816-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 9, 1991 Seminar Teaches About Families Under Seige LOU ANN GOOD Lancaster Farming Staff MECHANICSBURG (Cumber land Co.) “The family is under seige,” Dr. James Van Horn told those who attended the seminar on Building Strong Families, held at the Holiday Inn, Mechanicsburg, on November 1. Dr. Van Horn, who was the key note speaker, teaches and writes about rural family stresses and strengths for Penn State. A slight-built man with glasses, Dr. Van Horn, who has five child ren ranging in ages from 12 to 21, is a witty story teller who illus trated his talk with antidotes of families under stress. ‘There are significant changes not only in the structure of the fam ily but also in the norms whereby we live,” Dr. Van Horn said. “Whether we subscribe to the changes or not, they are occurring. Stress accompanies these changes because people do not what is expected of them.” Add to the changes are figures that show that two-thirds of first marriages will end in divorce. In addition is the quest for time. Dr. Van Horn gave the example of a male and female who walk up to the door side by side. “There was a time, when the man could have two grocery bags in his hands and somehow he was expected to grab Learn-At-Home Programs Offered The following educational leam-at-home programs are being offered from Penn State Coopera tive Extension. Learn-At-Home: Program packages for busy people to sub scribe for a minimal shipping and handling charge. These leam-at home programs may also be picked up at the office with no charge. Celebrate Your Family/ Young Family - strengthening families with young children, includes activities for interacting and discussion: planning for a spe cial activity, create a collage of feelings, speak in pastels, “ima gine if...”, make a family motto, and more. Cost: $2. 9 To 5 Survival - Four lessons to teach kids how to be safe when alone, at home. There are ideas for snacks, instruction for simple clo thing repair, fire safety, and safe practices for emergencies. Cost; $2. Children In Your Care/In Your Home - six lessons filled with activities, children’s safety, tax tips and various topics of con cern to Care Givers. Cost: $2. Celebrate Your Family/ Teenagers - learn to build under standing skills with the develop ing adolescent; how to create opportunities for sharing; how each family member gains respect for others in the family; and to build in time to be together, and more. Cost: $2. Celebrate Your Marriage - activities and discussion to build strengths for middle-age couples. Topics include: Look at our Mar riage, Develop a Survival Scheme, Caring Style, Mid-Life Transition, Resolving Conflict, and more. Cost: $2. Family After 40 - six booklets discussing Communication Skills, Physical Well-Being, Emotional Changes, Financial Help, Giving and Receiving Help, and Living Arrangements. Cost $2. the door handle with his little fin ger and open it because that was the proper and expected behavior in that era. Today, neither the man or woman are sure who will open the door. “If the couple hold to tradition, the male will lunge for the door and the female will step back. In another situation, the female will practically put her fist through the door because she is going to assert herself.” Each of those situations illus trate the 20 percent at each end of the spectrum. “In between are a whale of a lot of people who walk up to a door and wonder what to do,” said Dr. Van Horn. Situations such as these cause problems in marriages and with children because people do not have clear set of expectations laid out for them. This causes tremend ous anxiety. What am I supposed to be doing? Lay on that pressure the enormous pressure of time. The big issue in the ’9os is dis cretionary time and the pressures that people feel, Dr. Van Horn believes. “If anyone ran for Congress on the platform that they would create the eighth day of the week, they would probably win,” Dr. Van Horn surmised. Question of diversity also cre- Celebrate Your Family Through Stories - for all agge families. This learn-at-home prog ram helps build self-esteem. Cost: $2. Celebrate Your Family Through Recreation • for all ages of families. Helps for using recreational activities to strength en family life. Cost $2. Celebrate Your Family Across Generations - This series suggests ways to keep intergener ational ties growing, for your fam ily is a group to which you will belong for your entire life. Cost: $2. Grandletters - bring grandpa rents and grandchildren closer together by an exchange of letters and simple handmade materials that share thoughts, feelings, and experiences through the genera tions. Cost: $1.50. To Live At Home Or Note - helps son, daughters, and parents review their options when consid ering a joint or separate house hold. Guide reveals issues to be dicussed candidly - privacy, respect, expectations in an integcncrated living arrangement. Cost: $l. When Adult Children Live At Home - guidebook for families who have already made the deci sion to share a household. Helps suggested for a planning meeting to discuss personal needs, home management issues, and ways to maintain harmony. Cost $l. Your New Life... Alone - A scries of letters to help recently widowed, divorced, and separated adults cope more effectively with their emotions and daily responsi bilities. Cost: $2. Creative Vegetable Cookery - a scries of six lessons emphasizes increasing the variety of veget ables you cat; provides cooking tips and recipe;, and explains the connection between diet and cancer. (Because of correspon dence between the user and the office, this program has a set fee.) Cost: $5. ates enormous problems in this country. “We are moving close to a caste system. We have frozen people in poverty, and are close to establish ing a formal or informal caste-like system that is creating helplessness. “One in five kids is in poverty. In rural communities, we have 25 percent of children living in fami lies at or below the poverty line,” Dr. Van Horn said. “We are dealing with an adverse set of family structures where 25 percent of children live in single families. When two-thirds of marriages end in divorce, real-life kids feel “The Lite Eating Guide” ■ leam-at-home to recognize diffe rent types of fats; what foods con tain fats and cholesterol; under stand how food labels can help you eat lite, and how to eat lite in fast food restaurants. Cost: $2. Available At No Cost: Enroll to receive these newletters. Accent On Families: Bi- Monthly newsletters to Cumber land and Dauphin County Home makers written by extension home economists. Topics include con sumer issues, articles on nutrition and food safety, parenting and child care, the home environment, and ideas to help the sandwich generation cope. Dear Mother/Dear Father - ni-monthly newsletter to parents of children ages 2 to 7. Toddler Topics - Lcarn-at home program for families with children ages 2 to 6. Four part series distributed in the spring of the year. Dear Parent • monthly news letter to parents of children 8 to 15 years old. Off To A Good Start - A two year leam-at-home program for the parents of newborns. It is age graded and discusses all facets of the infant and family life during the first 24 months. Indicate birth dale of child. ■ Keeping Up - a monthly news letter for seniors with information about housing, safety, nutrition, tax tips, intergenerational relation ships, lips for shopping and more. To receive any of the above programs, send your choice(s) along with your name, address, phone, and amount to cither: Penn State Cooperative Exlcnsion-Cumberland County, 1100 Claremont Rd., Carlisle, PA 17013. Checks payable to: Exten sion Service Special Fund. —OR— Penn State Cooperative Extension-Dauphin County, 1451 Peters’ Mountain Rd., Dauphin, PA 17018. Checks payable to: Agri. Extension Special Fund. “There are pressures on farm families that urban families don't have and vice versa. Farm families are less inclined to seek professional help and are notorious for denying family stresses.” said Dr. Van Horn, who writes a column on mar riage and family strengths, which appears in 90 newspapers. the stress of divorce. And the num ber of hours that mothers spend in attorney offices is astronmical try ing to get child support. “A lot of kids don’t have parents. In addition, Dr. Van Horn said that white American does not know how to deal with cultures from other backgrounds. “We have a white privilege that we drag through life. If a white pro fessional is at home and dressed in woodworking clothes when he needs to take his child with a cut on the face to an emergency room, the white American merely tells the hospital admissions clerk that the child fell down the steps. Because the professional has insurance, he can zip right in and out of the hos pital. Take same situation, same iry jql. jgi , igm, . irpersoi. ihe seminar, said “We hope to learn to network to serve families better. We (Penn State Extension) don’t need to get all the credit as long as families are being helped.” Kay Pickering, housing counselor, Is on the left. Agnes Martlnko, education Ph.D, left, explains the per sonality variances that are within families to Herb Bomber ger of Salem U.C.C. dress, same kids, but have a black or Asian American who has no insurance, has an accent, and that parents is highly suspect of child abuse. “In the ’9os, we must deal with differences, honor differences, and understand them. To do otherwise in families is to do a tremendous inservice to the world,” Dr. Van Horn said. One reason, children get short changed is that they are not at the top of the list. Work and recreation takes precedence over a child’s place in the family. Advocates parents spending uninterrupted time with children and teens. “Parents should appear so busy that they don’t have time to spend with their children. (Turn to Pag* BIT)