Posts Tagged ‘gay relationships’

Is reading your horoscope a waste? According to scientific study, love isn’t in the stars!

Monday, April 2nd, 2007

Wow, I heard about a fascinating study today that seems to add credence to the belief that astrology is snake oil!  A scientist from the UK looked at the birthdays of 20 million husbands and wives in the UK (in the UK’s 2001 Census) to see ‘if certain star signs were attracted to others ‘.

The scientist didn’t find a correlation between sun sign and who was married to whom.  He reports that the only ‘relationship’ he found was ‘chance’.

What do you think?  I’ve always questioned the whole astrology thing, given I’m probably more scientist than artist at heart.  I do know that I fit some Taurean characteristics (my sun sign), but not others.  Especially as I’ve gotten older, I less and less seem to fit the Bull!  ;-) …course, ask those close to me for the ‘whole story’! 

As long as folks don’t take the whole horoscope thing too seriously, it can be fun.  I’ve always thought astrology a great ‘ice breaker’ or conversation starter/lubricator.  I remember being in a gay golf league years ago and looking forward to getting together with other club members at an area restaurant after playing.  There was one woman in the club, an attorney no less, who loved to ask each of us ‘what is your sign?’ and launch into a comical ‘reading’ designed to tell us how to live our lives, who to love etc.

Also – before you go trashing the boring/nerdy scientists, I have to say that the scientist part of me reminds me that we are limited by the tools we have to observe what is.  So, perhaps we can’t definitively answer whether astrology is true or not!

Ultimately the author of the study believes people will still go on believing in ‘reading the stars’, eventhough his and ‘hundreds’ of other similar studies, seem to dispute the validity of the method.  He even points to celebrity pairings whose star signs should be compatible who had stormy relationships which didn’t last.

Such is the mystery of love and attraction and what people feel drawn to do to find and keep the love they have.  I myself recommend folks try a more conscious, ‘centered’, or, shall we say ‘grounded in reality’ method of finding, growing and cherishing love:  relationship coaching!

Then again, I’m starting to sound ever more like that ‘down to earth’ Bull that I am….  ;-)

Click here to read the article!

Have a kissable day!

Barb Elgin

The importance of vibrant social networks in your life

Monday, March 12th, 2007

Happy Monday to you!  Wow, here in the southeast, we’re enjoying lots of sunshine and pleasant warmth.  My prayers go out to the folks in the Los Angelest area who are battling the fires.

Today’s post is short and sweet and aimed at helping you improve your life by…

  • evaluating your existing social network(s) and
  • ‘tweaking’ if necessary. 

But first I’d like to share a personal story about social support systems that illustrates the suggestions I’m going to make later in this post.  Prior to my becoming a life coach, I was much less aware of the importance of high quality social support. Yes, I’d been trained as a social worker and ‘got it’ that people aren’t islands and that we are ALWAYS operating in an environment that impacts us and vice versa.

But, when it came to my own life, I still had alot to learn. Currently I’m single.  But, for most of my adult life I’ve been in relationships with another woman.  And, that fact itself illustrates some of the concepts I’m about to reveal. 

As a young gay woman growing up in the 70′s and 80′s, I didn’t have a very supportive social network and I didn’t know how to build one.  All I did think was that I had to be pretty quiet about who I was and what I wanted.  In fact, because I felt unworthy (and those around me reinforced that unworthiness or shame), I usually found myself clinging on to anyone who was ‘like me’ and, as a matter of fact, I thought other lesbians were so rare, I basically believed unconsciously that I had to ‘latch onto’ any lesbian I was remotely attracted to.

Now, don’t get me wrong.  And, ex’es, if you are reading this article, please, don’t be insulted.  But, as I look back on it now, I see that my world was pretty small.  In high school, my sexuality was still ‘dawning’ on me.  But, I pretty much tried to avoid the whole dating thing.  I tried to like guys and even had a bit of a crush on a couple.  Anyway, I think it was a crush.  Who knows?

