Setting Boundaries With Your Adult Children: Five Signs You Are Enabling Your Ad
Posted on Wednesday, April 25 @ 22:17:54 CDT | Topic: Family
By Karla Downing
Are you wondering if you are enabling your adult child? These five signs will help you to determine whether or not you are helping or hurting. "Enabling" means that your action allows someone to continue to do something they otherwise couldn't do without it. It is also doing something for others that they should be doing for themselves.
Are you wondering if you are enabling your adult child? These five signs will help you to determine whether or not you are helping or hurting. "Enabling" means that your action allows someone to continue to do something they otherwise couldn't do without it. It is also doing something for others that they should be doing for themselves.
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Find Time For You
Posted on Wednesday, April 25 @ 22:11:26 CDT | Topic: Family
By Tracey Wall
Do you often consider how much time and energy you give to your family but never give to yourself? Do you feel you're constantly attending to the needs of others but never your own? Many mums feel their role is solely to care for their family but you cannot do this without looking after your own needs as well. Have you thought about what could happen to your family if you burn out, become unwell or even start to resent what you have?
Do you often consider how much time and energy you give to your family but never give to yourself? Do you feel you're constantly attending to the needs of others but never your own? Many mums feel their role is solely to care for their family but you cannot do this without looking after your own needs as well. Have you thought about what could happen to your family if you burn out, become unwell or even start to resent what you have?
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Time Off From Your Children Is Necessary for Everybody
Posted on Tuesday, December 27 @ 00:36:25 CST | Topic: Family
By Anne Benissan
They have pressure for their kids health, for their children's manners, for the right preschool, for the right school, for the homework, for the right activity, for the right parenting technique, for the right friends etc...
It is a 24/7 job that lasts for long. Everywhere you read how wonderful it is, the truth is that it is not always wonderful. It can be draining.
They have pressure for their kids health, for their children's manners, for the right preschool, for the right school, for the homework, for the right activity, for the right parenting technique, for the right friends etc...
It is a 24/7 job that lasts for long. Everywhere you read how wonderful it is, the truth is that it is not always wonderful. It can be draining.
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A Problem with Today's Parenting
Posted on Wednesday, October 05 @ 01:17:12 CDT | Topic: Family

There was an interesting article in The Atlantic, entitled "How to Land Your Kid in Therapy: Why the obsession with our kids' happiness may be dooming them to unhappy adulthoods. A therapist and mother reports."
The article is about the way many parents focus much of their energy on being there for their children, but their children end up feeling lost and empty.
One of the issues I've written about extensively is that half of good parenting is being there for our children, and the other half is being there for ourselves. This article says nothing about parents becoming loving role models of personal responsibility for filling their own emptiness. In fact, these parents, who are obsessed with their kids' happiness, are likely addicted to filling themselves up through their children - not a healthy situation.
This article validates what Inner Bonding is all about - learning how to take responsibility for your own feelings. The problem with these lost adults is that their parents always took responsibility for them, rather than role-modeling how to fill themselves up.
Feeling lost and empty is the result of a lack of love. As the cartoon drawing shows, these kids received an abundance of love from their parents. But they never learned how to fill themselves with love through a personal source of spiritual guidance. They never learned how to access their own higher self to guide them in what is loving to themselves, so they end up feeling lost.
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Motherhood, Some-days seem Impossible. Is It Worth the Tears?
Posted on Wednesday, October 06 @ 23:55:13 CDT | Topic: Family
by Kathy Somers Walsh
Lord Grant me more Patience please.
Who would have known that I would ever become a mother? Anyone who knows me personally still can't believe it, especially my mother. I promised myself since I was in my early 20's that I would never have children nor get married.
For 38 years I was a free being on this planet, coming and going as I pleased since leaving my parents side and renting my first apartment at the age of 19.
From the ages of 19-38, though working shift work, life was great even though it didn't feel like it at times. I could sleep in every day, have friends over at any time, watch whatever I wanted to on television. My house was always clean and I didn't have to pick up after anyone, I didn't have to cook if I didn't feel like it, I went to the gym and worked out 5 days a week, 3-4 hours a day, my vehicles were always spotless inside and out and the list goes on but, at times, I admit it was lonely.
Then I met my husband. We dated for maybe a year and a half and we had to think fast what we wanted in each of our own lives. He had always wanted a family, wife, kids, house, the whole package. I just wanted happiness, which I had a very hard time finding due to having had depression and severe anxiety for most of my life, which is the reason I had decided not to have children as I didn't want to pass this on to them.
Lord Grant me more Patience please.
Who would have known that I would ever become a mother? Anyone who knows me personally still can't believe it, especially my mother. I promised myself since I was in my early 20's that I would never have children nor get married.
For 38 years I was a free being on this planet, coming and going as I pleased since leaving my parents side and renting my first apartment at the age of 19.
From the ages of 19-38, though working shift work, life was great even though it didn't feel like it at times. I could sleep in every day, have friends over at any time, watch whatever I wanted to on television. My house was always clean and I didn't have to pick up after anyone, I didn't have to cook if I didn't feel like it, I went to the gym and worked out 5 days a week, 3-4 hours a day, my vehicles were always spotless inside and out and the list goes on but, at times, I admit it was lonely.
Then I met my husband. We dated for maybe a year and a half and we had to think fast what we wanted in each of our own lives. He had always wanted a family, wife, kids, house, the whole package. I just wanted happiness, which I had a very hard time finding due to having had depression and severe anxiety for most of my life, which is the reason I had decided not to have children as I didn't want to pass this on to them.
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