Your Hardest Family Question: How do I help my kids during our marital separation?
FEATURES
- A Country Doctor’s Healing Encounters with the Hereafter by Daniel C. Peterson
- Why the Fertile Crescent Matters: A Map That Unlocks the Bible’s Geography and History by Daniel C. Peterson
- Finishing Exodus, Furnishing a Home – Why Exodus Ends with Upholstery by Patrick D. Degn
- Where Did George Lucas Get His Idea? by Robert Starling
- The Stranger Who Stopped: The Good Samaritan by John Dye
- Hastening Now: A Weekly Church Report by Meridian Church Newswire
- “You Can Have What You Want or Something Better”–Come Follow Me Podcast #20: Num. 11-14, 20-24, 27 by Scot and Maurine Proctor
- Why Did Nephi Say Serpents Could Fly? by Scripture Central
- Miracles in the Waiting by Kellen B. Winslow
- How Has Retention Changed over Time? by Deseret News
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Protecting Conscience Rights of Physicians
By Nicole Hayes and J.C. Bicek -
Currents: BYU Alums on “Shark Tank”; “Secret Lives…Orange County,” What Do Words Mean?; Young Men in Trouble—a Constant Theme
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Is a Food Price Nightmare Coming?
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The Cold Comfort of the Screen: Reclaiming Real Connection in a Digital Age
















Comments | Return to Story
Helmut A. WorleJuly 5, 2024
"They'll get over it" is a comment about their children one often hears from parents who are planning a divorce. Little do they know or even acknowledge that divorce of the parents is generally really hard on the children. Staying together "for the kids' sake" may be one of the more heroic things parents can do in such a situation, but it is bound to earn benefits.
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