Fwd: How Stepfamilies Can Be Succesful - Ethics & REligion Col.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Michael J. McManus <Mike@marriagesavers.org>
Date: Thu, Feb 20, 2014 at 2:24 AM
Subject: How Stepfamilies Can Be Succesful - Ethics & REligion Col. #1,695
To: Bill Coffin <BillCoffin68@gmail.com>


February 20, 2014

Column #1,695

How Stepfamilies Can Be Successful

By Mike McManus

 

            Perhaps half of all marriages involve one partner who was previously married.  If children are involved, 70% of stepfamilies will divorce, putting everyone through another trauma.

 

            However, four of five of these marriages can be saved.

 

            Why do so many of these marriages fail?  “Putting together or integrating a stepfamily is one of the most difficult tasks for any family in America today. Integrating involves combining two unique family styles, various personalities and preferences, differing traditions, pasts and loyalties,” writes Ron Deal, in his must-read book on this subject, “The Smart Step-Family.”

 

            “Yet most people make the decision to bring two families together without consulting the instructions (God’s Word)…Blinded with a well-intentioned ignorance, couples march down the aisle a second or third time, only to discover that the building process is much more difficult than they anticipated – and the rewards are few and far between, especially at the beginning,” Deal writes.

 

            All children in stepfamilies suffered a major loss when their parents divorced. Usually they get little help with their emotional struggle because parents are immersed in their own emotions. 

 

            In time, however, the children form a deep bond with the parent whom they live with. They almost become “pals,” who enjoy sharing their lives together.

 

However, if either parent re-marries, the child experiences a new kind of grief – the loss of an intimate relationship between parent and child.  “I liked having Dad to myself when I go over there. We weren’t alone the entire weekend,” said Amy.

 

Two years later her mother remarried, and Amy experienced grief all over again –“the loss of the relationship she had developed with her parents. While the divorce was extremely traumatic for Amy, their remarriages were equally difficult. She had adapted to the divorce by becoming close friends with each of her parents. Now each of them had someone else and did not need her for emotional support anymore,” writes Rev. Dick Dunn in his book “Willing to Try Again: Steps Toward Blending a Family,” another excellent book. 

 

            The frequent reaction of children is open hostility: “I don‘t want a new Mom,” she says to her stepmother. “You’re the wicked stepmother!”

 

            That can drive the stepmom right out of that marriage.

 

            Alternatively, the biological parent often fails to see or understand the hostility of their child toward the new spouse.  They tend to think their spouse is not being considerate.

 

            The issue is compounded when both spouses bring children into the marriage.  That multiplies the potential for conflict – between the children as well as between the children and stepparents, and between husband and wife over the children.

 

            The first answer is to stop calling these families “blended families,” when in fact they are not blending but in seemingly perpetual conflict.  The euphemism is misleading.

 

            The most important solution is for a church to create a Stepfamily Support Group, the first of which was created by Dick Dunn, a Methodist pastor.  In such a group, couples immediately realize “It’s not us. It’s the situation.” Each person understands that it is not a matter that “My spouse needs to change.” Rather, both realize, “We have a problem that we can work on together. Our struggles are normal because stepfamilies are different.”

 

            Dunn tells of a couple who came to their group after they had already separated and filed for divorce. “As we listened to them talk and describe their situation, there was frequent laughter and smiles because every one of us had been there. Frequently, someone would say, “Sounds normal to me.  You’re not crazy. You live in a stepfamily.” That very week the couple moved back together.  They figured if these people can make it, so could they.

 

            Dunn wrote a manual on how to create a Stepfamily Support Group.  First, select five couples, at least four of whom need it to save their marriages. This Planning Team should be couples married less than four years and be willing to meet six times over two-three months. “It will be one of the most exciting things they have ever done,” he writes.

 

            He outlines what should happen at each meeting, the first of which begins with a prayer to God admitting “that we do not know what we are doing. But we see a need for a ministry with stepfamilies. Show us the way.”

 

            A kit to create a Stepfamily Support Group includes the Manual, “Willing To Try Again,” a chapter of which is read by couples before each meeting, plus a CD by Dunn.  Cost: $35. Call 301 469-5873.

