divorced
Sometimes a good divorce is better than a bad marriage.
Hidden Consequences Revealed
Ali and Sara were university students who had recently become very close friends. They spent hours together in the library, shared lunch breaks, and talked late into the night about their dreams, fears, and plans for the future. What started as a simple friendship slowly turned into emotional attachment. They felt comfortable with each other, trusted one another deeply, and believed that their bond was special.
By USA daily update 16 days ago in Families
When Thursday Became the Hardest Day
I used to love Thursdays. It was fish and chips night, football practice with my son Jake, and bedtime stories about dragons. Now, Thursdays are the day I sit in my empty flat, staring at photos on my phone, wondering if I'm doing any of this right.
By Jess Knauf16 days ago in Families
CAFCASS Scared Her More Than Court - Here's What Helped. AI-Generated.
She thought she was ready for family court. She wasn't ready for CAFCASS. When she first heard about the CAFCASS call, she nodded along as if she understood. She'd already filed paperwork. She'd already stood in front of a judge once as a litigant in person. She assumed this was just another box to tick.
By Family Law Service19 days ago in Families
Growing Up Without a Dad
Growing up without a dad leaves a space you notice even before you can name it. It is not always about what is missing materially. It is about guidance, reassurance, and the quiet sense that someone is always there to support you. Children notice absence even when adults try to soften it or explain it away. They notice empty chairs at birthdays, missed celebrations, and unanswered questions about who they are and where they belong.
By Eunice Kamau19 days ago in Families
Raising Children Alone: Choice, Circumstance, and the Emotional Consequences We Rarely Talk About
In recent years, more people are raising children alone. Sometimes it is a deliberate choice. Other times it is the result of loss, separation, abandonment, or the need to leave an unsafe situation. Society often debates the decision itself, asking whether it was chosen or forced, as if that distinction determines whether the emotional weight is valid.
By Eunice Kamau22 days ago in Families
What If I Am the Victim
There is a moment many of us reach after deep self-reflection. You ask yourself hard questions. You examine your behavior. You wonder if you are the problem. And after all that honesty, another thought quietly appears. What if I am actually the victim
By Eunice Kamau22 days ago in Families
Men who eat nuts tend to have better quality sperm
Peak Potency: How a Daily Nut Habit Elevates Male Sperm Quality Male fertility rates have dropped in recent years. Many couples struggle to conceive, and men often overlook their role in this challenge. Your diet can make a big difference here. Nuts stand out as a simple fix. They pack antioxidants and healthy fats that support better sperm quality. Think of them as fuel for your reproductive system. Studies show men who eat nuts regularly see real gains in sperm health. If you're planning a family or just want peak vitality, adding nuts could be your smart move.
By Story silver book 24 days ago in Families
Bettijo Hirschi
Introduction Bettijo Hirschi is a multi‑talented creative professional from the United States. She works as a designer, art director, photographer, writer, and event planner. Bettijo has built a long career in creative work and media. People know her for her artistic skills, her work in magazines and television, and her lifestyle blog. She is also known in recent news because of changes in her personal life.
By Farhan Sayed26 days ago in Families
C100 Form Explained: Applying to Court for Child Arrangements. AI-Generated.
When parents separate, worries about children don’t usually arrive all at once. At first, they sit quietly in the background. Then something happens. A disagreement over school nights. A holiday that hasn’t been agreed. A pick-up time that suddenly changes.
By Jess Knauf26 days ago in Families
We Agreed to Wait a Year Before Divorcing
I was sat in my car outside Tesco, engine off, shopping list forgotten, when it properly hit me: I had no idea where I'd be living in six months. Rachel and I had decided to separate three weeks earlier, but beyond "we'll sort it out amicably," we'd done precisely nothing. The girls were in the middle of their A-levels, we were both exhausted from years of low-level bickering about money, and now I was having a minor panic attack in a car park because I couldn't answer basic questions about my own life.
By Jess Knauf28 days ago in Families











