It’s never too late to start making a change. If you start showing up for your kids in better ways, it starts a relationship and changes what’s firing and wiring in their brain.
Does an member of an unmarried same-sex couple have standing to pursue court-ordered parenting time in Tennessee?
A ruling in Massachusetts calls into question the constitutionality of Tennessee’s statutory non-disparagement requirements.
What are parents to do when their parenting schedule is based on the school calendar and schools are closed for the rest of the academic year?
Settle in, parents, because it’s looking like life, at least for the immediate future, is going to be anything but usual.
Child custody is often the most contentious aspect of divorce proceedings. But this doesn’t have to be the case for you and your soon-to-be-ex
After saying goodbye to your college student on move-in day, one of the hardest things to come to grips with at home is the yawning lack of information. You’re excluded from your student’s experience in a new, jarring way, and no one will invite you in except your student — and that’s only if they want to. That doesn’t mean you disappear from their lives; far from it. But it does mean you play a different role.
Through the pathological undervaluation of children’s culture, what we have effectively managed to do is slash and burn core features of childhood—the very roots of what makes us human.
How Parents Are Robbing Their Children of Adulthood: Today’s “snowplow parents” keep their children’s futures obstacle-free — even when it means crossing ethical and legal boundaries.
A peaceful divorce can benefit both children and parents. Here is some advice for how to do it.
When is a “nesting” parenting arrangement a viable option?
When is a “nesting” parenting arrangement a viable option?
This article by Kate Rope in The Washington Post is interesting. Six Things Parents Can Do to Raise Kids to Be Confident Decision-Makers On every…
Children whose parents are over-controlling “helicopter parents” when they are toddlers are less able to control their emotions and impulses as they get older apparently leading to more problems with school, new research suggests.
Children whose parents are over-controlling “helicopter parents” when they are toddlers are less able to control their emotions and impulses as they get older apparently leading to more problems with school, new research suggests.