 

            Results: His Stepfamily Support Groups saved 80% of these marriages, instead of losing 70%.

 

Copyright © 2014 Michael J. McManus is President of Marriage Savers and a syndicated columnist.

              

 

 

*******************************************

Mike McManus is President of Marriage Savers.

He also writes a nationally syndicated newspaper column,

Ethics & Religion.

301 469-5873

Potomac, MD 20854

mike@marriagesavers.org

 

 

Fwd: Great News from National Marriage Week USA

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: National Marriage Week USA <sheila@nationalmarriageweekusa.org>
Date: Wed, Feb 19, 2014 at 11:25 AM
Subject: Great News from National Marriage Week USA
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com


National Marriage Week USA  

2014 was a banner year for National Marriage Week USA!

Our FIRST TIME ACTIVITIES this year included:

From here on out:

1. Please keep posting your events all year long on our National Calendar!

2. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook to stay in touch and get latest news and tips!

3. Watch for the new documentary "Irreplaceable" coming May 6th to select cinemas. It asks and answers the critical questions--does marriage still matter and should we fight to preserve its importance? Watch

Yours for strengthening marriage!

Sheila Weber
Executive Director, National Marriage Week USA (Feb. 7-14)
www.nationalmarriageweekusa.org
Sheila@nationalmarriageweekusa.org



Forward email


Lets Strengthen Marriage / National Marriage Week USA | 1603 Belvue Drive | Forest Hill | MD | 21050

Fwd: Last Call: Survey of Empathy in Counseling!

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Hannah Bayne <hkbarnhill@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Feb 19, 2014 at 8:55 AM
Subject: Last Call: Survey of Empathy in Counseling!



Hello!

If you have already participated in our survey on potential factors influencing empathy in counseling, thank you! We are still in need of participants and hope that if you have not already taken the survey you will consider participating at this time.


The survey takes approximately 15 minutes to complete and participation consists of completing demographic information, the Conditions for Empathy Scale, and two additional brief instruments. 


Participation is anonymous, and you can withdraw from the survey at any time. We are interested in gathering perspectives from students, counselor educators, and practitioners in a range of mental health professionals.

The study has been approved by the Virginia Tech Institutional Review Board (IRB # 14-017).


The survey can be found by following this link:  https://virginiatech.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_9vruBuSSVH50OSp


Thank you in advance for your support of our research! Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions or concerns.


Sincerely,

Hannah Bayne, PhD

Virginia Tech

hannahb@vt.edu

 

Danica Hays, PhD

Old Dominion University

dhays@odu.edu


--
Hannah Barnhill Bayne
Visiting Assistant Professor of Counseling
Virginia Tech - Northern Virginia Campus
*******************

Fwd: Webinar postponed till the spring:

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: The Dibble Institute <relationshipskills@dibbleinstitute.org>
Date: Tue, Feb 18, 2014 at 1:07 PM
Subject: Webinar: Coming! $150M to Teach Relationship Skills
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com

THIS WEBINAR IS POSTPONED TILL THE SPRING


Coming! $150M to Teach Relationship Skills

 


 

 

Learn More About the Federal Grants to Teach Healthy Relationship Skills to Teens, Singles, Fathers, and Couples

 

_______________________________________________

  

Interested in strengthening families and improving the lives of children and youth in your community?

 

Then join us for a special Dibble webinar to prepare your team for the coming $150 million dollar Healthy Marriage/ Relationships and Responsible Fatherhood grant announcements.

 

You will learn the goals of the original legislation, how family strengthening programs also strengthen community organizations, and how current grantees are implementing their current grant activities.   

 

Presenters: 

  • Ron Haskins, Co-Director, Center on Children and Families at The Brookings Institution.
  • Bill Coffin, former Marriage Education Specialist for the US Department of Health and Human Services.
  • Julie Baumgardner, CEO of First Things First, Chattanooga, TN.
  • Alicia Austin-Townsend, Program Manager, Responsible Fatherhood (POPS) Program Manager, Fresno County Economic Opportunities Commission.



Duration: 60 minutes 

Who: Anyone interested in learning more about the Healthy Marriage/Relationships and Responsible Fatherhood grants.

