Sentences with phrase «children over her husband»

I was absolutely mortified that any woman would choose sleeping with her children over her husband.

Not exact matches

I live with my husband (together for over 9 years, and living together for over 8 years) and our two fur - children.
I'm the primary care giver for the children since my husband works over night graveyard shifts.
(I Corinthians 14:34 - 35) «Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee.»
Polygamist husbands in the FLDS & fundamentalist Mormon communities don't earn enough to support their wives and children: many husbands do not work at all, but merely preside over the family and conduct Church business.
At the same time, women's resentment at being used gives rise in them to feelings of hostility which may prompt them to manipulate their husbands in devious ways and to exercise over their children a dominance that harms the latter psychologically.
And in several weddings over the past few years, I've heard the officiating ministers (all of them male) warn young brides to avoid «letting themselves go» after having children or else their husbands might be tempted to «look elsewhere.»
... «Gen 3:16 Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and thy desire [shall be] to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee.»
Aristotle wrote that «the smallest and primary parts of the household are master and slave, husband and wife, father and children» and devoted several sections of his Politics to the importance of free men ruling over their wives, children, and slaves.
Robert I can enjoy the Iliad because I realize that it's myth, and that thousands of lives were not lost over some child bride running away from her jealous husband.
The husband is to rule over his wife and their children.
«3:16 Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee.»
2 The overseer should therefore be irreprehensible, a husband of one wife, moderate in habits, sound in mind, orderly, hospitable, qualified to teach, 3 not a drunken brawler, not a smiter, but reasonable, not belligerent, not a lover of money, 4 a man presiding over his own household in a fine manner, having children in subjection with all seriousness; 5 (if indeed any man does not know how to preside over his own household, how will he take care of God's congregation?)
Those who love Him - holy parents, good and dear friends, faithful and loving wife or husband, children that are a joy, and priests who are spiritual and true, and over all the Eucharist and the Church - all of this spiritual «ecology» may give us years and years of almost unbroken happiness.
To the woman He said: «I will greatly multiply your sorrow and your conception; In pain you shall bring forth children; Your desire shall be for your husband, And he shall rule over you.»
Gen 3:16 To the woman He said, «I will greatly multiply Your pain in childbirth, In pain you will bring forth children; Yet your desire will be for your husband, And he will rule over you.»
On a different note, Christian folksinger Bob Bennett scored a hit with a song he wrote for his children while going through a divorce: «There is no such thing as divorce between a father and his son / No matter what has happened, no matter what will be / There's no such thing as divorce between you and me... Sometimes I cry over the things I can't undo / And the words I never should have said in front of you / But I pray the good will somehow overcome the bad / And where I failed as a husband, I'll succeed as your dad.»
Stage 4: The wife takes over control of the family and the husband is seen as a recalcitrant child.
Pat Robertson's quip from the 1992 Republican National Convention pushed me over the edge: «Feminism,» he sneered, «encourages women to leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism, and become lesbians.»
The doctor's voice lingers over the scene: «The question you and your husband need to consider is whether now would be a good time for children
She has more than fifteen years of experience teaching Language of Listening ® as a pathway to profound understanding of ourselves and our children, and over 25 years experience raising two children with her husband Patrick.
I told my husband just today I'm not going to stress out over a dog I have worked to hard to get pregnant and I'll be damned if i lose this child to stress over chasing a pet around i don't give birth to puppies.
It occurred to me last night as I was sitting in the hot tub and watching the sun set over the desert, that if I could travel back in time twenty years and whisper in my teenage ear: You're going to be an author and have a wonderful husband and a firebrand, amazing child and you're going to get to travel a lot and one night you're going to find yourself alone in a hot tub in the desert, looking up at a glowing pink sky, I would have thought, That's a pretty f-ing cool life.
She and her husband are the parents of two children (young adults), whom they adopted as infants and have maintained an open adoption with their birthmother for over 20 years.
She was raising four children when she placed Tyrus for adoption with the other Rebekah and her husband, Ben, just over four years ago.
For reasons that include business and grown children of our blended spread out all over the west, my husband and I maintain three residences — in Colorado, Nevada and northern California.
So far I have freaked out about doubling the amount of children in our house, where the babies are going to sleep, cloth diapering, starting completely over with baby clothes instead of trying to sort through what would be usable, nursing two babies at the same time, buying a bigger house, how I'm going to drive four kids around (thank God we just replaced my husband's car in January with a full size SUV with a usable third row), traveling with four kids, what happens if my husband has to start traveling for work, getting the big kids to and from school with two babies in tow, how the big kids are going to feel once there are two new babies in the house, how I»M going to feel with two more babies in the house, and so on and so forth.
Gesa Harmston is a Certified Life Coach of over 8 years and lives in Ottawa, Ontario with her husband and two children.
By Henry Amador - Batten So my husband and I have been struggling over which one of us should carry our next child.
For full disclosure, my AP husband has now over the years read many, many books about the development of children, particularly the adolescent years, including Reviving Ophelia, Teenage Guys, and many others.
I expect that my husband, my son and myself will have our hearts grow by leaps and bounds over this upcoming experience of opening our lives to help heal a «broken child
Another may presume custody for the father (if he is suitable) in the event a wife / mother abandons the husband and the children are over 7 years old.
My husband and I are now vacilating over having another child.
Audiences all over the world watched as little couple Jen Arnold and her husband Bill Klein brought their two adopted children home.
But you and your husband need to establish from the beginning that you make the decisions regarding your child and your little family, or else your MIL will run over you for the rest of her life.
I live in Nashville, TN, with my husband, daughter, dog, and cat, but am able to help parents and children all over the world through consultations via phone, e-mail, Skype, and other electronic platforms.
There's a roof over our heads, food on the table, I have a husband who loves me and children who are healthy.
One day, over five years ago, my husband and I made a conscious decision for me to become a stay at home mother with the birth of our next child.
To suggest my husband and I don't value the lives of our children or put financial concerns over the lives of our children is so ridiculous is not even offensive - it's just laughable.
Maybe it's about feeling invisible, about not having a career, about not feeling able to voice her resentment over feeling distant from her husband because of the intensity of her intimacy with her child.
Mother in law wanted to choose a different name for her child (husband had a row with his mother over this and used the guilt factor to getting her way) and practically had Joan follow her step by step instructions on how to care for her child.
I really regret not cloth diapering our last child but my husband didn't want to mess with cloth diapers — he was tired of them — and I was not about to upset the marriage equilibrium over the type of diapers we used.
With Kids Embrace my husband and I can rest knowing our little one is protected, with over 60 years experience in children's car seat design and 22 ultimate installation and safety features, we are very happy with this seat.
In fact, after giving birth twice in that maternity ward, my husband and I just waddled over to get our own birthing ball when we were in labor with our third child.
«My husband's work took him away from Westminster to New York over Easter, and the children and I decided to tag along.
Over the past year my husband & I have been slowly learning how to eat right, & now that we're expecting our first child I'm pushing even more for the «good wholesome» foods.
This starts with my five children and my husband of over 29 years.
She speaks of having a great life of over thirty years with her husband, a life in which they raised two fine children and then looked forward to a comfortable retirement ahead.
As women over 50, a husband to make babies and raise children is not what we need anymore, what we need now is someone to stay with us and make us happy.
In place of the voyages of the Beagle and that bizarre menagerie on the Galapagos Isles, we get a sodden family drama, set in early Victorian England, focusing on guilt over a lost child and an exaggerated moral struggle between a sickly husband who chooses reason over religion and a prim wife who prefers faith to fact.
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