12 Ways to Love Your Spouse: Offense is the Best Defense
How do we love our spouse? How do we nurture a loving relationship with them over the next 5 or 50 years of marriage?
How do we love our spouse? How do we nurture a loving relationship with them over the next 5 or 50 years of marriage?
In the last article on emotionally destructive relationships, we looked at journaling as a way to understand your reality. Now we are going to talk about letting someone into what’s happening in your relationship and your world.
Single Christian women often experience depression due to loneliness or from lacking intimate relationships. Learn how to…
The first question to think about is whether your adult child even wants to have a relationship with you. This is an important piece of information to be aware of because you cannot have a relationship with your adult child if he/she does not want one with you.
Watching someone you love grieve is an incredibly difficult space to find yourself in. I often hear things like “I just don’t know what to say” or “what can I even do to help them?” Hopefully in this article I can provide some insight into how to sit with your loved ones in their grief.
For many, one of the most exciting milestones in life is when a couple takes their dating relationship to the next level as they commit to a lifetime of togetherness, joy, and adventure, and say their “I do’s”.
It can happen to anyone. You find yourself in a relationship where you are repeatedly torn down and criticized, or perhaps called cruel names.
Forbes magazine (2021, January) reports that millennials are pioneering more career and personal growth goals than any generation.
You look over at your spouse and you realize the spark is gone in your marriage. A thought occurs to you: “It feels like we are roommates.” This may feel like a surprising revelation or it may feel like something you have known for a long time.