How: Click here to register for this webinar. If you can't attend the live webinar, register anyway so you can receive a link to the recording after the webinar.

Cost: Free!

 

Over the last 8 years this grant has helped hundreds of thousands of youth, singles and couples to gain the skills to form and sustain healthy romantic relationships.

 

Don't miss this opportunity to learn how this grant money can help you accomplish your mission.

 

 

 

Questions about the Webinar? 

Contact aaron@DibbleInstitute.org

Fwd: Webinar: Coming! $150M to Teach Relationship Skills

From: The Dibble Institute <relationshipskills@dibbleinstitute.org>
Date: February 15, 2014 at 2:48:57 PM PST
To: kay@dibbleinstitute.org
Subject: Webinar: Coming! $150M to Teach Relationship Skills
Reply-To: relationshipskills@dibbleinstitute.org

Coming! $150M to Teach Relationship Skills

 

Learn More About the Federal Grants to Teach Healthy Relationship Skills to Teens, Singles, Fathers, and Couples

 https://www.dibbleinstitute.org/federal-grants-webinar/


Fwd: Tip of the Day: Enjoy a Lingering Kiss

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Erin Stone <info@skillscenter.org>
Date: Fri, Feb 14, 2014 at 4:05 PM
Subject: Tip of the Day: Enjoy a Lingering Kiss
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com


Happy Valentine's Day
FOLLOW US

Like us on Facebook

Follow us on Twitter

View our profile on LinkedIn

Find us on Pinterest
A huge thank you to Primrose Sacramento for the generous cookie donation and for helping us celebrate Valentine's week!
Thank you to everyone who participated in our Valentine's Week picture contest!

~TIP OF THE DAY~

 

This Valentine's week, deepen your relationship while revving it up. Try this:

 

  

 

Forget that quick peck on the lips. Try a 10-second kiss for starters and see what happens. Chemistry can do interesting things if you give it time.

 

A long kiss may kick up testosterone and ignite your sex drive. It may activate the hormones that stir the euphoria and giddiness of romantic love, or it may release the mysterious oxytocin that creates a sense of security and attachment. When two people kiss for a long time, there's no telling where it may lead.

This email was sent to billcoffin68@gmail.com by info@skillscenter.org |  
Relationship Skills Center | 9719 Lincoln Village Dr. | Suite 503 | Sacramento | CA | 95827

Fwd: Tip of the Day: Give and Accept Apologies

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Erin Stone <info@skillscenter.org>
Date: Wed, Feb 12, 2014 at 4:02 PM
Subject: Tip of the Day: Give and Accept Apologies
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com


Happy Valentine's Week
FOLLOW US

Like us on Facebook

Follow us on Twitter

View our profile on LinkedIn

Find us on Pinterest

VALENTINE'S WEEK CONTEST:

 

Take a picture of any of our signs in the Sacramento area for your chance to win a box of See's candy! 

 

Find contest details on our Facebook page!

~TIP OF THE DAY~

 

This Valentine's week, deepen your relationship while revving it up. Try this:

 

  

 

When hurtful behavior has sent your relationship into the deep freeze, partners must be willing to give and accept apologies. Why? 

 

Because the primary purpose of apology is to restore connection and bring about reconciliation. 

 

Sincerity and follow-through are crucial to the process. You have to walk the walk, not just talk the talk. Remember, however, that sincere apology is never submission. It is never to defend your ego. 

 

Apologies must come from your core values and focus on the hurt inflicted on your partner. Then you have to decide how you can make up for the wrong you have done.

Stay tuned for tomorrow's tip of the day! 
This email was sent to billcoffin68@gmail.com by info@skillscenter.org |  
Relationship Skills Center | 9719 Lincoln Village Dr. | Suite 503 | Sacramento | CA | 95827

Fwd: Updates from the National Resource Center for Healthy Marriage and Families

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <Info@healthymarriageandfamilies.org>
Date: Wed, Feb 12, 2014 at 9:55 AM
Subject: Updates from the National Resource Center for Healthy Marriage and Families
To: Bill Coffin <billcoffin68@gmail.com>


Having trouble reading this email? View the web version.

