Candidates for Friday Five

1. Why men are having problems getting married

​AIMEE PICCHI​


http://www.cbsnews.com/news/why-men-are-having-problems-getting-married/






2. Happy marriage and a healthy life

CLEVELAND CLINIC





3. Community Cafés in Alaska Discuss Strengthening Families Initiative






4. Family Inequality: Diverging Patterns in Marriage, Cohabitation, and Childbearing

Shelly Lundberg , Robert A. Pollak  and Jenna Stearns 






5. 

Online daters ignore wish list when choosing a match

Do cyber daters contact their stated perfect match online? It seems not








6. Father involvement in the UK: trends in the new millennium

By Ursula Henz

 

Abstract: In many Western countries, father involvement in childcare has strongly increased during the second half of the 20th century. Policy changes should have arguably sustained the trends in the UK in the new millennium. This report examines recent changes in father involvement in the UK by analysing the 2000 and 2015 UK Time-Use surveys and compares the patterns with findings from similar analyses for France, Italy and Sweden. The analyses show that fathers in the UK spent more time doing childcare in 2015 compared to 2000 but they spent less total time together with their children. Compared to fathers in France and Sweden, the levels of father involvement in the UK were relatively low. The UK stands out from the other three countries by stronger educational gradients of father involvement on weekends, suggesting cumulative disadvantages of children who grow up in low-educated families.

 

http://www.familiesandsocieties.eu/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/WP70Henz2017.pdf






7. Breaking the Intergenerational Cycle

Partner Violence, Child–Parent Attachment, and Children’s Aggressive Behaviors

Shao-Chiu Juan, Heather M. Washington, Megan C. Kurlychek






FRPN Webinar: Inside the Black Box: Measuring
​ ​
Service Delivery, Client Engagement and Fidelity



OR (if it's archived)

Coping with Financial Volatility:
Strategies Families Use

Thursday, March 2, 2017, 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. EST

LIVE WEBCAST





9. Four-year-olds to get relationship education in the classroom, Government announces

Beth Rigby







10. Principle 3: My Family is Special

Children are usually best supported within their families. Respectful connections with families foster partnerships to promote children's safety.






Richard Meier




Thanks Alysse. I like the new website layout.




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Fwd: We love these bloggers!



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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: PREPARE/ENRICH <customer_service@prepare-enrich.com>
Date: Tue, Feb 28, 2017 at 3:03 PM
Subject: We love these bloggers!
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com


You'll love these blogs
Hi, just a reminder that you're receiving this email because you have expressed an interest in PREPARE/ENRICH, LLC. Don't forget to add cs@prepare-enrich.com to your address book so we'll be sure to land in your inbox!
 
You may unsubscribe if you no longer wish to receive our emails.
Why we love blogs
In February, P/E partnered with bloggers with the mission of encouraging couples to talk about their relationship whether it was through a tool (like Couple Checkup) or through something more casual, like a date. We love these bloggers because they authentically shared their experience and perspective with their readers. We are excited to feature these bloggers and share their stories with you.

 Why You Need to Check In on Your Marriage on a Regular Basis

by A Prioritized Marriage

 

5 Easy Ways to Strengthen Your Marriage

by Friday We're In Love

 

4 Ways to be More Intentional in Marriage 

by A Beautiful Exchange

 

Couple Checkup Review & Giveaway

by Make Mine Happy

 

Can We Stay Newlyweds Forever?  

by Belle Brita

 

Strengthening Your Marriage After Kids (It's Not What You Think) 

by Elisabeth McKnight

 

The Couple Checkup Every Marriage Could Use 

by Simple Moments Stick

 

5 Ways to Rekindle the Butterflies in Your Relationship 

by Simply Elliot

 

Military Marriage: It's Time for a Couple Checkup

by Soldier's Wife, Crazy Life

 

How Military Couples Can Bring Back the Butterflies 

by Jo, My Gosh

 

If you have a favorite relationship blog that we didn't mention, message us on Facebook or Twitter with the details so we can check it out!  

