Twins Coming Soon
-
[image: Twins Coming Soon]
Jedidiah and Katey Duggar are less than a month out from their January 19th
due date. That means that their twins could arrive ...
Welcome to a family friendly blog that presents popular family issues and provides advice on family conflict. From dramas left behind by ancestors to generational curses, this family blog covers challenging issues. The more you know, the more empowered you will be when it comes to dealing with family problems, relationship challenges, and more! Solve family struggles and gain respect! Welcome to a site that puts family secrets on blast, so one can find spiritual healing!
Tuesday, January 14, 2020
Sunday, January 12, 2020
Wednesday, December 11, 2019
Monday, November 4, 2019
5 Things to Do Stay Out of Family Dramas Before the Holiday Season Approaches
Holiday seasons can make or break families. Some trouble-making relatives simply don't want to mind their own business, behave themselves, or act respectfully around others. So with that said, you will want to be proactive in protecting your mind, body and spirit this upcoming season while alerting those closest to you that you don't want to be bothered with the gossips, liars, braggarts, or drunkards in your family or others.
Here are a some things you can do to keep the family drama at bay. Remember, the more involved you are with certain family members, the more likely you will find yourself in the middle of some nonsense!
1) Stay busy with your own task list. Don't offer service and don't expect others to help you with your holiday plans.
If you are busy, you won't have any idle time to participate in the latest family drama. You also won't be available to offer service or ask for help. In some cases, no good deed goes unpunished. Picky, petty and controlling types will not be satisfied with your assistance no matter what you do! Lazy, rude or manipulative relatives may appear helpful initially, but in time they will make a mountain out of a molehill regarding your holiday planning requests.
2) Avoid answering the phone or visiting those relatives who merely want to talk about what everyone else is doing.
So much time is wasted because someone wants you to be available to listen to their comments, complaints, concerns, etc. about someone else. Is it any wonder why unflattering information gets passed around by the gossips? Feed into the b.s. and you will surely be caught in their web of destruction sooner rather than later.
3) Safeguard your wallet by not offering or promising to buy any items for anyone when you know that your funds are running low. Don't expect others to buy you and your family members anything.
You will surely be let down if you are relying on petty people to make you and your family happy this year with their cheap gifts. When you know that money is tight, why upset a spouse or children by trying to impress others with pricey gifts? Stay quiet about buying anything or wanting anything in return. Meanwhile, you just might hear how others are such a burden for expecting relatives to buy them as well as their children.
4) Opt out of preparing holiday meals when once again you know you can't afford it.
The irritation and anger shows up out of nowhere when you are spending money you really don't have on things that will bite you in the butt later! Just because someone else wants to holiday plan, doesn't mean you have to.
5) Don't involve anyone in past or current conflict concerning your relatives. Teach children to stay out of grown folks business!
Children, believe it or not, can be a source of confusion and misery during holiday seasons. They are desiring any number of things: a new pet, divorced parents reconciled, expensive gifts, lots of money, college funds...whatever someone has manipulated them into believing. When the negativity begins to arise in children, put a stop to it quickly! Explain your situation as well as scold rebellious children. Difficult young people can easily be used by mean-spirited adults to carry negative information about you as well as others, don't fuel the fire!
When people are getting along, the holiday season comes and goes without conflict, but when people are at war with one another before a holiday season, all hell breaks loose sometimes sooner rather than later. Know who your family foes are and avoid them like a plague!
Nicholl McGuire
Here are a some things you can do to keep the family drama at bay. Remember, the more involved you are with certain family members, the more likely you will find yourself in the middle of some nonsense!
1) Stay busy with your own task list. Don't offer service and don't expect others to help you with your holiday plans.
If you are busy, you won't have any idle time to participate in the latest family drama. You also won't be available to offer service or ask for help. In some cases, no good deed goes unpunished. Picky, petty and controlling types will not be satisfied with your assistance no matter what you do! Lazy, rude or manipulative relatives may appear helpful initially, but in time they will make a mountain out of a molehill regarding your holiday planning requests.
2) Avoid answering the phone or visiting those relatives who merely want to talk about what everyone else is doing.
So much time is wasted because someone wants you to be available to listen to their comments, complaints, concerns, etc. about someone else. Is it any wonder why unflattering information gets passed around by the gossips? Feed into the b.s. and you will surely be caught in their web of destruction sooner rather than later.