National Resource Center for Healthy Marriage and Families
Issue 15
February 2014

National Resource Center for Healthy Marriage and Families

The Director's Corner

Greetings,

February is celebrated as Black History Month. This February is particularly significant as 2014 also marks the 50th Anniversary of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This hallmark legislation prohibited discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.

In honor of Black History Month, the Resource Center is excited to invite you to participate in a free live Expert Panel webcast,Working with African American Individuals, Couples and Families. I will be moderating this live panel discussion on Thursday, February 20, 2014, at 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM EST. I will be joined by nationally recognized experts including:

    Charisse Johnson, Administration for Children & Families, Office of Family Assistance
    Rozario Slack, The Legacy Campaign
    Tera Jordan, Iowa State University
    Kenneth Braswell, National Responsible Fatherhood Clearinghouse
    Nisa Muhammad, Wedded Bliss

Register here for the free webcast.

In addition to joining us for this live webcast, you might consider inviting colleagues or community leaders to gather for a group viewing followed by discussion of local issues. However you choose to honor Black History Month, I hope you will take this opportunity to generate discussion as it relates to better serving not only African American individuals and families, but other diverse groups in your communities.

Best Regards,

Robyn Cenizal, Project Director
 

Tip of the Month

Your monthly tip to strengthen the relationships of those you serve. Share it - Post it - Pass it on!

Despite changes in family and community structures over the years, extended family members play an important role for many families, including African American and Latino families. Extended family members often provide benefits such as enhancing children’s racial or ethnic identity, maintaining social connectedness, and providing respite child care. See Working with African American Individuals, Couples, and Families: A Toolkit for Stakeholders and Working With Latino Individuals, Couples, and Families: A Toolkit for Stakeholders for more information.

Although many African American and Latino families share in these rich cultures, it is important to remember that all families are unique in their individual experiences, complexity, and circumstances. Building an effective client-provider partnership based on mutual respect will enhance service delivery and increase the likelihood of the family’s success in reaching its goal of self-sufficiency.

Featured Resources

The Resource Center's Virtual Library has collected more than 700 materials in a variety of formats including fact sheets, research-to-practice briefs, brochures, pamphlets, training resources, program reports or evaluations, and research materials.

Select the links below to view our featured February resources:
  • Working with African American Individuals, Couples, and Families (Toolkit)
    This toolkit uses a backdrop of significant historical events as a foundation for understanding perspectives, improving communication, and strengthening relationships with those in the African American community. This toolkit is grounded in current research and draws on the experience of practitioners to provide practical suggestions for engaging and serving this population, particularly for incorporating healthy marriage and relationship education skills into service delivery systems as part of a comprehensive family-centered approach to promoting self-sufficiency.
  • Dispelling the Myth: Black Couples Are Not Interested in Marriage (Fact Sheet)
    This fact sheet highlights the reality of seven common myths about black marriage. The aims in doing so are twofold: (1) to provide accurate information concerning demographic trends in black relationships among low-income persons, and (2) to share strategies safety-net service providers may use to encourage their clients to participate in healthy marriage and relationship education programs.

Events

The Resource Center's Events Calendar offers a listing of Resource Center events and other national, regional, and community-wide events that might be of interest. Upcoming events include:

  • Working With African American Individuals, Couples, and Families: Expert Panel Webcast, Thursday, February 20, 2014, 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM EST: The National Resource Center for Healthy Marriage and Families is excited to invite you to participate in a free live Expert Panel webcast on Working with African American Individuals, Couples and Families. This moderated discussion will bring together nationally recognized experts and practitioners to address cultural competencies, discuss strategies to improve services, and highlight free resources to support you and your agency in your efforts to strengthen families.
    Register here for the free webcast.
  • National Association of Workforce Boards (NAWB) Forum 2014 in Washington, DC, March 29-31, 2014: NAWB is the national association representing 650 State and local workforce investment boards. The Forum is NAWB's signature event, attracting nearly 1,200 business leaders and workforce professionals from across the nation: This year's theme is Dialogue for Workforce Excellence. This Forum will bring leaders from workforce organizations, economic development, education, business, and others together to meet these challenges head on and to work together to Dialogue for Workforce Excellence. The Forum will be held March 29-31, 2014, at the Washington Hilton in our nation's capital. The National Resource Center will be exhibiting at this event.
  • 2014 International Conference on Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault, and Stalking in Seattle, WA, April 22-24, 2014: This event, sponsored by End Violence Against Women International will focus on bringing together law enforcement personnel, prosecutors, victim advocates, judges, parole and probation officers, rape crisis workers, medical personnel, faith community members, educators, and others in this three-day conference highlighting promising practices and emerging issues in sexual assault, domestic violence, and stalking. The National Resource Center will be exhibiting at this event.