February Social Media Recap

Blog posts: 

First and foremost, we want to thank all the couples who have participated in our Bring Back the Butterflies promotion before and during National Marriage Week.  It would not have been such a success if you weren't invested in checking in with your relationship and aligned with our vision of bringing the butterflies back.  We [...]...»

 

The snow has fallen, wool socks have been pulled out of storage, fire places have been lit, winter is here and it has plateaued: don't let your relationship do the same.  Here's the thing about complacency, it's a natural part of a relationship's journey, but it can be avoided.  Leading up to National Marriage Week, [...]...»

 
Trending on Facebook:

Follow:  Like us on Facebook  Follow us on Twitter  View our videos on YouTube  Visit our blog
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Fwd: [New post] The growth of non-marital childbearing, including the growth of childbearing within a cohabiting union is associated with more family instability for children: a UK study claims



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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Intentional-Relationship.com Blog <comment-reply@wordpress.com>
Date: Tue, Feb 28, 2017 at 5:34 PM
Subject: [New post] The growth of non-marital childbearing, including the growth of childbearing within a cohabiting union is associated with more family instability for children: a UK study claims
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com


intentional-relationship.com posted: "In recent decades, much of the globe has witnessed a retreat from marriage. This means more children are being born outside of marriage, either to single parents or cohabiting couples, in countries around the world. This social change raises a few questio"
Respond to this post by replying above this line

New post on Intentional-Relationship.com Blog

The growth of non-marital childbearing, including the growth of childbearing within a cohabiting union is associated with more family instability for children: a UK study claims

by intentional-relationship.com

In recent decades, much of the globe has witnessed a retreat from marriage. This means more children are being born outside of marriage, either to single parents or cohabiting couples, in countries around the world. This social change raises a few questions:

  1. Are such children less likely to enjoy stable family lives?
  2. Is the growth of non-marital childbearing, including the growth of childbearing within a cohabiting union, associated with more family instability for children? 
  3. Are there financial disadvantages impacting children born outside of marriage?

To answer question 2, the Cohabitation-go-round study provides fresh evidence that cohabitation is less likely to deliver such family stability to children, compared to marriage and as the American expert on family and marriage Professor Brad Wilcox said: “We know that children thrive on stable routines with stable caregivers.

Similar comparisons can be made to Australian families because family instability is associated with a host of negative outcomes for children.

While in Australia the rates of living together without marrying are increasing, cohabitation is nevertheless the normative pathway to marriage. While it remains the case that the vast majority of couples in a living-together union are married to each other, cohabitation without marriage appears to have increased by one to three percentage points across each Census year since 1971, reaching 16% in 2011.

Prior to 1997, there was a substantial increase in the proportion of families with children that were headed by a lone parent (father or mother). These proportions were:

  • 12% in 1980
  • 15% in 1990
  • 20% in 1997 and
  • 21% in 2008.

Given the increase in cohabitation rates, changes have also occurred in the marital status of parents. For example, while most lone parents living with dependent children have been married previously, lone parents today are less likely than in the past to have ever been married.

About one in five lone parents living with dependent children in 1986 was never married, compared with around one in three in 2006.

The increase in the proportion of lone parents who have never married does not mean that these parents became lone parents when their children were born. Many of today's lone parents have separated from a de facto relationship.

For example, recent research in Australia reveals that part of the disadvantage associated with being born to a single mother may be the heighted risk of subsequent union transitions faced by children of single mothers... and union transitions appear to present children with more challenges than merely being reared by a lone parent.

If comparisons can be made to the UK study, and that children are more likely to flounder in unstable families, the spike in children born outside of marriage eludes to the fact that children from cohabiting relationships are more likely to experience parental separation than those living with married parents.

There is also a growing consensus that the number of parental union transitions matters for children above and beyond family structure,  with children being more likely to thrive in stable families and more likely to flounder in unstable ones.