3) Safeguard your wallet by not offering or promising to buy any items for anyone when you know that your funds are running low. Don't expect others to buy you and your family members anything.
You will surely be let down if you are relying on petty people to make you and your family happy this year with their cheap gifts. When you know that money is tight, why upset a spouse or children by trying to impress others with pricey gifts? Stay quiet about buying anything or wanting anything in return. Meanwhile, you just might hear how others are such a burden for expecting relatives to buy them as well as their children.
4) Opt out of preparing holiday meals when once again you know you can't afford it.
The irritation and anger shows up out of nowhere when you are spending money you really don't have on things that will bite you in the butt later! Just because someone else wants to holiday plan, doesn't mean you have to.
5) Don't involve anyone in past or current conflict concerning your relatives. Teach children to stay out of grown folks business!
Children, believe it or not, can be a source of confusion and misery during holiday seasons. They are desiring any number of things: a new pet, divorced parents reconciled, expensive gifts, lots of money, college funds...whatever someone has manipulated them into believing. When the negativity begins to arise in children, put a stop to it quickly! Explain your situation as well as scold rebellious children. Difficult young people can easily be used by mean-spirited adults to carry negative information about you as well as others, don't fuel the fire!
When people are getting along, the holiday season comes and goes without conflict, but when people are at war with one another before a holiday season, all hell breaks loose sometimes sooner rather than later. Know who your family foes are and avoid them like a plague!
Nicholl McGuire
Sunday, October 6, 2019
Sunday, September 22, 2019
Thursday, July 18, 2019
7 Signs a Parent or Grandparent is Just Not into You and Your Family
When one feels like he or she is not welcome in a family, it
can be difficult to believe this especially around the holidays. Sometimes it is assumed that because it is a
holiday season everyone will treat you and your family well, but this isn't
always the case. Unresolved issues, past
disputes, gossip, lies, and more will keep some relatives from connecting with
those they deem trouble-makers. But how
can you tell if the family appears like they are polite and welcoming even
though you have a feeling they don't care for you and others?
One. Kinfolk (including a partner or exes relatives) expresses no interest in you or your family's holiday celebrating.
Two. The relatives explain to you why they will not be buying gifts this year, yet you find out that certain family members received gifts.
Three. You or children may have got something from them, but it wasn't much or needed. They didn't bother to ask you what you could use.
Four. You find out that a parent or grandparent has repeatedly talked negatively about you to your siblings and other family members.
Five. They don't
bother to call or come around whether during a holiday season or not.
Six. When you speak to them or see them out on the street they don't bother to ask about your family.
Seven. They are not helpful or kind when you and your family are in need.
After years of dismissing signs, at some point you come to the realization that you are the one who is reaching out to relatives even when they are not very nice, generous, or appreciative of you and your family. In time, your efforts begin to diminish, sometimes this is noticed and relatives might accuse you of acting indifferent. However, you know the truth. Safeguard your children from tension filled atmospheres and negative family members.
Nicholl McGuire is the owner and contributor of this blog.
One. Kinfolk (including a partner or exes relatives) expresses no interest in you or your family's holiday celebrating.
Two. The relatives explain to you why they will not be buying gifts this year, yet you find out that certain family members received gifts.
Three. You or children may have got something from them, but it wasn't much or needed. They didn't bother to ask you what you could use.
Four. You find out that a parent or grandparent has repeatedly talked negatively about you to your siblings and other family members.
Photo by William Krause on Unsplash |
Six. When you speak to them or see them out on the street they don't bother to ask about your family.
Seven. They are not helpful or kind when you and your family are in need.
After years of dismissing signs, at some point you come to the realization that you are the one who is reaching out to relatives even when they are not very nice, generous, or appreciative of you and your family. In time, your efforts begin to diminish, sometimes this is noticed and relatives might accuse you of acting indifferent. However, you know the truth. Safeguard your children from tension filled atmospheres and negative family members.
Nicholl McGuire is the owner and contributor of this blog.
Saturday, July 13, 2019
Thursday, July 11, 2019
Monday, June 24, 2019
Saturday, June 22, 2019
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
ADVERTISE HERE!
Have a blog/product/service? Share it with visitors of our site. Feel free to contact nichollmcguire@yahoo.com to discuss your business needs.
It's All in the Family by Nicholl McGuire is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at familyarticlesbynicholl.blogspot.com.
Search This Blog
Other Family Blogs Worth a Look...