Feedback and Technical Assistance:

If you have suggestions or wish to speak with a Resource Center staff member, please contact us and we will be happy to assist you. If you would like to request Technical Assistance, please submit a Training and Technical Assistance Request Form and our Technical Assistance Coordinator will contact you.

To learn more about the Resource Center visit us at www.healthymarriageandfamilies.org

The National Resource Center for Healthy Marriage and Families supports safety-net service providers as they integrate healthy marriage and relationship education skills into service delivery systems as part of a comprehensive, culturally appropriate, family-centered approach designed to promote self-sufficiency.

Subscribe | Unsubscribe

Funding for this project was provided by the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, Grant: [90FH0002]. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families.

Fwd: Chick Flicks as Couples Therapy/ Love Illuminated/ Love Sense/ Relationship Research - 2/11/14

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Smartmarriages <smartmarriages@lists101.his.com>
Date: Tue, Feb 11, 2014 at 3:14 PM
Subject: Chick Flicks as Couples Therapy/ Love Illuminated/ Love Sense/ Relationship Research - 2/11/14
To: List <smartmarriages@lists101.his.com>


- Chick Flicks as Couples Therapy
- Love Sense
- Relationship Studies need participants
#################################

- Chick Flicks as Couples Therapy
Tara Parker Pope
NY Times, Feb 11, 2014 – Science Section

An amazing study finds that discussing a relationship movie together can be as helpful as counseling.  This reminds me of John Gottman’s report at a Smart Marriages keynote that couples who simply read his book did as well as those who attended the programs.  As we keep saying, what couples need is information.  

. . . A University of Rochester study found that couples who watched and talked about issues raised in movies like “Steel Magnolias” and “Love Story” were less likely to divorce or separate than couples in a control group. Surprisingly, the “Love Story” intervention was as effective at keeping couples together as two intensive therapist-led methods.  . . .

The initial goal of the study was to evaluate two types of therapist-led interventions called CARE and PREP. The CARE method focuses on acceptance and empathy in couples counseling, while PREP is centered on a specific communication style that couples use to resolve issues. The researchers wanted a third option that allowed couples to interact but did not involve intensive counseling.

They came up with the movie intervention, assigning couples to watch five movies and to take part in guided discussions afterward. A fourth group of couples received no counseling or self-help assignments and served as a control group. . . .
Here’s the full article:
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/02/10/movie-date-night-can-double-as-therapy/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=0

Comment: You can click on the link embedding in the article www.couples-research.com <http://www.couples-research.com/> that takes you to the extensive list of movies used and another link to read the movie discussion guide.  Anyone could use this intervention themselves or with couples with whom you work.  Note that the study allows that
###########################
- Love Sense
As the lead up to Valentine’s Day, The New York Times Sunday Feb 9th Book Review magazine was focused on books about love and marriage.  My favorite is a review of Love Illuminated by Daniel Jones, who has edited the Modern Love feature since 2004.  

. . . The Modern Love column in this newspaper is a guilty pleasure for the many and a source of bitter rejection for the few: Over the past nine years only some 350 columns have been published out of 50,000 submissions. . . .

. . . . “Love Illuminated” presents itself as a report on the most happening, most now kind of “love,” yet at heart supports a life philosophy as conventional as Cosmopolitan’s. Because what the book is really about is what everything from “Sex and the City” to “Fifty Shades of Grey” is really about: marriage. For all of its celebration of the “modern,” the off-kilter and the nontraditional, the pounding pulse of “Love Illuminated” is the poignant quest for a legal and permanent union. . . .

