How To Help Your Child Find Their Place in a Blended Family
Roles in traditional homes grow with the family. But in stepfamilies, it’s not always clear how everything should work.
Roles in traditional homes grow with the family. But in stepfamilies, it’s not always clear how everything should work.
Okay, if you have any relationships, anybody you care about, I want to give you a principle that will strengthen those relationships. Are you listening?
Compared to other siblings stepsiblings have less conflict. That may not be as good as it sounds.
Have you ever thought about how dysfunctional the families of the Bible were?
Here’s a fun fact for you. In the early years of a blended family the level of stress is typically very high.
Here’s a not so secret quality of strong families. They have fun together.
Now I know you’ve heard me say some crazy things but this one takes the cake. Learn to endure disharmony in your home.
Accommodating someone’s preferences out of love for the Lord is an act of faith.
It’s the most wonderful time of the year!” But if you’re in a stepfamily, the holidays can get complicated pretty fast. Ron Deal offers some perspective, and gives counsel for how to navigate Christmas in a stepfamily.
We can’t always see what God is doing. Ray McKelvy tells of his walk with God, meeting his wife, and his estranged dad being invited back into his life. He learns that his real story was much more than he thought.
Ray McKelvy tells his story about not knowing his real father and being the man of the house. Another father figure stepped into his life, only to then separate from his mom, and the devastation that left him searching for his identity.
When it comes to insurance, which beneficiary do you want to be—primary or secondary?
Ron Deal, Director of FamilyLife Blended, explains the benefits of “cooking” your stepfamily with a crock pot and not a blender. He stresses the value of being patient as your blended family blends at its own pace.