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Get plugged into the latest Be Strong Families news, initiatives, and blog articles — all central to creating transformative conversations that nurture the spirit of family, promote well-being and prevent violence.


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Intimacy Issues and Protective Factors
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Intimacy Issues and Protective Factors

It's no surprise that the confusion central to Adult Attachment Disorder results from the experiences we had as children with our parents. The way I understand it, there are 4 possible primary stances to relationship. When it comes to intimate relationships, do you feel secure? Do you avoid them? Are you ambivalent? Or are you completely disorganized?

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Wanted - A New Type of Foster Parent
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Wanted - A New Type of Foster Parent

This week I had an interesting conversation with a colleague. She was using my experiences as a foster parent to help shape redesigning the child welfare system in America. We talked for 40 minutes and the conversation has been playing in my head for days. One of her main questions was—How do we place an emphasis on maintaining children with their families while messaging that foster parents do good work—and only should be used as a last resort?

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A White Sister’s Experience with Transracial Adoption
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A White Sister’s Experience with Transracial Adoption

About a year after my brother moved in with my family, I was in the toy aisle of Target staring at a bunch of Ryan Reynolds look-alikes. I was beyond frustrated—Green Lantern was his favorite superhero, because he was Black like him. But the 2011 remake meant that the only Black action figures at Target were some half-price villains in the clearance bin. At 16, the symbolism was not lost on me.

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Maryville Academy Launches Parent Cafés in Austin
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Maryville Academy Launches Parent Cafés in Austin

Maryville is committed to facilitating meaningful collaborative conversations with parents to help them achieve greater success in their parenting initiatives. We are able to facilitate transformative conversations by creating a safe space for parents to share and learn from each other. We have already seen partnerships forming amongst participants. Parents have the ability to feel connected to other parents which provides support to them. The peer-to-peer sharing and learning is exciting to watch.

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Your Children Are Not Your Children.
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Your Children Are Not Your Children.

No matter where I am on my (growth) journey as a parent, that first line of Gibran’s poem always gets me; a punch, right in my gut. It’s a natural, normal parental reaction to an obvious fact—I birthed them, raised them, loved and nurtured them, provided and protected them, encouraged and supported all of their hopes and dreams. So yes, they belong to me!

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Basking in the MMMM with Journey to Vitality
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Basking in the MMMM with Journey to Vitality

Yesterday someone dissed my Vitality goal. He said, “How are you going to achieve a goal unless it’s specific?” Dismissively. Derisively. I’ve been thinking a lot about that. Because the conventional wisdom is that a goal has to be SMART (Specific, Measurable, Appetizing, Reasonable, Time-Limited) to be good.

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Parent Cafés Meet Micro-Enterprise in Nairobi, Kenya
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Parent Cafés Meet Micro-Enterprise in Nairobi, Kenya

On June 1, 2018, I visited my friends who are the Soweto Forum Parent Café (Kikao Cha Wazazi) Team in Kibera, Nairobi, Kenya. I first went to Kibera in 2015 as part of an early childhood initiative sponsored by the Utopia Foundation called Harambee Toto (coming together for the little ones). That initiative was responsible for building the beautiful center where today’s meeting was hosted. My part was to train members of the Soweto Forum (a 14-year-old community organizing and housing rights activist group) in the Strengthening Families™ Protective Factors and Parent Cafés.

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Encountering and Accommodating the “Other”
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Encountering and Accommodating the “Other”

My heart broke when I listened to the recording of a 911 call made to police by a woman on a campus tour at Colorado State University to report two young men who had joined the tour because “They just really stand out. When I asked what they were wanting to study I could tell they were making stuff up because one of them started to laugh about it” and their “behavior is just really odd.” She described the two young men as “Hispanic,” noting that one stated that he was “from Mexico.”  She added: :If it's nothing, I'm sorry, but they, it actually made me feel, like, sick.”

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