How to Spice Up Your Post-Kid Marriage (or Relationship)
Put a babysitter on retainer and paint the town red. If you can’t do date nights out, put the kids to bed early once a week and enjoy some wine and a movie.
Put a babysitter on retainer and paint the town red. If you can’t do date nights out, put the kids to bed early once a week and enjoy some wine and a movie.
I hope that someday my children find life partners who make them happy. I hope that I’m setting a good example for them to figure that out, too.
Ever wonder what it’s like to date online? Here’s a little insight into the online dating adventures of a single mom.
Single mom, Kristen Chase, pulls a Berger.
An anatomy of a first (and subsequently last) date, and how as much as someone is nice and kind and lovely and funny, in the end, you still need that spark.
A heartbroken new mom needs advice on navigating her co-parenting relationship with her former partner.
Sometimes a pixie cut is more than just a style decision. Kristen Chase shares her reasoning for taking the plunge. And no, it wasn’t lice.
Is sadness a bad thing? Kristen Chase talks about letting feelings out to let them go, with the hopes that they’ll find peace and that she will too.
How do you know when you’re in love with someone? Kristen Chase ponders what that means after years of failed relationships and marriages.
What does being your best self mean? After making some life changes, Kristen Chase shares her thoughts.
Finding love after divorce can be challenging if you can’t even make it through a first date. Here’s why Kristen wishes she could just skip to the hard stuff.
If your kids are reaching dating age, don’t panic! With a little patience and a lot of communication, you’ll all get through it okay.
A newly pregnant woman feels as if she is being forced to make some very big emotional and logistical decisions given her recent pregnancy news and her father’s terminal cancer diagnosis. But does she have other choices?
Sure, you keep saying you and partner need some time away from the kids but here’s why you really need to do it.
Amalah tackles a common problem: disagreements over household division of responsibilities between out-of-the-home-working and stay-at-home parents.
A mom to a toddler thinks her daughter’s father is a wonderful co-parent but not a great partner. She’s wondering whether her unhappiness is a result of relationship growing pains or a bigger problem.
There’s nothing like a few little health scares to make you think about your assumptions and the future.
A reader asks for advice on finding the time/ways to focus on her marriage amid the craziness of constant parenting other other life demands. It can be done!
A new mom is struggling with a very difficult relationship issue and is looking for some outside perspective.