Source:

  • DeRose, L. Lyons-Amos, M.; Wilcox, W.B.; and Huarcaya, G. 2017: The Cohabitation-go-round: Cohabitation and Family Stability Across the Globe, Social Trends Institute, World Family Map 2017.
  • Families then and now: 1980-2010: Alan Hayes, Ruth Weston, Lixia Qu and Matthew Gray
  • Weston, R., & Qu, L. (2013). Working out relationships (Australian Family Trends No. 3). Melbourne: Australian Institute of Family Studies.

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The Couple Checkup is an online couple assessment based on the PREPARE/ENRICH couple inventories. The Checkup assessment and Checkup report are designed to go directly to couples at any stage of their relationship (dating, engaged or married). The online system allows for dynamic customization of the assessment to each couple based on how the couple answers background questions. The goal is for the Couple Checkup to reach a more diverse group of couples, to empower couples to deal with issues on their own and to emphasize prevention over remediation.

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Fwd: info on conference in Fort Worth this Sat for you to pass along


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Bill Coffin <billcoffin68@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, Feb 27, 2017 at 1:10 PM
Subject: Fwd: info on conference in Fort Worth this Sat for you to pass along
To: patfitz20@hotmail.com





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Candidates for Friday Five

1. Ask the Historical Society: Busiest marriage year





2. 

When Work Disappears: Manufacturing Decline and the Falling Marriage-Market Value of Men


David AutorDavid DornGordon Hanson








3. MARRIAGE COUNSELING TO BE SUBSIDIZED BY STATE






4. Mental Health Care for Family Members of Post 9/11 Veterans: Practical Approaches to Addressing the Impact of the Invisible Wounds of War on Families (February 2017)








5. 

Now Online: Men Without Work
Dr. Nicholas Eberstadt's lecture is now available on YouTube. He explores why American men are leaving the labor force in greater numbers than ever before and the consequences it will have on the American economy and culture.
Watch Now












7. The Science of Compassion in Marriage

Brad Hoppmann







8. Study Finds Cohabiting Parents Twice as Likely to Split as Married Parents

Rachel Sheffield






9. 55 Questions to Break the Military Marriage Radio Silence

AMANDA ANDERSON






10. Married? Here are 2 traits couples need for a happy spouse and healthier life







Thanks Alysse 








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Fwd: National Marriage Week - Ethics & Religion Col.


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Michael McManus <mike@marriagesavers.org>
Date: Thu, Feb 16, 2017 at 12:42 AM
Subject: National Marriage Week - Ethics & Religion Col. #1,851
To: Bill Coffin <BillCoffin68@gmail.com>


Ethics & Religion

A Column by Mike McManus

 

February 16, 2017

Column #1,851

National Marriage Week

By Mike McManus

 

            It is National Marriage Week, a good time to assess the health of marriage in America.   “The institution of marriage represents the very foundation of human social order,” writes Dr. James Dobson. “Everything of value sits on that base. Institutions, government, religious fervor and the welfare of children are all dependent on its stability.”

 

            When Gallup asked couples to grade their marriages, 68% gave it an A and 23%, a B. Only 6% gave it a C and 1% each, a D or F.  By contrast, 64% of cohabiting couples who were preparing for marriage, ranked their relationship in the “low satisfaction group.”

 

            Nor do unhappy marriages stay that way: 86% of bad marriages become good ones!

 

            However, divorced men are twice as likely as married men to die from the four big killers: heart disease, stroke, hypertension and cancer.  My wife and I report in our book, Living Together: Myths, Risks & Answers, “Auto accidents and suicide death rates for the divorced are almost four times higher; cirrhosis of the liver and pneumonia death rates are seven times higher; the rate of death from murder is eight times greater.”

 

            Not surprisingly, therefore, being unmarried chops nearly ten years off a man’s life. Married women will live four years longer, and their children, five years longer.

 

            “Loneliness is a lethal force with the power to break the human heart,” writes James J. Lynch in A Cry Unheard. A married couple cares for each other. For example, a wife watches their diet and objects if her husband pours a second drink.  But when one of them dies, the will to live is extinguished for many.

