advice
It takes a village to raise a family; advice and tips to make the most of yours.
How to Instill Good Hygiene Habits in Your Kids
One of the things I’m most passionate about in my life is being a Dad. I frequently make the cliché that it’s the greatest thing I’ve ever done. Now that my daughter is a teenager, things have gotten more interesting regarding contests of willpower and authority, but we do quite well. That said, there are several things you can empirically do to be a good Father or Parent, chief among them is personal hygiene habits.
By Brent Salmon5 years ago in Families
BEFORE THE FIRE
September 25st 2010. The time was 8pm having the family celebration success. Enjoying every second of it before a beautiful day turned into tears. The day started with us working up in the morning everyone smiling and getting ready to prepare for this beautiful day our family was about to have. Friends started calling congratulating our family’s success, neighbors bringing us gifts and everything was going according to a plan. My sisters and aunts went to a salon and payed for a expensive wigs, bought new cars, expensive jewelries, nice clothes, while all men went to get fresh hair cuts, nice suits bought new cars and hired the most expensive chef to prepare a meal for us while we go to the clubs and casinos to gamble. It was a fun day.
By Goabaone Mosheleketi5 years ago in Families
How to Care for an Infant With a Birth Injury
Conception is a celebration of life and the beginning of a family. Unfortunately, there are circumstances that can lead to birth defects and birth injuries brought on by issues in medical care and potentially during delivery.
By Casey Chesterfield5 years ago in Families
What about moms?
Mom....every single one of us has one. Whether you know her, or don't, she is responsible for bringing you into this world. It is a title that holds great weight and responsibility, and often referred to as the hardest and most important job in the world. Well, I know all this first hand, as I am a mom of three children, oldest daughter 9, and two sons, 8 and 2. I naturally birthed all three of my kids, no drugs, no interventions, nothing, just me and god lol. My journey into motherhood has been hard to say the least, but to be more specific, the hardest thing I've ever taken on. While having children are a blessing and a gift, there's a lot that you can't prepare for and see coming. I am also a single mom, who has had to figure it all out, while trying to stay sane in the process. I have always had big dreams to make it big in the modeling, fashion, beauty etc. world, but once children came along, they all but died. Along came responsibility, isolation, loneliness, depression. It didn't take long after my first born for me to feel like something was off and not like myself, knowing that overwhelming sadness and depression, suicidal thoughts, loss of appetite, and the list goes on, is not normal. There was a talk show that came on one day and the topic was postpartum depression, and a light bulb came on, it felt like they were talking to, and about me!!! I was relieved to know this was actually a thing I was going through, that had a name, and that I wasn't the only one, but was also afraid that it still meant something was wrong with me. I was recommended by a friend at the time who noticed, to see someone and never did, was never diagnosed, and just lived with it, because of shame mostly. I just tried my very best and hardest to manage what I was going through. Even in a relationship I couldn't open up about it all, and just carried on with daily life, responsibilities, taking care of and doing for everyone, but myself, feeling alone, unappreciated, lost, confused, and hopeless. I have learned ways to better cope, and manage, but I still very much struggle, and some things have never quite gone away. I know there are many moms out there who can relate, but may also feel shame, guilt, inadequacy, depression, etc. I have been silent and alone with this for a very long time, and am speaking for those who have suffered silently as well. So I ask what about moms? We matter. We can often be unrecognized, unappreciated, disrespected, overlooked, and unsupported, but we matter and are important. We often do so much, and so much for others, and we ourselves are often forgotten about, even by our own selves. If you read this and can relate, or if anything resonates with you, I just want you to know that you are not alone, you are doing great, and you matter. If you know a mom who is struggling or not themselves, I challenge you to support her, ask questions, and try to be of some assistance to her. We can use more love and kindness in the world, especially in these uncertain times, so I challenge anyone who reads this to spread some out into the universe, especially our moms.
By Jessique Austin 5 years ago in Families
Britluchot lawyers
Obligations and consequences of parenting orders The Family Law Act 1975 (the Act) sets out the rights, duties, powers and liabilities of spouses and children, and provides for enforcement of those rights and liabilities as well as the dissolution of marriage.
By Md Amir Hossain5 years ago in Families
Living With A Narcissist
When my dad died when I was 7, my cousin who was 30 years old at the time had gotten custody of my brother and me. At first everything was fine and going well. Then by the time I turned 12, everything changed. I was grounded for absolutely everything. At that time it was just me lying about little things. As the years progressed, the things I had gotten grounded for got ridiculous. If something wasn’t cleaned right or done right, I was grounded. If I had a small pile of clothes that weren’t in the dirty clothes basket, I was grounded, and my room was searched. My brother and I had shared a room for a couple years before my cousin’s oldest son had moved out and my brother had moved into the other room with my cousin’s youngest, but once her oldest moved out and my brother moved into the same room as her youngest, let me just say if that other bed in my room wasn’t clean and strictly just have extra blankets, pillows and sheets on it, I was grounded and my whole room was searched. She would purposely find every reason to ground me and yell at me. If I didn’t get grounded for a whole week, she would go through my room while I was at school and once I got home, I was yelled at and grounded.
By Patricia Meredith5 years ago in Families




