FAMILY COUNSELING CENTER ASSOCIATION
  • RSS
3617 W. Pioneer Parkway
Arlington, Texas 76013
817-275-3617
  • Home
  • Books
  • Staff
    • Dr. Roger Doss, Ph.D.
    • Dr. Carol Doss, Ph.D.
  • Counseling Services
    • Individual Counseling
    • Marital/Couple Counseling
    • Family Counseling
    • Play Therapy
    • Adolescent Transitions
    • Group Counseling
    • Grief Recovery
    • Career Counseling
    • Spiritual Counseling
  • Counseling FAQ
  • Unsolicited Advice Column
    • Relationships
    • Personal Issues
    • Parenting
    • Random Topics
  • Contact Us

Life can be challenging and, even with our best efforts, we can have difficulty sorting through our own challenges. Let us help. Sometimes, having an impartial listener can help. Whether you're anxious, depressed or trying to sort through relationship difficulties, our therapists are trained to give you our full attention and help you find the solutions that work for you.

We offer the options of in-person therapy, virtual counseling or telephone sessions to current and new clients. (Our virtual services are offered through HIPPA compliant and encrypted services. This option involves new clients filling out intake forms--links on first page of this site--and either faxing them to 817-275-3720 or emailing them to our office at centerstaff@hotmail.com. Arrangement of payment method needs to be made with our office and we are glad to file insurance claims when appropriate.)

Credit cards are also accepted. All our therapists are licensed in the state of Texas.

CLIENT FORMS

Complete Here: 2026 CLIENT INTAKE FORM
  • Home»
  • Unsolicited Advice Column»
  • Parenting»
  • Small Choices, Big Consequences

Small Choices, Big Consequences

Posted on January 22, 2007 by Carol in Parenting, Personal Issues, Relationships

Only a few choices seem big at the moment you’re making them. You look down a long aisle of a church and see the person you’re marrying–that’s a big choice. You look down at the contract you’re about to sign for a thirty-year mortgage on a house. That seems big, too, even though you can sell the house, if you choose.

Most choices, though, don’t come with a resounding trumpet blast announcing “This Is Big!” Many are small, sneaky moments that you don’t even really notice unless you’re paying attention.

One night with a hot guy and an old condom. Leaving a sleeping child in a car while you run into a store for one small minute. Buying your kid a toy every time she whines in the store. Flirting with the new woman at work, even though you’re married. Gunning your car to race through the traffic light that’s turning yellow.

Our lives are filled with small choices. Some can have huge consequences. Life-altering, life-ending or just frustrating consequences. We have to remember that each action we take has a consequence. With this clearly in focus, we are more likely to give each action the thought it needs.

When you’re out partying with your friends and blowing off steam from a crappy week or month, be aware of how one choice can change your life…and those choices get blurrier when you’ve had a few. Getting pulled over for a DUI is only one possibility. What if the hot guy you have sex with has Chlamydia? Or HIV or venereal warts? Getting wasted at the club might have more consequences than you ever thought.

If you run the yellow/red traffic light, you might get one of those tickets in the mail, but you might also have a bad meeting with a semi-truck.

Watching the television news report about these kind of moments, you might say, “How could they be so stupid?” But when you’re in the moment, things may not be so clear. The urge to cut corners can be strong. Even more likely are the everyday choices that have relationship consequences. The fight with your spouse that never gets resolved. The times you promise your kid you’ll be home and you don’t make it because you have other priorities.

Never think that your actions and your words don’t make that big a difference. What you do–or don’t do–matters. Your choices effect your relationships, your work experience and your credit rating. You are very powerful. You get to be in charge of you, every day. While this may not seem like a big deal, it really is huge. Even in situations in which you don’t feel like you have much choice, you get to choose how you function, how you behave. You have power over who you are.

In most situations, you get to choose what you do, where you do it and who you’re with. It’s your power. You get to make the choices and they bring certain consequences. Big or little, your actions create your life.

Comments are closed.

Share This Page

Blog Categories

  • Parenting (138)
  • Personal Issues (158)
  • Random Topics (23)
  • Relationships (208)
  • Uncategorized (14)
  • Unsolicited Advice Column (61)

Recent Posts

  • Saying “I Told You So”
  • Don’t Distract Your Kid
  • Roommate Marriage
  • Why I Don’t Call No-Show Clients
  • You’re Not Nuts
  • Not Done Yet…
  • ADDICTED TO ACHIEVEMENT
  • Doing Your Part
  • Staying For The Kids
  • Relationship Issues & Alcohol
  • Stupid Emotional Choices
  • Biology Doesn’t Trump Behavior
  • Prepare Your Kids
  • Relationships & Winning
  • Beating Anxiety
  • WHY DO EVIL?
  • How We Affect Each Other (or The Relationship Dance)
  • Getting The Therapist You Deserve
  • PRESSURING OUR YOUNG
  • CHANGING KIDS
Content/Graphics © 2002-2026 Family Counseling Center Association. All rights reserved.