Your Hardest Family Question: Can I pursue personal happiness without neglecting my familial duties?
FEATURES
- Unprecedented: A New Temple Square Visitors’ Center that Is Unlike Any Other by Scot and Maurine Proctor
- Currents: Taylor Frankie Paul Leaves Church; Why Religious Runners Are So Fast; An AI Jesus and More by Meridian Magazine
- Holding Your Peace vs. Holding Your Ground on the Quest to Be Peacemakers by Mariah Proctor
- Parked on the Covenant Path by JeaNette Goates Smith
- Look All the World Over—There’s Only One You by Becky Douglas
- My Mom Cared If She Got Mail by Daris Howard
- Better and Poorer Kinds of Guidance in Parenting by H. Wallace Goddard
- The Double Disguise: How Hiding Who You Are and What You Want Is Keeping You Single by Jeff Teichert
- The Fire on the Altar: Emerson’s Longing and the Restoration’s Reply by Patrick D. Degn
- Elijah, the Sealing Powers, and the Kirtland Temple by Valiant K. Jones
















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Rosemarie BailleulJuly 29, 2023
I would NEVER ask my only single daughter to stay around just because I am in poor health (which I am), and could use her help. I have told her many times to follow her own path, and to go where she feels directed to go. Of course I would miss her if she did decide to move, but I'd never want to hold her back for my own purposes. I find it interesting that this lady is the one who has always been around for her dad, while her sisters have moved away, and yet she's being called selfish for wanting to be around her own children and grandchildren now. The heart wants what the heart wants; is say she needs to follow her dad's counsel - she'll know what to do. I definitely don't think that she should ever agree to stay out of guilt; she has to follow her own heart and the Lord's guidance, otherwise she'll have guilt on other levels.
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