5:1 within conflict is one potential divorce indicator.

To keep your Emotional Bank Account flourishing, you need to make many more deposits than you do withdrawals. Couples should save up 20 positive interactions to every 1 negative to build their Emotional Bank Account.

Deposits can be big or small.

Here are everyday ways to make deposits into your emotional bank account:


Ways to Make Deposits into Your 

Emotional Bank Account


Turn towards your partner’s bids for connection

Bids for connection are verbal or non-verbal attempts a person makes to connect with their partner. They can be small or big, spoken or unspoken. Healthy couples constantly make and accept (turn towards) bids to connect.

Catch your partner doing something good

Notice what your partner does that you appreciate, even if it is something they do every day, and say thank you.

Give your partner a compliment

The most impactful compliments are ones about who your partner is as a person. For example, “I really love and appreciate how thoughtful you are of others.” Follow your compliment with a specific example of a time your partner demonstrated that trait.

Do something nice for them

We all have opportunities throughout our day to do something kind for our partner. Make them coffee in the morning, empty the dishwasher even though it isn’t your turn, or offer to cook dinner when you know they’ve had a hard day.

Show genuine interest in your partner and their world

Maintain curiosity about your partner and how their world may have changed recently. Engage and ask them questions about their day or their dreams. Showing interest sends the message that you care about your partner and their world is important to you.

Show your partner physical affection

This could include a six-second kiss before you walk out the door, a hug after returning home, holding their hand while watching TV, or snuggling up next to them in bed.

Give them a gift

Let your partner know that you are thinking of them in a tangible way. This can be large or small—it doesn’t matter the cost. Giving gifts is just one way to let your partner know you care about them.

Spend quality time with them

Plan a date night, a vacation, a cozy night in, or just a few minutes during the day to focus on each other without distractions. Spending quality time with your partner sends the message that they are important.

Support them emotionally

When your partner reaches toward you to express difficult emotions, listen to them and provide empathy and support. And when it comes to your partner’s goals and dreams, be sure to be their #1 fan.


BANK OF BIDS

Verbal:

questions, statements, or stories


Affectionate touching: back-slaps, handshakes, a pat, a squeeze, a kiss, a hug, or a back or shoulder rub

Facial expressions:

a smile, blowing a kiss, rolling your eyes, or sticking out your tongue

 

Playful touching: tickling, bopping, wrestling, dancing, or a gentle bump or shove

 

Affiliating gestures: opening a door, offering a place to sit, handing over a utensil, or pointing to a shared activity or interest


Vocalizing: laughing, chuckling, grunting, sighing, or groaning in a way that invites interaction or interest









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