Reviews!

To any authors/publishers/ tour companies that are looking for the reviews that I signed up for please know this is very hard to do. I will be stopping reviews temporarily. My husband passed away February 1st and my new normal is a bit scary right now and I am unable to concentrate on a book to do justice to the book and authors. I will still do spotlight posts if you wish it is just the reviews at this time. I apologize for this, but it isn't fair to you if I signed up to do a review and haven't been able to because I can't concentrate on any books. Thank you for your understanding during this difficult time. I appreciate all of you. Kathleen Kelly April 2nd 2024

08 August 2019

Living in the Family Blender Book Spotlight!


Release Date: July 4, 2019
Deep River Press
ISBN: 9781632695055
Retail: $14.99
Pages: 224
FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Parenting / Stepparenting
Format: Paperback


Blended family issues impact the vast majority of Americans. Yet, even so, society often sidesteps the topic, while literature leaves a bleak landscape nearly void of practical advice from those who have lived in the trenches.

With over 68 combined years of direct blended family experience, including 14 years with their own family of 10 children, authors Clark and Leah Burbidge are uniquely qualified to fill this void. Their combined 'Autobiographical/How-To' guidebook weaves a humorous, tender, uplifting, and critically insightful fabric of 10 foundational principles upon which any family may confidently build. Every blended family can have happier, more fulfilling lives where disruption, disorientation, and contention are replaced by teamwork, progress, and overcoming-oriented achievement.

Living in the Family Blender provides practical guidance upon which any family may build better relationships and a life filled with joy and purpose. Join them on their personal journey and discover glorious possibilities in your own family.



Clark and Leah live in the high mountain valleys of the Rockies where they enjoy their ever-expanding blended family of ten children and seven grandchildren. They enjoy travel, hiking, road and mountain biking, and serving in their community and church. Clark received a BS in Finance from the University of Utah and an MBA from the University of Southern California and spent 35 years traveling the world as a banker, investment banker and Chief Financial Officer. Leah earned an Associates Degree from Ricks College and what arguably could be considered a doctoral-level real-life education in blended families. Clark and Leah treasure their blended wild ride of 14 years together, firmly believing that any challenge is manageable when you have someone you love to walk beside. Living in the Family Blender is Clark and Leah’s first book together, but Clark has been writing for years with 9 books in different genres including Middle Reader, Teen and YA fiction, adult non-fiction and a beautiful Christmas/Easter Family read together storybook. 

Excerpt

Causes of Miscommunication in Blended Families (but applies to all families in general)

Excerpt from Living in the Family Blender: 10 Principles of a Successful Blended Family by Clark and Leah Burbidge

Blended families can have additional issues that overlay all communication. These can create tension, fragile interaction, and false expectations regarding predisposed reactions that are not reality. Countless volumes have been written on the subject of effective communication. Our goal here is to provide some ideas regarding how we have wrestled this alligator in our blended family.

Miscommunication in our family most often occurs when the following circumstances are present:

1.  We are more interested in formulating our next response than listening to what is being said.
2.  We voice our comment or statement then cut off responses by saying we don’t want to talk about it or by walking away or shutting the door. We call this shutting down the conversation or person.
3.  We are distracted by other thoughts or activities and don’t pay close enough attention.
4.  We prejudge or anticipate certain responses that are not, in fact, reality.
5.  We have pre-formulated opinions and jump in with a quick answer or talk over the other person before we know what was going to be said.
6.  We try to fix the problem when all the person wants is someone to listen.
7.  We fail to ask enough questions to clarify what is being communicated.
8.  We convey our thoughts or responses in words or a tone that causes a defensive reaction rather than promoting listening.
9.   We read things into the conversation that are not intended.
10. We are impatient and try to rush the conversation.
11. We commandeer the conversation, inadvertently robbing them of title to their own thinking and problem-solving process.
12. We internally demean the intelligence or worth of the speaker thereby giving ourselves permission to ignore what is said.

The point is that there are numerous ways to shut down or promote communication. Leah has a gift for drawing the true feelings out of our children in their own comfort zone. She can seamlessly slide back and forth between right-brained general creative communication and a left-brained specific task and schedule-oriented communication. Clark possesses the ability to communicate on different levels as well, but usually, he must make a conscious decision regarding the general and specific discussions.

We have children of both types in our blended family. Some tend toward the artistic and chafe when they have structure, schedules or study plans that need to be addressed in specific. Others will immediately organize the schedule with times and objectives. Both types can then fail to think outside the box, frequently setting themselves up for unexpected headbanging and frontal assaults when sudden change occurs.

In addition, our children’s approach to life can bounce back and forth, depending on situational demands. As a result, our blended family communication has required us to develop nimble and flexible strategies. We manage the delicate balance through actively listening and understanding. We must walk that fine line and not irritate a child by pushing for too many specifics when they think they are done with the conversation. There will always be another opportunity to reinforce a point. On the other hand, we cannot back off too early without raising questions they at least need to think about.

We have previously discussed the value of showing your children and spouse respect. Listening to understand naturally demonstrates that respect. Children must know that you appreciate where they are coming from, respect their position, and value their thoughts. In doing so, parents are more likely to find that children will listen to their advice. Most of what we have discussed is common sense that can be patiently and effectively employed in relationships. However, there are outside distractions that can severely challenge a blended family’s ability to communicate.

About the Authors: Clark and Leah Burbidge are 14 years into their blended family experience and loving life more than ever with ten children with their eight spouses, eight grandchildren, and counting. Their practical ‘autobiographical/how to’ guide is contained in a new Gold Medal award-winning book, Living in the Family Blender: 10 Principles of a Successful Blended Family, July 2019 – Deep River Books.

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