What was VERY clear, however, were my attractions to some of my female friends, teachers, co-workers, etc.  Without a doubt, I was attracted to women.  However, in 1978, 1979, what do you do about that?  I couldn’t even conceive of going to my prom with another woman.  And, so, I played a very interesting ‘low profile’ sort of stance in high school.  One of my best friends was a cheerleader who was dating the captain and quarterback of the football team.  But, I didn’t feel worthy of hanging with them.  And, my parents were strict – they were a faster crowd.

So, I hung more with friends at my part time job at the hamburger joint.  I also fell in love with straight a co-worker there.  Up until my college years I had developed a ‘habit’ of falling for straight gals.  But, then again, what other option did most of us have back then?  There were no gay-straight alliances at the schools, no internet, and society was much more ‘in the closet’ about sexual orientation issues.

I did the best I knew how.  In my first relationship, which lasted 7 years, we were each other’s best friend, lover, sister, etc.  And we had very few friends who knew us as a couple.  We were pretty isolated, now that I look back on it.  Her family and parents disapproved and so did mine, although my parents were somewhat better because they didn’t disown us and my partner was always invited to family events such as holidays (which her family more grudgingly allowed).  What happened to that relationship?  My partner figured out that she really liked men more and she left me for a guy.

This was the late 80′s/early 90′s.  So, what did I do in response?  Moped.  And, when I got a little further along in my grieving process I hit the bars!  I tried to drown my sorrows in dancing, running, denial, etc.  I even had one or two ‘one night stands’.  How great was my social network at that point?  Better than before, but still not so hot.  There was the one straight married guy who tried to get me to have sex with him while feigning friendship.  And, there were the lesbians who were drinkers and druggers.  In general, there was a lack of support from family for my ‘divorce’ (in the mental health industry they call this ‘disenfranchised grief’).  And, I didn’t know how to ask for support either.

I’d re-connected with some friends from childhood and through them met my second partner. We barely dated and, before she and I knew it, I’d moved into her house. 

Who were our supports?  We knew one or two couples who were relatively functional to turn to, and my partner’s family, while not close, seemed to accept us.  But otherwise, we were pretty isolated.  And, when it came down to it, at least one of the women in this ‘set’ was actively helping drive bigger the wedge that was growing between me and my partner.  I saw it happening but felt helpless to stop it.

By this time my other siblings were married, having children and they were doing the whole families thing.  We were accepted (although no one ever acknowledged openly we were a couple by finding out our anniversary date, for example).

My second partner has (and still is) become a very important figure in my life.  We were together almost 15 years when I left because it hadn’t been good for awhile.

Up until now (and I’m still a ‘work in progress’), I’ve made all of the mistakes that having a better support network would have prevented…

I had couple buddies who weren’t real supportive of us as a couple (and perhaps we could’ve been more supportive)

I had one close friend who I’d met in college who really helped me, especially during the 2nd relationship.  But I Parents and family still were in denial about me and I was too wimpy to be more of myself with them.How?    In fact, up until late 2004, I’d

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I was talking earlier today with a client who was lamenting the age old ‘how do I find other lesbians-or folks in general-who have interests similar to mine?’.   Now, this client doesn’t live near a major city.  But, I’ve found most men and women, gay and straight, no matter where they live, find themselves asking this question at some point.</p>

<p>Whether you are single or coupled, the quality of your social support system is VITAL to your the quality of your life.  NO ONE IS AN ISLAND!  Isolated singles become isolated couples and isolated couples become isolated families.  Not good!</p>

<p>I highly recommend building a qualilty social support system for yourself whether you are single or coupled.  If you are single, you no doubt want to eventually meet a soulmate.  Well, he or she just ain’t going to appear out of the ethers.  Now, if you do some advance legwork by expanding the breadth and depth of your social connections I can promise you that, one day your soulmate will seem to ‘just appear’.  But, you’ve got to get the ball rolling first….</p>

<p>If you are single, you need to find friends who know…</p>

<ul><li>that you are single</li>

<li>who you are</li>

<li>what you like and </li>

<li>what you want  </li></ul>

<p>I heartily recommend single folk make friends with couples.   And, if you are single, you need to ‘get out there’ and start attending some events that are matched to your values and/or interests.  Even if you feel you are ‘too busy’ to make time, commit to checking out a ‘new venue’ at least once per month.</p>

