Has Feminism Killed Chivalry and Good Old Fashioned Manners?
I hear people talk about kids now-a-days and how they are rude, unhelpful, and reeking of self-entitlment. Here are 10 ways your kids can practice good manners.
I hear people talk about kids now-a-days and how they are rude, unhelpful, and reeking of self-entitlment. Here are 10 ways your kids can practice good manners.
Have teen girls become more aggressive in dating situations? Here is one mother’s experience with her teen son and dating.
Some days I think chasing a toddler around the pool’s edge would be less exhausting than parenting teens.
Tidings of comfort and joy can feel like a tall order in a household with children who are no longer truly children… but I think it’s still there if you look.
Having older kids should make summer less complicated, not more; at least, that’s what I used to think. Planning for the “right” kind of summer is still daunting.
Turns out parenting teens is a lot like parenting toddlers, and you’ve already done that. Let us show you the similarities.
One of the hardest lessons for my teens is that, sometimes, there are some things more important than being right.
The reason some parents laughed about the dad who shot his daughter’s laptop is because we all know that parenting teens makes the most sane of us act nuts.
Halloween seems to have gotten a lot more complicated over the years, and I have mixed feelings about what that means for my teens.
What if I told you that the way to get your teenagers to do chores around the house was to use food as motivation? Hear me out.
An important topic for our teenagers, who may not grasp the concept of the long term consequences of what they are posting on social media.
This Thanksgiving and beyond, I am grateful that we are “The House” for my teens and their friends. What does that look like?
I have high expectations of you. I have no doubt that you will live up to them all, but in the wake of recent news events I feel like I have to verbalize them.
Having to drive your teen and their friends around town is unavoidable. Busy Mom has some advice for how to do it without mortifying your teen.
I invited my 20-year-old to sound off with me on the issue of drinking before reaching legal age. This was a hard, but good, talk.
“I feel like I don’t belong here.” She said. Her words hit me like a punch to the gut. How could I just get up and leave her in a place where she felt so alone?
Once your kid hits the teenage years every day brings a new development that you were definitely not expecting. Here are just a few.
Nine digital cards to show the teenager in your life how special they are to you, but how, as their parent, you totally have their number.
Help! My autistic young teen loves these stay-at-home orders for COVID and just wants to play video games. How do I keep him interested in learning?