
Learning to Share a Child
There are a number of people who find themselves in a shared-time parenting scenario. And for some reason, one of the parents acts like they are the child’s only parent.
There are a number of people who find themselves in a shared-time parenting scenario. And for some reason, one of the parents acts like they are the child’s only parent.
Generally we don’t have confidence in our prayers and even if they are answered we may not possess the confidence to share with others what was done in our lives.
What happens when your step-child or non-blood child is receiving negative feedback about you? That’s what I call impacted by a bias.
Because you’ve changed you have an opportunity to be the difference-maker.
There are times where we mislabel or misclassify the people who do life with. For example, in a blend-family environment, you might treat your child(ren)’s other parent or step-parent as if they’re the enemy. It sounds normal to do so, but where has normal thinking ever gotten you? To normal …
How can you become one of those who know more and more before? How can you become this leader?
Are you a parent in a blended-family scenario where you share your child’s time with another? It can be very frustrating when that other parent tries to hijack your scheduled time or makes adjustments to the schedule.
How many times have you prayed and it seemed like God didn’t answer you? You felt like He didn’t hear you or just didn’t care to do anything.
It’s easy to fall for normal thinking that being a parent who shares-time of their child(ren) is the worst thing that can happen to a parent. You’re reading this because that might be your situation, but a person who’s turning to prayer isn’t normal. Therefore normal thinking doesn’t apply and …
I often wonder why a person would continue to pray if it doesn’t work. What would one pray if they expect nothing to come of it. Or they believe that God rarely answers or responds. Something doesn’t add up.
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