<p>If you are a couple (and another client and I were discussing the importance of this yesterday), you need to find other couple friends who are stable and who are committed to each other AND to the health and success of your relationship too.  Be choosy!  I’ve heard one too many story of couples going through a rough time who haven’t developed the type of relationship with other couples where they can go to them and get support.</p>

<p>As a couple, if you have single friends, be sure to be discriminating and hang around a single person who is respectful of your relationship and won’t try to steal either of you away!  Seriously!  And, if you are one member of a couple and you admit you have been or might be tempted to be ‘stolen away’, I would get honest with yourself about that right away and address it with a coach or counselor before you fall further down the ‘slippery slope’ of destroying your relationship!</p>

<p>Some of this might sound pretty severe or serious to you, but I’m only bringing all of this up because I talk to alot of people whose relationships have been injured by not being careful in these ways.</p>

<p>Are long distance, online only relationships part of a healthy, social support network?</p>

<p>There isn’t an easy yes or no answer to this question, however, it’s common today for some of us to become overinvolved and/or addicted to ‘long distance’, and/or online only love relationships.  Online only relationships can become very seductive, meaning when we are interacting with someone in this way we probably aren’t ‘seeing’ and/or ‘experiencing’ enough about them to really be able to know who they fully are AND how we are when we are ‘with’ them.  In fact, there can be such an ‘anonymous’ nature to them, that they other person can completely ‘misrepresent’ themselves to you.  And, you may be more tempted to ‘puff up’ who you are in such an environment also.</p>

<p>Here’s what I advise you do with online only relationships:  it’s okay if you are forming ongoing, long distance, online only relationships for NON romantic reasons.   Many are relying on them for very specific purposes (for example, you talk via telephone with a book club that is so specific in it’s topic that you can’t find enough people in your town with a similar interest or  you met and communicate with someone online because you are taking a class together.  These exampes are usually fine).  Some folks even enjoy – and gain in healthy ways – from these sorts of relationships.</p>

<p>However, if you find yourself  ‘falling for’ or developing romantic or sexual feelings for one of these folks, tread carefully.  Yes, some of us are caught up in such ‘fantasy’ relationships to distract ourselves from dealing with what’s going on in our real lives.  However, beware:  unless you pretty shortly meet this person in person and/or get to know them in a real sense, you could be setting yourself up for heartache.  In fact, if the whole reason you have formed such a relationship has to do with avoiding what’s going on in your real life, I encourage you to stop and take a look at what you are doing.</p>

<p>Free resources for growing your social network</p>

<p>In my travels this past week, I’ve discovered two, online tools that can help you get started in creating healthy, more vibrant social networks for yourself:</p>

<p><strong><a href=” />Olivia</a> – Yes, Olivia the travel/cruise company for lesbians is now getting into the business of social networking.  Be sure to stop by their site and check out their new online communities.  I’ve already joined under the name – BABZ – and I’ve created groups for single lesbians and lesbian couples.  It’s fun and the site is pretty easy to navigate.</p>

<p><strong><a href=”http://matchactivity.com/”>Match Activity</a></strong> – This is what one of my colleagues, Tara Kachaturoff, has to say about this new site:  “MatchActivity recognizes a simple fact: people who like the same music, restaurants, sports, etc., already share qualities that will help them connect, and have a more relaxed basis for communication. While other sites make you browse endless profiles, many of which are misleading or outdated, MatchActivity lets you immediately plan an activity; set the time and place; and find someone who shares your interests. <br /><br />No more endless email relationships — MatchActivity introduces you to people who are ready to get off the couch. No more superficial profiles ? MatchActivity works according to common interests, recognizing that opposites often attract. No more free ride for fakers — MatchActivity lets people?s passions prove they are who they say they are. Activities speak louder than words.”<br /><br />Regardless of the quality of either of these sites, YOU are the one who will make them work for you!  Be sure to <strong><a href=”mailto:barb@barbelgin.com”>email me</a></strong> and let me know how it’s going if you choose to try one or more of these sites!</p>

