Stop Whining, Start Living

Stop Whining, Start Living

by Laura Schlessinger
Stop Whining, Start Living

Stop Whining, Start Living

by Laura Schlessinger

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Overview

Bestselling author and popular national radio host Dr. Laura offers tough-love advice to help us all lead active and more positive lives.

Dr. Laura Schelssinger has helped millions to nurture and cherish their relationships and their partners. Now, she turns her piercing insight and no-nonsense approach to each and every one of us, offering advice and information for becoming better people in more control of our lives.

Using real-life situations, Dr. Laura provides solutions that will inform our lives and relationships with parents, siblings, spouses, colleagues, and the others we interact with every day. With Stop Whining, Start Living, readers will learn to act instead of react in their path toward living a positive life.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780060838348
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 12/23/2008
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 224
Sales rank: 1,125,972
Product dimensions: 5.20(w) x 7.90(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

One of the most popular hosts in radio history—with millions of listeners weekly—Dr. Laura Schlessinger has been offering no-nonsense advice infused with a strong sense of personal responsibility for more than 40 years. Her internationally syndicated radio program is now on SiriusXM Triumph Channel 111, and is streamed on the Internet and podcast.


She's a best-selling author of eighteen books, which range from the provocative (New York Times chart topper The Proper Care and Feeding of Husbands) to the poignant (children's book Why Do You Love Me?).  She's on Instagram and Facebook (with over 1.7 million followers), and her Call of the Day podcast has exceeded one hundred million downloads. She has raised millions for veterans and their families with her boutique, DrLauraDesigns.com, which benefits the Children of Fallen Patriots Foundation.


Dr. Laura holds a Ph.D. in physiology from Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons, and received her post-doctoral certification in Marriage, Family, and Child Counseling from the University of Southern California. She was in private practice for 12 years. She has been inducted into the National Radio Hall of Fame, received an award from the Office of the Secretary of Defense for her Exceptional Public Service, and was the first woman ever to win the National Association of Broadcasters' prestigious Marconi Award for Network/Syndicated Personality.

Read an Excerpt


Stop Whining, Start Living

By Dr. Laura Schlessinger HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.
Copyright © 2008
Dr. Laura Schlessinger
All right reserved.

ISBN: 9780060838331

Chapter One

Perspective Is Everything

"I have changed my life from 'talking, whining, rehashing, complaining, and suffering' into a life of doing and enduring because I got tired. I got tired of making the choice to have a bad attitude. I realized almost at the 'ripe' old age of thirty that I alone am responsible for my behaviors and my moods; and whining and the rest of that nonsense is futile to resolution and problem solving.

"I suppose the main catalyst for this life change was putting things in perspective; I haven't had a charmed life but I also realize how blessed I have been. I think all those people who claim that they are unhappy are only that way because they do not know how to appreciate what they DO have. It is hard not to take for granted what one has, but at the same time it is hard to believe that most people who have so much are still so miserable."
—Wendy, a listener

I talk a lot about perspective on my radio program to callers who just can't seem to break the hold that emotional pain, disappointments, and fears have on them. I'm usually met first with their annoyance, as though I'm trying to strip them of what is most important in their lives—their suffering and their anger about it. As anyone who has ever dealt with children knows, if you grab something out of the hand of a cranky kid, you'd better be ready to put something else in itsplace. Well, with callers on the phone, what I have to put back in their minds after grabbing their complaints (justified or not—it doesn't matter) is a more compelling image.

That substitute image has to:

  • 1. Make sense to them
  • 2. Not ignore or deny their suffering or the reasons for it
  • 3. Touch them more deeply than the reason they have for suffering
  • 4. Motivate behavior in a new and healthier direction
  • 5. Provide a direction for action
  • 6. Overpower resistance now and the likelihood of falling back into old patterns in the future

Let me move straightaway to some examples of how this works in real life. One recent caller in particular sticks in my mind for this demonstration, as the call was powerful with a very quick turnabout in attitude and perspective.

A young woman, about twenty-three, called concerning her sexual orientation and whether or not she should tell her mother. She was afraid that her mother would not be approving.

The very first thing I told her was "I'll bet your mother knows. She can't have lived with you for over two decades and not have an inkling. . . . She is a mother! It is not unusual, however, for parents to seemingly ignore situations like this because of their fears and feelings."

The next thing I told her was "You have to understand that this is foreign to your mother, who has loved a man all her adult life, and who, as a loving mother, worries about what you'll be missing out on that she has cherished for a lifetime. She may never approve of (embrace) your orientation, but given a chance, she'll probably be lovingly accepting (tolerant)."

It was at this point that I worked more directly on perspective: "It isn't all about you, although I realize you see it that way. Your mother loses one of her dreams—her daughter's wedding and marriage to a son-in-law and eventual grandchildren, and without that, she doesn't see a clear role for herself in your future. Your mother will suffer for her losses as well as her concerns about yours. I think you need to be less prickly and worried, and more compassionate."

The caller's attitude changed abruptly from fearful and whiny to hopeful and concerned. Her mission became one of mutuality instead of one that was totally defensive. She hung up feeling more understanding of the bigger picture, of which she was but one part. Pictures must be seen from a multitude of vantage points to be seen clearly and properly appreciated.

The Everyday

I wish I had a dollar for every woman who called complaining about her husband not doing enough housework. Such women usually first tell me what a great guy he is in general, and then they get to their specific complaint concerning his sloppiness. Most advice show hosts generally go into strategies to manipulate, threaten, demand, or negotiate him into housework. I work on perspective.

Traci, a listener, wrote:

"You've talked before about keeping things in perspective and I just felt the need to reiterate the point. My husband, who is my hero, my swimmer of shark-infested waters, the sole financial supporter of our family of four, and the wonderful father to my two small girls, can absolutely annoy the CRAP out of me sometimes!!! He can take the can opener out of the drawer, place it on the counter right above, and never put it back; his dirty clothes are typically on the floor somewhere near the dirty clothes hamper. He thinks everything that is in the garage needs to be put back in its proper place however those things that belong in the house are of less importance. I could go on . . .

"But then on occasion, I manage to remember who he is; he is a public servant. It is what he was born to do. He protects people. He is a state trooper, a volunteer firefighter, and an officer in the Coast Guard Reserves (after five years active duty Air Force and two years Air Force Reserves).

"He is a man who, except for the occasional fishing trip, spends his spare time at home with his family. So I face the reality nearly every single time he walks out that door . . . he might not come back. You know what? When I remember to put it in that light, it really doesn't matter where the can opener or his socks end up. I would much rather spend every day of the rest of my life taking care of such items behind him, than live a moment of my life without him.

"Perhaps together, Dr. Laura, we can remind wives out there that having a wonderful husband that doesn't care so much that things are always in their proper place is a far cry better than having no wonderful husband at all!"



Continues...


Excerpted from Stop Whining, Start Living by Dr. Laura Schlessinger Copyright © 2008 by Dr. Laura Schlessinger. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Preface     vii
Introduction     1
Perspective Is Everything     15
Talk! Talk? Talk! Talk?     39
Just Say "No" to Hurt Feelings     55
Always So Sa-a-a-a-a-d     81
This Relationship Stinks     111
The Earth Is Not the Center of the Universe-and You and I Aren't Either!     147
Start Living     175
Postscript     198
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