 

            Married couples are far wealthier.  Those who never marry experience a 75% reduction in wealth. Married men earn 10% to 40% more than single men with similar education and job history. Why? Married men have a greater work commitment, lower quit rates, healthier and more stable routines.

 

            According to The Case For Marriage by Linda J. Waite and Maggie Gallagher, “On the verge of retirement, the typical married couple had accumulated about $410,000 compared to $167,000 for the never-married, $154,000 for the divorced, and under $96,000 for the separated.”

 

            We write, “Marrying offers balance. Spouses are invested in each other and in the well-being of their joint future. He proposes to buy a new car; she says, `That’s a waste of our money. Let’s remodel the screen porch and turn it into a sunroom.’ Result: the investment increases the value of their home.  The single guy buys the car or vacations in Cancun and by retirement can claim fewer assets.”

 

            Married people also have more and better sex than singles.  TV shows like Sex and the City give the impression the happiest people are those who jump in bed with someone new every Friday night.  But the National Sex Survey reports 43% of married men had sex at least twice a week – compared to only 26% of single men.

 

Married people also enjoy their sex more, both physically and emotionally than their unmarried counterparts. Married women are almost twice as likely as divorced and never-married women to have a sex life that (a) exists and (b) is extremely emotionally satisfying.

 

What about cohabiters? While cohabiting couples have at least as much sex as the married, they don’t seem to enjoy it quite as much. For men, having a wife beats shacking up by a wide margin: 48% of husbands say sex with their wife is extremely satisfying emotionally compared to just 37% of cohabiting men.

 

Therefore, I have a tough question.  Why were there more marriages in 1970 (2,159,000) than in 2015 (2,077,000)?  The population grew from 203 million to 319 million.  If the same percentage of couples were marrying now, there would be 1.3 million more marriages per year!

 

First, I blame America’s churches for not making a better case for marriage. Four in ten people attend church weekly – giving clergy huge access. Yet, in my 70+ years of attending church, I can remember only one sermon, a recent one - that held up Christian marriage. 

 

Second, two-thirds of young couples think they should test the relationship by living together.  There were 8.3 million couples cohabiting in 2015, but only 1.3 million of them married.  The rest mostly break up over time. And women who cohabit are 33% more likely to divorce than those who remained apart till marriage.

 

Churches should insist that cohabiting couples move apart for months before the wedding – to increase their odds of success.

 

Sadly, few do so.

Copyright © 2017 Michael J. McManus, President of Marriage Savers and a syndicated columnist. To see past columns, go to www.ethicsandreligion.com.  Hit Search for any topic.

 

 

 

 

 

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

Mike McManus is President of Marriage Savers

and a syndicated columnist, writing Ethics & Religion weekly

mike@marriagesavers.org

9311 Harrington Dr.

Potomac, MD 20854

 

301-978-7105

 

Candidates for Friday Five









2. Dr. Anda's recent (2/1/17) medical grand rounds re: ACE's 

https://youtu.be/s26rKgIqZ70 







​3. Healthy Child Development through Prevention Science
February 2017 NPSC Brief

chrome-extension://ecnphlgnajanjnkcmbpancdjoidceilk/content/web/viewer.html?file=http%3A%2F%2Fmedia.wix.com%2Fugd%2F773dc1_5c98a49aab8c430fbba581638a0e3c27.pdf


media.wix.com%2Fugd%2F773dc1_5c98a49aab8c430fbba581638a0e3c27.pdf





4. Accepting our children






5. Couple Growth Plan Exercise

Priscilla Hunt






6. 'Random App of Kindness' helps teach children how to be more empathetic

OR



OR







7. Americans are staying single longer than ever, and it’s changing modern marriage in 3 major ways





8. Purging the marriage penalty








9. 7 health benefits of being in a happy marriage













11.Marriage and Sanctity in the Lives of Late Medieval Married Saints








Thanks Alysee. Enjoy your trip!