<p>Have a great week!</p>

<p><strong><a href=”mailto:barb@barbelgin.com”>Barb Elgin</a></strong></p>

<p><a href=”http://barbelgin.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/barb_and_ruby_2_3.jpg”><img title=”Barb Elgin is offering complimentary, 15 minute coaching consults this week if you’d like to learn more about how she can help you create the life you desire!  To get started email Barb or call her at 866-396-BARB to set your appointment!” height=”179″ alt=”Barb Elgin is offering complimentary, 15 minute coaching consults this week if you’d like to learn more about how she can help you create the life you desire! To get started, <a href=” />email Barb </a>or call her at 866-396-BARB to set your appointment!” src=”http://www.authenticgayliving.com/images/barb_and_ruby_2_3.jpg” width=”150″ border=”0″ style=”FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 5px 5px 0px” /> </p>

Monday, October 23rd, 2006

Can you say you absolutely love your life and your work?  Well I can.  And I want the same for you.  You see, I truly believe that the only life worth living is the examined one and that all of us are here for more than meets the eye!  All of us are conscious, loving beings, and I believe we are continuously becoming more of who we are…if we choose to connect with and nurture that part of ourselves.  I know what a challenge all of this can be, making your life your own when you’ve still got to pay the bills, wash the dishes and put up with others who care more about taking your freedoms away than making life better for all!  However, I do know this:  feeling more alive and deeper life satisfaction awaits those who courageously choose their authentic path! 

So, if…

  • you are a GLBT (gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered) or GLBT-friendly individual, couple, parent(s), family, group or organization and you are ready to clarify your individual and/or mutual life vision(s) and live that vision with gusto OR
  • you are GLBT (or think you might be) and you are ready to live a more authentic life

I’ll bet it’s worth your time to get to know me.  To get started, be sure to check out:

  • Coach Sappho®, which I founded in 2001, offers exciting, cutting edge relationship enhancement and improvement coaching, seminars and conferences (by telephone and in person) for singles and couples who sincerely value and are committed to finding, creating and cherishing a deeply satisfying, lifelong relationship with an ‘ideal’ partner.
  • LesbianDatingCoach, a blog specifically for lesbian singles, 18 and up.
  • Authentic Loving, a blog where you’ll find oodles of relationship articles and posts written by myself and other experts, online discussions, tips and resources.
  • Relationship MAGIC for Life, where you’ll learn 5 keys to relationship success.
  • Authentic Gay Living, which provides a ‘safe place’ exploring what it means to live an authentic gay life and why supporting individuals for doing so is morally right.

Coach Sappho is an expert in the area of couples coaching, gay dating, online dating help and tips, and lesbian relationships in individual and group settings.© 2001-2006, Barb Elgin (DBA BE A Success Enterprises, LLC). Coach Sappho® is a registered U.S. Trademark, 2006-2011. All rights reserved.

In Honor of Coming Out Day: Being Happy Together – A New Book for Gay and Lesbian Couples

Wednesday, October 11th, 2006

…Hello and a happy, gay, NATIONAL COMING OUT DAY to you!  As a life coach whose role it is to ask you the BIG questions that inspire you to live your best life I just couldn’t resist to ask…

What is the most courageous ‘coming out’ action you are willing to take today in honor of National Coming Out Day’?

What action have you been wanting to take, that you know is most likely safe to take, that you’ve been ‘putting’ off, because of a most likely unrealistic fear? 

Stretch yourself!  And, believe me, when you do, it’ll feel good!!!  Gay or straight, the world needs you to stand up for gays, lesbians, transgenders and bisexuals because they are first and formost human beings – when you do you support human rights for all. 

And, in case you need to get your creative juices rolling, how about watching the following inspiring, heart-tugging, compassionate video created by the Human Rights Campaign in honor of  National Coming Out Day?  You’ve got to watch this video, which includes ‘words of wisdom’ from well known people such as Coretta Scott King, Rosa Parks, Sharon Stone, Ellen DeGeneres, and many more.

