Sentences with phrase «child about her spouse»

Not exact matches

• Two final follow - ups: When I referred to «survivors» in my column about deciding when to take Social Security, I was talking about children and grandchildren, not spouses.
People in that actual situation usually think about loved ones — grandkids, children, their spouses.
«They are either worried about depleting their assets for their spouse, or they want to make sure they have enough money to pass to their children
When asked about the PBO findings Thursday, Morneau said the government pursued the changes because some Canadians were lowering their taxes by sprinkling income to children or their spouses in a private corporation, even though those family members weren't actively engaged in the business.
For example, if your children have done well in their careers, you may be less concerned about passing on an inheritance but still want some coverage for your spouse.
About 3.7 million temporary workers and trainees along with their spouses and children were admitted to the U.S. in 2015, the latest year for which data is available.
A person who didn't consider family before embarking upon a political career, who simply didn't care about the impact of that decision on his or her spouse and children, would be some sort of monster.
All this is quite true, as I am a caregiver, and usually stay until the end and when we talk, family is the one topic they always talk about — some bad but mostly the good — the love they have for their children and the love of a wonderful spouse, whom they hate to leave.
The interview format used by the Oliner team had over 450 items and consisted of six main parts: a) characteristics of the family household in which respondents lived in their early years, including relationships among family members; b) parental education, occupation, politics, and religiosity, as well as parental values, attitudes, and disciplinary approaches; c) respondent's childhood and adolescent years - education, religiosity, and friendship patterns, as well as self - described personality characteristics; d) the five - year period just prior to the war — marital status, occupation, work colleagues, politics, religiosity, sense of community, and psychological closeness to various groups of people; if married, similar questions were asked about the spouse; e) the immediate prewar and war years, including employment, attitudes toward Nazis, whether Jews lived in the neighborhood, and awareness of Nazi intentions toward Jews; all were asked to describe their wartime lives and activities, whom they helped, and organizations they belonged to; f) the years after the war, including the present — relations with children and personal and community — helping activities in the last year; this section included forty - two personality items comprising four psychological scales.
For example, somebody becomes a Christian, but then they go and gossip about you around town, and divorces their spouse, abuses their children and gets arrested for dealing drugs.
It's all about having a support group — this country is chock full of substance abusers, they abuse Rx, they abuse Alcohol, they abuse their spouse or children, they abuse their religion, they hate themselves and so abuse comes naturally.
I suspect that if you took spousal and child abuse statistics in the US (and account at least a little bit for what goes unreported), you'd probably find that the spectrum of our «Christian» nation doesn't exactly have a lot to brag about either (but of course anyone who abuses children or spouse can't POSSIBLY be a «true Christian»... and I hope you see the irony in that remark).
It is about how you can continue (or start anew) to enhance the marriage relationship even when the children are grown and gone and you think you know all there is to know about your spouse.
Reading all the books about 2012, and listening to all the doom and gloom sermons, attending all the prayer meetings about the end of the world, and watching the Discovery channel special about Mayan calendars and aliens from space and Egyptian pyramid tunnels, OR loving our neighbors, serving our spouses, teaching our children, working hard at our jobs, and helping where people are hurting?
You talk about forgiveness, what about the hurting spouse who now has to pick up the pieces with children and carry on while their spouse abandoned his home to live in «bliss» with his new soulmate
«They often are more adaptable about the religious nurture of children than their more religiously conservative spouses
So for you it is a very difficult situation; because your spouse does not know anything about Judiasm; so your child will be confused.Judiasm is a rich religion and very complicated and being immersed in a Jewish family helps alot.
Do single Christians have the ability to make major life decisions without worrying about their commitment to their spouse or children?
I just don't think it applies to real life, are you going to have «Faith» in your doctor when she is treating your child, of course not (you want to see a degree or at least have knowledge that the doctor knows what she is talking about), if the technician working on your spouses brakes tell you that he doesn't know what he is doing but he has faith that he can fix them, are you going to your spouses life in his hands?
Parents of small families who are very concerned about having grandchildren around might reflect they are likely to see more of their celibate children than those with the care of spouses and families.
If you are with a group of mothers who've all had a similar experience, you're more likely to share about things you're struggling with, or maybe your spouse or your children or a friend is struggling with.
