The "Ten Commendments"
"Simply let your 'Yes' be 'Yes,' and your 'No,' 'No'"1
    A while back I received an  email in French requesting a copy of the "Ten Commendments." As I  can't read French, I used the Google online translator to read this person's  request. When translating online, sometimes the words can come out rather  funny. For instance, when I asked Google to translate, "The cat sat on the  mat" into French it read, "Le chat s'est reposé sur la natte."  But when I asked Google to translate this back into English it read, "The  cat rested on the plait." And then when I checked the word  "plait" in my computer Thesaurus it said, "ponytail." So  "The cat sat on the mat" ended up as "The cat rested on the  ponytail." 
    
    Jokes aside, it's  understandable that this can happen when translating online from one language  to another, but the same thing happens very easily when communicating in person  in the same language—especially between parents and children, husbands and  wives. 
    
    Effective communication  should be one of many "commendments" because so many  misunderstandings and broken relationships are caused by mis-communications  and/or misunderstood communications. 
    
    One of the challenges in  communication is that we see and hear things, and will even read into things,  on the basis of how we feel about ourselves, and on the bases of unresolved  issues from past significant relationships. 
    
    If I am a very insecure,  super-sensitive person, the slightest negative comment can send me into an  emotional tailspin. Furthermore, if I didn't get along with my mother [or  father, sister, or brother], and you say or do something that reminds me of my  mother, it's going to push my "mother [or whichever] button" and I  will overreact way out of proportion to what you said or did. And you are going  to be left wondering what on earth is happening to me. Then we get into the  battle of: "You said" … "did not." "Yes you did"…  "No I didn't" … "Did" … "Didn't…." And the  vicious cycle continues and escalates. 
    
    As healthy relationships  are vital to healthy living, learning to communicate effectively needs to be a  top priority. There are many helpful tips on how we can learn to do this  besides learning to hear what is not being said, but the bottom line is that we  need to resolve all past impaired significant relationships so our hot buttons  don't get pushed, and that we grow in maturity so we overcome our insecurities. 
    
    Suggested prayer:  "Dear God, please help me to see and resolve any and all impaired  relationships and grow in maturity so that I can learn to love and accept  myself in a healthy manner and not overreact to what others say or do to me.  Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus' name,  amen." 
  
    1. Matthew  5:37 (NIV). 
  
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All articles on this website are written by 
            Richard (Dick) Innes unless otherwise stated.