Click here to watch HRC’s webcast – it’s short and, oh so sweet – as a matter of fact, if I were you I’d have some tissues nearby (you’ll need a quicktime plug in to watch, which is easy to download now).

And, lastly, be sure to scroll down to the end of MY post and post YOUR ‘comments’ below!!!

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Click here and sign up for the priority release of Being Happy Together along with the FREE audio 'My Ideal Day' exerciseAlso, and this is important – to recognize same sex couples on National Coming Out Day, I’d like to share with you a special message and FREE resource from my colleague and friend, Dr. Laurie Weiss:

Happy Coming Out Day to you!

Something from your past may be keeping you from having the fantastic, loving and supportive relationship you deserve now.

Sometimes relationships just don?t work out. They end abruptly and leave you feeling wounded. You feel angry, scared and sad. You?re afraid to trust, and keep holding back.

When you?re in a new relationship, these feelings get stirred up again in spite of your determined efforts to keep them at bay. It?s really hard to do what it takes to move forward in a new relationship.

You know you need something in order to move on and commit to the relationship you?re in right now.

That?s why I want you to have the important information that will help you release your past in order to enjoy a loving relationship now.

Otto Collins interviewed my husband and I when he was exploring the challenge of helping people heal after a broken relationship.

Jon and I have been married for 46 years and teaching people about relationships for over 35 years. Our book, Recovery from CoDependency: It?s Never Too Late to Reclaim Your Childhood, sold over 40,000 copies years ago and it?s actually still available now.

In answering Otto?s questions, we revealed the secrets to moving into and past your grief, dealing with anger, codependent relationships, clearing blocks and much more. You’re going to love this Reclaiming Yourself interview. You’ll find it very helpful in your healing journey, especially after a relationship break up or divorce ?even if it happened a long time ago.

This interview is contained in a 74 minute long MPU file that you download from a special link and play on your computer or on your ipod or MP3 player. You can even burn it onto a CD if you wish.

We?re offering you this interview as a very special bonus when you purchase your copy of Being Happy Together: How to Create a Fabulous Relationship With Your Life Partner in Less Than an Hour a Week by October 15 or after the first 50 copies are claimed?which ever comes first.

Click here to sign up now and be one of the first to receive this amazing book, while receiving the FREE mp3: Your Ideal Day exerise.

Barb Elgin and Laurie Weiss

p.s.  You know, HRC’s campaign for justice and fairness is called ‘talk about it’.  I find it ironic that THIS is in unison with the ‘ultimate’ message of Laurie’s book – talking about your relationship can and will make it better, if done well.  Laurie can help you do so!

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Should you write an online personal ad?

Friday, September 1st, 2006

In last week’s post I introduced the topic of writing personal ads.  The growth of online dating and social networking sites certainly offer single individuals seemingly unlimited opportunities for getting information out there about themselves to the masses. 

Even better, if you join one or more services using some of the more sophisticated means of matching, you may meet with greater success finding someone you are both compatible with and, attracted to, however, before you feel that writing a personal ad is necessary to meeting a soulmate, I recommend you decide whether you even want to use your precious time using this particular search strategy.

In last week’s post I mentioned perception and hype.  There is the belief by some online dating industry watchdogs that current online dating and social networking sites are promising more than they can deliver.  I hear some say the sites are good for ‘hooking up’ (slang for transactional and/or sexual or, short term encounters). 

I suspected that the younger set (say 18-25 or so) use online strategies with greater regularity and probably success than most older singles, although I was informed yesterday by a 21 year old female, who is in an exclusive, heterosexual relationship, that she and most of her friends, single and coupled, look at online dating as an ‘act of desperation’.  So much for a very tiny, possibly unrepresentative sample!  ;-]

I don’t know how prevalent or true any of these perceptions are, however, it is a fact that the internet dating industry is still very young.  You can bet online dating companies will continue to innovate, expand and improve their services to singles.   They’ll need to if they plan to survive.  If so, perhaps the usefulness of online dating sites for more of us will improve in the months and years ahead.

