Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

The Emotionally Whole Family

307 members • Free

9 contributions to The Emotionally Whole Family
I wish my mom had this when she was a single mom!!
Being raised by a single mom for eight years, there’s one thing I wish she had. A coach. But not just any coach, a coach who knew our story and the values she wanted to bring into our home. Not only that, but a coach who could be there at any time she needed. Well now it’s available…because I built it. You may disagree with this, but it’s by using the power of AI (and it’s not to replace your relationship with God, but to support it). A single mom has had her parenting transformed by using my “Family Intelligence System” (pause the video near the end to read her testimony). Need a coach like this? Module 1 is only $7. Full course is $27. Details here: https://thefamilyintelligencesystem.com/
I wish my mom had this when she was a single mom!!
2 likes • 27d
@Seth Dahl I have both Grok and ChatGPT but seem to trust Grok more… maybe I will run the setup through both together and see what that looks like and which sits better with our family.
2 likes • 27d
@Seth Dahl I definitely will! I will let you know how it goes!
New podcast is up!
My friend Sandi got a bird who could’ve easily become a victim to his past life situation, but didn’t. We tell his story in this episode and pull out all kinds of ways to break out of a victim mindset and into who you truly are. Watch it on YouTube here. Listen on Apple here. Listen on Spotify here.
2 likes • Jan 22
This is so good and a very timely message!
A hard truth for Dads…
A man who can't regulate his emotions forces his wife and kids to do it for him. His kids walk on eggshells & his wife carries the entire emotional weight of the family. This is what we want to see change.
2 likes • Jan 22
I grew up in a house like this and it’s what we want to change in our house but it’s me not my husband that can’t control emotions. My husband is very passive but fairly steady emotionally.
Men finding their voice again
We have entered a time where men are finding their true voice: Learning how to articulate their thoughts and feelings with clarity, without being passive aggressive, or having a graduate degree from the “It’s nothing, I’m fine” academy. To do so, we must learn emotional and communication skills that go beyond single syllable sounds and grunts or passive aggressive teenage frustration. This level of clarity and communication, in sincerity, even though it’s uncomfortable, builds the foundation of authentic relationships (in our homes and outside them). It stabilizes our home, our marriages, and children. It takes off the masks we’ve tended to wear. And invites others to do same with us. But it requires active commitment, stimulating our brain instead of atrophying it, exploring disciplines that light us up. Being men who are capable of bringing more than a paycheck to our homes. More than complaints about the weather, traffic, or the game we just watched. More than surface level survival mode. It requires courage to tell the truth when we feel scared instead of pretending like we’re invincible. For us to turn difficulties into opportunities, failures into lessons, mistakes into experience. Without regrets, without excuses, without the annoying tendency to look for scapegoats outside of ourselves. To engage self-control and letting go of the illusion of controlling others. To listen without fixing, to see beneath the behavior, in ourselves and our family members. To come in contact with who we really are and in turn, with those we love. To protect our family because we’re connected to them. To leave something in our children, not just for them. To show our sons who to be and our daughters who to look for. To nourish them with the fruit of the Spirit, to model to them the husband and father Jesus models to us. As we find our true voice, we carry and project a signal that cuts through the noise of earth, and silences any whisper of the enemy. It’s what our families and all creation grown for.
2 likes • Jan 22
I hope that maybe one of your future sessions could be an hour or two later for us in MST zone so that my husband would be available to attend. He doesn’t get home until between 6-7pm here which is 7-8 CST.
Fortnight
Hey y’all, I’ve taken literally almost every electronic device away from my son lol lately for decisions that he has made. I gave him a little freedom here and there as a reward for when I do see him doing good and felt like I heard God say Fortnite is OK for him to play every now and then. But his behavior is still still still a little mean sometimes and wondering if it’s because of that. Do any of you have a experience with it or revelation the father has showed?
4 likes • Jan 22
I literally just had this conversation with my kids yesterday. We had gone through a period of about two months where tablet games and usage was very minimal and then the past couple days we had lots of appointments to take their great grandpa to so I allowed them to bring their tablets. Then they spent more time on them at home while I was under the weather. In a matter of 4 days being on their tablets the attitudes and outbursts came very fierce and lots of hateful words were being yelled out when it was time to do anything that didn’t involve their tablet. They had been playing Minecraft and while they can be extremely creative in their worlds they have a difficult time transitioning away from it. My 7 yr old son has the hardest time while my 10yr old daughter seems to be able to transition with no problems. It has been such a night and day transformation when they have access vs not… we are really struggling to find a way to teach healthy electronics habits without taking it away all the time.
1-9 of 9
Brandy Szakacs
3
38points to level up
@brandy-szakacs-8411
Homeschooling Family working hard to align with God’s purpose for our lives!

Active 27d ago
Joined Mar 3, 2025
Powered by