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Candidates for Friday Five

1. Call for Papers: European Network for the Sociological and Demographic Study of Divorce







2. About Healthy Marriage & Relationship Education






3. FOR BETTER, FOR WORSE: STAYING IN AN UNHAPPY MARRIAGE COULD BE THE BEST THING YOU DO




OR 







4. Strange Sex Habits of Silicon Valley








5. 

East and West may be reshaping each other's parenting


Dr Xinyin Chen 






6. Fatherhood in the 21st Century: Valentine’s Day Musings and Letters

Dr. Gerald Brown






7. OSBORNE PAPER ON THE IMPACT OF SHIFTING FAMILY DYNAMICS ON CHILD WELLBEING






8. Fatherhood Initiatives: Connecting Fathers to Their Children

Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress. Carmen Solomon-Fears, Jessica Tollestrup. December 28, 2016






9.  IKEA Carpark Therapy






10. Under pressure: the relationships of UK parents who have a child with a learning disability

Dr David Marjoribanks


OR

I'm bored with my relationship




11. 13 COMPANIES YOU SHOULD CONSIDER WORKING FOR IF YOU WANT A FAMILY SOMEDAY

 SOPHIE CALDECOTT





Thanks Alysse


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Fwd: Marriage Week is here. So much happening. TV and more

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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: National Marriage Week USA <sheila@nationalmarriageweekusa.org>
Date: Mon, Feb 6, 2017 at 4:58 PM
Subject: Marriage Week is here. So much happening. TV and more
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com


NMW header
National Marriage Week starts tomorrow, Feb. 7th!! 
LOOK what's happening!
It's here!

National Marriage Week USA starts tomorrow, February 7th. It's already heating up!

Many hundreds of activities are already on our National Calendar...you can LOCATE one near you in a search by state. And KEEP POSTING your own events because we will get national news coverage this week.

Here's a "good-to-share" 3-minute national TV clip from EWTN Global News

Salon TV hosted a 20-minute conversation
with NMW executive director Sheila Weber and BoldGlobal founder Carrie Sheffield. Watch this good resource for answers to probing questions among millennials and marriage today.

An example of LOCAL Media Coverage potential: The Cleveland Daily Banner article, "Campaign Designed to Encourage Marriage and Reduce Divorce"
 
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops sent this letter to all parishes encouraging them to celebrate National Marriage Week USA with these resources.

It's not too late to pick up the phone and call your local newspaper and radio station! Let folks know what you are doing for National Marriage Week USA.

Yours for strengthening marriage,
Sheila Weber, Executive Director
Heather Grizzle, Campaign Manager



National Marriage Week USA is part of International Marriage Week, with 20 major countries around the world now mobilizing leaders and events to strengthen marriage in their countries.

Like us on Facebook   Follow us on Twitter
National Marriage Week USA, 115 E 62nd Street, New York, NY 10065
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Fwd: Get Ready for National Marriage Week (Feb. 7–14)

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Ave Maria Press <avemariapress@e.avemariapress.com>
Date: Thu, Feb 2, 2017, 11:03 AM
Subject: Get Ready for National Marriage Week (Feb. 7–14)
To: <billcoffin68@gmail.com>


Ave Maria Press is celebrating National Marriage Week with a number of giveaways and online events.
View this email online
 
High School Textbooks Ministry Resources Spiritual Books SALE!

National Marriage Week


February 7–14
"Let's Strengthen Marriage"

We are celebrating National Marriage Week with a number of book giveaways and online events. Our goal is to spread the word about the value and importance of Catholic marriage today and to feature helpful advice that married couples can apply to their own marriages.

Put any of our online events on your calendar and get ready to spread the word about the beauty of Catholic marriage.

View the Schedule of Events & Giveaways >

♥    ♥    ♥

Special Offer: Marriage Week Discount

Get 20% OFF our line of marriage enrichment books when you use the promo code MARRIAGEWEEK.
Offer expires 2.14.17. Exclusions apply.*

Intimate Graces 101 Tips for a Happier Marriage Just Married The Four Keys to Everlasting Love
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$12.76 with code
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