However, in the meantime, if you are single right now and you are seriously looking for a life partner right now, depending solely on placing personal ads, via the internet or elsewhere, is probably not the most direct or smartest search strategy.  And, I think that holds true for gay and straight singles.

That’s right!  There are probably better, more reliable search strategies!  So, if you decide to write a personal ad, that’s great, there is nothing wrong with that.  Just remember that this strategy alone is not very likely to ‘be enough’.  Just like the typical experiences I hear of those who launch into a search on multiple, well-known job sites, like Monster, Gaywork.com and Career Builder.  Initiating the search is easy (and so is getting those lovely emails right in your inbox that the job site sends to you based on your preferences), however, many jobhunters find online searching to be only one of several things they must do to eventually land a real job.

So, should you write a personal ad?  More important, I think, than should, is desire.  Do you want to invest your precious time writing, posting and responding to, personal ads?  Again, I don’t think it can hurt, particularly if you are deeply focused on making this strategy work for you.

Most importantly, I think that the more you know about the entire process, the more informed you will be at selecting the approach (or approaches) that work best for you.  For example, are you aware of all of the current, available options for meeting a soulmate?  Did you know that there is a continuum of most to least-likely places to meet singles that are potential soulmates for you?

Using a personal ad to find dates might be a great idea if you have already visited and/or used one or more online dating sites and you have already written an ad or two that are attracting to you the types of individuals you find appealing.  Certainly, there are some potential advantages to internet dating and personal ad posting, such as:

  • a seemingly greater pool of individuals to choose from (and get your ad out to)
  • lower cost (as compared to joining dating or matchmaking services, attending in person singles events, joining singles clubs, etc.)
  • enough information is often available for efficient sorting (sorting being an important singles skill you’ll want to learn more about)
  • you choose the amount of anonymity you want
  • it’s easy to control most aspects of the process

Do these ‘benefits’ appeal to you?  Will they still appeal to you once you better understand the disadvantages of online dating?  Lastly, do these comments hold true for couples who are now getting online to find other compatible couples for recreation, activism, etc.?

Stay tuned for my next post where I’ll discuss the potential downsides to online dating!  And, be sure to click on ‘comments’ below and post your reactions, questions, etc.   I do read and respond to them online!

Have a great Friday!

Barb Elgin

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If you are single or in a relationship and your vision includes forming and nurturing a long term, deeply satisfying life with another person, you will want to check out Coach Sappho?, a unique, ‘members only’ community for singles and couples who are ‘like-minded’ about creating authentic lives and relationships. 

Coach Sappho? offers a number of convenient, fun, wisdom-packed events and opportunities for singles and couples who are open to collaborating with an experienced coach who can help them clarify a powerful vision for where they want their life to go and a plan to help them get there.   If you’d like to learn more, click here.

Or, if you prefer, I offer an initial, complimentary, one-on-one, no obligation coaching meeting, where I invite you to begin building a ‘working’ relationship with me that will help you change your life in wondrous ways.  Just email me and we’ll set up a time that is convenient for us to talk.   In addition to the meeting, I also cover the cost of the phone call!

About Barb

Tuesday, July 25th, 2006

Contact Barb Elgin at 866-396-BARB for your free coaching 'test drive'!Barb Elgin, (AKA ‘Coach Sappho’), MSW, LCSW-C, is an experienced health care professional and business owner, whose career journey includes, to date, over 15 years of combined experience as a licensed clinical social worker, relationship and business coach, private practice psychotherapist, author, speaker and trainer. 

Barb enjoys coaching singles and couples over the telephone and in person as well as providing workshops and retreats for singles and couples who are becoming the next greatest version of who they are, individually and, as life partners.

Barb created Coach Sappho® in 2001 to inspire lesbian women to success.  Barb envisions Coach Sappho® becoming an internationally known relationship success community that lesbian and lesbian-friendly singles and couples return to again and again for support as they go about creating the love lives they desire!

Other Barb tidbits you might want to know about…

© 2001-2006 Barb Elgin and Coach Sappho® DBA BE A Success Enterprises, LLC, Central Florida, USA, PHONE: 866.396.BARB (2272) toll free, FAX: 208.246.1651