-
-
Cookie Tutorials! - I always look at smooth glossy cookies and wonder how they do that, so I watched YouTube videos and invited my friend Carrie over to try it out with me. We...
-
Instrument. - I've played a few instruments in my life... not very well, but I played them. My favorite was the French Horn. It was such a powerful sound. I was the only...
-
Happy Birthday, Pumpkin! - On Pumpkin's actual birthday we celebrated as a family. She woke up to her favorite, MONKEY BREAD! The day before her birthday, she decided out of the blu...
-
Dear World: Let’s Stop Giving Our Crap to the Poor - I was getting ready to leave for a trip to Kenya a couple of years ago, when a church emailed and asked if Mercy House had any specific needs. I quickly re...
Topics
4th of July
abandonment
about us
abusers
abusive daughters
abusive fathers
abusive people
addiction
adult add/adhd
adult sons and daughters
adults and mental health issues
advice
African American children
aging
alcoholics
ancestry
ancestry dna
angry men toward women
angry relatives
antisocial personality disorder
apologies
arguments
bad news
bad relatives
bereavement
bigotry
black sheep
blended families
blog owner
borderline personality disorder
braggarts
bully
busybodies
career
caring for elderly parents
cheapskates
cheating
child abuse
children and mental health disorders
christmas
church
codependency
codependent
cognitive dissonance
communication
community
competitive relatives
controlling parents
controlling women
crazy relatives
cults
cyclothymia
daddy issues
dating
death
deceased loved ones
deceitful people
declutter
delusional relatives
demonic influence
dependent personality disorder
depression
difficult family members
disabilities
disappointments
discipline
dissociative identity disorder
distant relatives
divorce
domestic violence
doubts
dreams
drug abuse
drunks
dysfunctional families
emotional abuse
emotional blackmail
emotional flashbacks
emotional physical bondage
emotional vampires
empaths
enablers
encouragement
engaged
enmeshed relationships
entertainment
estranged siblings
evil people
ex relatives
exes
exs
faith
family
family abuse
family activities
family breakup
family bullies
family challenges
family closeness
family conflict
family crisis
family fighting
family history
family liars
family lies
family obligations
family parties
family planning
family problems
family resources
family reunion
family scapegoat
family secrets
family stories
family support
family survival
family therapy
family togetherness
family traditions
family vacation
father daughter relationships
fatherhood
fault-finders
feeling used
foolish people
forgiveness
friends
funerals
generational abuse
generational curses
gifts
God
golden children
gossips
graduates
grandchildren
grandparents
greedy relatives
grief
guilt
happiness
haters
healing
healthy families
helping someone get a job
histrionic personality disorder
hoarders
holidays
house guests
how to reconnect with family
how to say goodbye to children
humor
husbands
hypocrites
hypomania personality disorder
ill relatives
immature adults
immorality
inlaws
intermittent explosive disorder
interracial relationships
introverts
jealousy
lazy relatives
liars
lies
loneliness
love
low T
manipulation
marriage
medical history
mental abuse
mind control
misers
money
mother
mother-in-laws
motherhood
naivety
narcissistic men
narcissistic parent
narcissistic personality disorder
narcissistic relatives
negative family members
new year
no contact with family
obsession
obsessive compulsive disorder
offended relatives
overprotective defensive relatives
overwhelm
paranoid disorder
parental brainwashing
parenting
parents
parents who play favorites
peacemaker
personal problems
petty relatives
physically abused
podcast
poems
post traumatic stress disorder
prayer
prejudice
prideful people
prophets in the family
psychology
psychopath personality disorder
racism
racists
raising daughters
raising sons
rebellion
relationship abuse
relationships
relatives and babysitting
relocation
repressed memories
reputation
respect
rich family members
rude relatives
satan
schizoaffective disorder
schizoid personality disorder
school breaks
seasonal affective disorder
self-esteem problems
selfish family members
senior citizens
sexism
shopping
sibling arguments
sibling rivalry
single parent
singles without children
social anxiety disorder
sociopath personality disorder
soldiers
spiritual abuse
spiritual family friends
spiritual relatives
spirituality
step-parents
stepmothers
stonewalling
strange relatives
strangers
stress
strict fathers
strong families
stubborn relatives
successful family
suicide
teens
temptation
thanksgiving
the big dreamer
toxic relatives
trauma
travel
truthtellers
visions
wedding
widows
wisdom
witchcraft
wives
work
worry