I can't tell you how many times I hear people say that they have adopted
certain traditions in their family because it was what they saw their parents doing growing up and they always knew that they wanted the kind of love that their parents had.
Not exact matches
The Protestant Reformation attacked
certain elements
in the Catholic
tradition, its exaltation of celibacy above marriage, its conception of the religious vocation as of greater merit than secular life with
family responsibility.
My
family and I sat
in pews on
certain Sundays throughout the year, so I quickly learned the church's
traditions, but I didn't know much about the God spoken of there.
It's interesting how
certain gatherings become a
tradition in families.
Rather than immediately assuming that all holidays are to be divided equally and allocated to the parties on an even year / odd year basis as typically happens
in litigation, Collaborative Divorce starts by asking more out of the box questions such as «Does either parent's extended
family have holiday
traditions associated with
certain holidays that the children enjoy attending that we should try and facilitate with the Parenting Plan?»