Full – Adventures in Marriage
We’re sorry, this event is full. Please contact kaycee@mrecenter.org to add your name to the email list so you can be notified when the next class is scheduled. Adventures
We’re sorry, this event is full. Please contact kaycee@mrecenter.org to add your name to the email list so you can be notified when the next class is scheduled. Adventures
Discover Marriage: Love & Respect (6 weeks) Sundays, 11:00 – 12:00; September 29th – November 3rd Hosted by: Crossroads 140, Westminster, MD; This 6-week class is the perfect next
Congratulations on your first baby! Get ready for all the joys of a party of three, but… as you do — keep in mind that most couples spend so much time focusing on baby showers, planning the nursery, Lamaze, and parenting classes, that they usually don’t think about how this bundle of joy is going to impact their marriage.
You’ve found “the one” and you’re in love. There are so many things to think about, so many people to share this news with, and so much to get done. But there’s more to think about than just your wedding day. Take a look at these easy tips to prepare for your actual marriage.
By: Glenn T. Stanton | Originally Published HERE on Nov. 11, 2020 Scholars at the Institute for Family Studies are reporting that even while the divorce rate has been steadily declining over
By: Anne Malmburg | Originally Published HERE on September 30, 2020 If you Google “quotes about complacency”, you will see many different iterations of the same idea — complacency is
By: Elaine Roth Originally published HERE on October 3, 2020 My twelfth wedding anniversary is coming up this weekend. Twelve years married, but he only lived for nine of them.
By: JULIE BAUMGARDNER | Originally published HERE by ‘First Things First ‘ It’s nothing new to disagree with the ones you love, whether it’s about COVID-19, quarantine, religion, guns, racism,
Originally posted by Prepare and Enrich Blog on April 29, 2020 by Anne Malmburg Every day we are presented with opportunities to strengthen our relationship. Most of the time these
by Lois Szymanski The average blended family needs between five and seven years to merge and form a shared family identify. And for some it could be longer. When Keith