Factors That Influence Home Management | Family Tips : Keeping Your Family Entertained | Dealing With Teenagers | Child Care : Don't Stress Out
A Satisfying Family Life Part 1
A Satisfying Family Life Part 2
Husband Problems
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Emotional Health Of Teens
Broken Families and Helping Children Adjust
Adjusting To A Family Relationship
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Broken Families and Helping Children Adjust
When parents split up and get a divorce, they should be aware that their decision doesn’t only affect them but their children as well. If the children are still underage, it’s imperative that parents try their best to make their children feel that they are in no way to blame and that there would be as little change as possible.

Custody of Children
It’s always for the best if the children of broken families stay in one household only rather than divide them like pieces of loaf. Secondly, it also wouldn’t do if the children would stay with one parent for a week then switch households the week after even if both parents live in the same town. Such a setting would just place more stress on your children’s lives. It’s crucial for parents to remember at all times how children has this natural inclination to conform to the society’s standards and their peers’ expectations and having two homes can’t be classified as normal in any way.

For parents who are still negotiating for child custody, it’s better that the children stay with the parent who can best provide the emotional care that they need. If that parent is not as well-off the other, financial support must be provided because it’s the overall welfare of the children that should count.

Keep Them Out of the Fights
If and when parents have a tendency to fight or disagree over something, it’s better not to do so in front of the children because exposure to such fights usually has unwanted psychological impact on the children.

Make Them Understand Why
As mentioned earlier, most children tend to believe – however unreasonable it may be – that they’re in some ways to blame for their parents’ split up. Parents should expect this to happen if and when they decide to break up. And having expected this, parents should immediately address the children’s concerns to save them from more emotional confusion.

An Incomplete Family Doesn’t Make It an Inferior One
Similarly, children also have this tendency to believe that an incomplete family is immediately an inferior one. Hence, parents should explain that just because their father or mother isn’t living with them anymore doesn’t mean their family is immediately something to be ashamed of.

In broken families, children usually prefer to keep quiet and refrain from disclosing what they truly feel about what happened. Although this is expected, parents should still try their best to encourage children to open up so that parents can comfort their children properly.

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