In both of the examples I have presented, the cheating spouse denied thier spouse (and children) sufficient access to necessary health care, food, clothing and other provisions, and their perception of reality was controlled by the cheaters» pretense that nothing had changed about the relationship when in fact the relationship suffered a cataclysmic and covert paradigm shift.
You love your life, you love your spouse and you're thinking about adding a baby into the mix because you love the idea of having a child with your beloved.
Perhaps not; while about 15 percent to 45 percent of first marriages end in divorce about 60 percent to 80 percent of second marriages end in divorce (although numbers vary on how many of those second marriages are to the former spouse or a different one with assorted children from different parents all trying to live happily a la «The Brady Bunch» under one roof).
Additionally, it was found that men's ideas about their relationships with their spouses and children may be unrealistic, ambiguous, and unclear.
If the words your or your spouse are using are inappropriate, however, and wouldn't be used around a group of your peers (meaning other moms with toddlers or any reasonable person who has ever had a child), then you should definitely talk to them about using more appropriate terms.
If these people are harassing you, your spouse, or your children about home schooling, you should check out the Home School Legal Defense Association.
I had a lot more to learn about child rearing than the introduction the hospital gave me and I had a setback early on regarding discipline, but through the years, Attachment Parenting has transformed the way I look at myself, my children, my spouse, my community, my world.
Ideally, talk to your children about your divorce two to three weeks before you and your spouse actually separate — you don't want one parent to move out immediately after the conversation.
Is she trying to make calls about dinner or t - ball or the dozens of other bits of minutiae that her partner hasn't keyed in on because 64 percent of moms in two - parent households say that they do more than their spouse or partner when it comes to managing their children's schedule and activities?
Sit down and talk with your spouse about the amount of time you each expect and want to spend on various tasks like child care, work, personal time and together time.
and talk with your spouse about things you did or learned during the day in front of your child,» Dr. Fray says.
One of the biggest sources of children's problems after a divorce is the failure of parents to keep their negative feelings or disparaging comments about their ex (or their new spouse's ex) to themselves.
Think of the excitement that builds when being able to reveal a huge surprise to your children and spouse about an upcoming family trip.
When you get angry and are about to blow up at your child or spouse, do you take a few minutes to calm yourself first?
Most importantly, make sure your spouse and your child's caregivers know about these important safety tips!
According to 2003 to 2011 pooled ATUS data, about 80 % of parents ages 18 to 64 with children younger than 18 are married and living with a spouse, an additional 16 % of parents are not, and about 4 % of parents live with a partner.
In that, you may learn something about your child, your spouse and yourself.
We often forget that although most of what we remember about our day has to do with tantrums and chaos, we also get to experience some pretty cool interactions with our children that our spouses miss while working.
I write about my life as a mom of four children under the age of six, as a Navy spouse, athlete and about healthy living.
A parent might have had other experiences of being «not seen» perhaps by a spouse, co-worker or by her own parents, that makes her particularly vulnerable to getting upset about not being «seen» by her child.
Brace yourself for stories from your parents and in - laws about what a hellacious child you or your spouse were and how you totally deserve what's coming to you.
Talk to your partner / spouse / support people, really anyone who will be involved in your child's care, about how important breastfeeding is to you.
Do be consistent with your spouse about how to handle your child's anxiety.
In the 2011 BCCWF research study, we found that most fathers believed they should share their children's caregivingequally with their spouses; however, only about 30 % claimed to be actually doing that.
While most people think about how divorce will impact relationships with their spouse, children and friends, one that is often forgotten is the in - law relationship.
If your spouse isn't parenting your child the way you think they should be, you need to be able to communicate with them about that and work things out.
Parents find themselves torn, with one parent always at the NICU and the other running around trying to maintain an income and keep the rest of the family going, all the time worrying about what is going on with their child and their spouse.
Recent conversations about mental health in the university — depression, loneliness, suicide — have largely flailed to consider in any holistic way the distance imposed on families within such systems, as life - partners live apart for months and often years at a time, with one spouse shouldering the burden of childcare alone while the other manages the psychological pain of loneliness and distance from the children and partner.
Sen. John DeFrancisco (R - Syracuse) cited a recent report in The New York Times that found Cuomo, a Democrat, had received about $ 2 million in contributions from people he appointed to various boards and positions, their spouses, their children or their businesses.
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