My advice would be to reach out to a mother at your church who displays the sort of attributes the Bible speaks of
concerning wives and mothers (see Prov.
Not exact matches
Some months back, Americans found bewildered fascination in the story of John Emil List, a Missouri Synod Lutheran who, out of despair over his inability to provide for his family
and concern over the state of their souls, killed his
mother,
wife,
and three children.
The
concern is that the husband will naturally want his new
wife to bear his child,
and the new pregnancy could lower the
mother's milk supply
and potentially harm the existing child.
Actually, the dialog between the fathers
and the
mothers is FAR MORE
CONCERNING to me being the
wife and partner to a stay - at - home - dad, a feminist
and someone who believes both sexes are equal.
They are far less
concerned with material wealth
and more determined to be good
wives and mothers.
It
concerns a lesbian,
and therefore forbidden, love affair between Therese, a young, penniless photographer (Rooney Mara),
and Carol, an upper - class suburban
wife and mother (Cate Blanchett).
Anyhow, back to the story: A panicked Fin realizes that his pregnant
wife, April (Tara Reid), his
mother - in - law (Bo Derek)
and teenage daughter (Ryan Newman) are all visiting the theme park, where no one seems terribly
concerned about all the carnage up in Washington.
He seems more
concerned with the troubled relationships: that between Malcolm
and Cole
and the more troubled ones between Cole
and his
mother (Toni Collette)
and Malcolm
and his
wife (Olivia Williams, sadly underused).
The case of Q. (P.) c. L. (A.), Quebec Superior Court,
concerns a claim by a father for damages against his former
wife and the
mother of his children, based on the fact that she made unfounded allegations of improper sexual touching of their two young daughters against him.
This happens when a
wife asks a husband to communicate his weekend plans
and he interprets it as being
mothered because it harks back to childhood nagging about his whereabouts, or when a husband expresses
concern that his
wife is working too much,
and she sees it as neediness on his part, wanting her around more, not
concern that she is exhausted.
In contrast, American women indicated that husbands should have significantly more
concern and interest in meeting the needs of his
wife than his
mother.