. . . . We were promised an exploration of life’s most mystifying subject, but instead what we keep coming back to is a study of life’s least mystifying subject: how it might come to pass that two like-minded graduate students in the same creative writing program might fall in love, get married, learn that marriage is not composed of an unfolding series of ever-heightened erotic pleasures, and yet still manage, year after year, to keep their leaky but serviceable vessel out of dry dock.

For the full review: http://tinyurl.com/jvm6bkv

Also included is a review by Helen Fisher of the new book, Love Sense, by Sue Johnson.  http://www.nytimes.com/pages/books/review/

. . . Enter Sue Johnson, a clinical psychologist and couples therapist who says that relationships are a basic human need and that “a stable, loving relationship is the absolute cornerstone of human happiness and general well-being.” To repair ailing partnerships, she has developed a new approach in marriage counseling called Emotionally Focused Therapy, or EFT, which she introduces in her new book, “Love Sense.”  . . . http://tinyurl.com/l6vghnq

#############################
And, here is reminder to help continue the research by participating in the relationship studies below if you haven’t yet done so, and to forward these to your list.  Thanks.
- diane
##################################
- RELATIONSHIP STUDY NEEDS PARTICIPANTS
Our study is looking at the possible link between relationship distress,
adult attachment, and attitudes towards seeking professional help. The
anonymous survey takes 10-15 minutes to complete and after completing the
survey, participants have the choice to enter for a chance to win one of our
Amazon gift cards. If they chose to enter for one of the gift cards, their
survey responses will not be able to be connected back to them in any way.
Please forward this to anyone that might help.

Here is the survey link:
http://stthomascaps.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_aVJcknbYsJrKFV3
 
Matt Fowler
Graduate Student
University of St. Thomas, Minnesota
####################################

- COMPARATIVE STUDY NEEDS PARTICIPANTS
 I am looking for married individuals to participate in my dissertation
research study: ³The perceived effectiveness of PREPARE, RELATE, and FOCCUS:
A comparative study of three assessment-based premarital counseling
programs²
>  
> Requirements to participate:
> 1.     Be married between 1 month to 10 years
> 2.     Be able to read and understand English
> 3.     Must be first marriage
>  
> What is in it for you?
> 1.       Take the Revised Dyadic Adjustment Scale (RDAS, a marital
> satisfaction assessment with 14 short questions) for FREE (about $150-$200
> saving)
> 2.       Better understanding of strength and weak areas of your marriage
> 3.       Referrals will be provided to you if you request to talk to a
> marriage and family therapist. Or you can discuss the results with your
> existing therapist.
> 4.       Your information is anonymous and is held with the strictest
> confidentiality
>  
> What is requested from you?
> 1.       To complete basic info about yourself
> 2.       To take the Revised Dyadic Adjustment Scale (it takes less than 10
> minutes to complete)
> 3.       Ask your wife or husband to participate as well
> 4.       FORWARD this email invitation to as many qualified people as possible
>  
> What if you are not qualified to participate?
> 1.       Please forward this email to as many people you know so they can
> participate in the study ESPECIALLY if they completed PREPARE/ENRICH, or
> RELATE, or FOCCUS in premarital counseling.
> 2.       NOTE: If you are not qualified to participate‹that DOES NOT mean your
> spouse is not qualified to participate.
> 3.       PLEASE REFER, REFER, REFER!!! You can refer your students, clients,
> colleagues, friends, families, coworkers, supervisors, ex
> boyfriends/girlfriends, and even enemies by forwarding this link to them.
>  
> How to participate (entire study takes only 10 short minutes)?
> 1.     By clicking on this link Dasmain Dissertation
> <http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/dasmainDissertation>  or
> 2.     By copying and pasting this
> link http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/dasmainDissertation
> <http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/dasmainDissertation>  to your browser.
>  
> It is my belief if we provide better premarital counseling to more people, we
> can decrease the divorce rate that is destroying far too many families in this
> great country we love. Please join me in this small step to save our marriages
> and families
>  
> Dasmain Joseph, Principal Researcher
> Candidate for Doctor of Education (ABD)
> Argosy University
> Tampa, Florida 33607, USA
> djoseph1 at stu.argosy.edu <http://lists101.his.com/mailman/listinfo/smartmarriages>  
> Cell: 813-995-7415 <tel:813-995-7415>
############################