Relationship News

Info on how to build relationships

Relationship Support Groups

without comments



relationship support groups

DivorceCare support group preview: divorcecare.org


LCD Display Fashion Cordless Phone 60000 Groups of Power-on Password


LCD Display Fashion Cordless Phone 60000 Groups of Power-on Password


$45


LCD Display Fashion Cordless Phone 60000 Groups of Power-on Password

Support Sock


Support Sock


$5.99


Support Sock. Polyester heel/toe sock with ankle and arch compression zones and double welt top to keep sock from slipping down the leg.78/18/4 polyester/nylon/rubber.

Clairol Herbal Essences Long Term Relationship Hair Conditioner for Long Hair - 12 Oz


Clairol Herbal Essences Long Term Relationship Hair Conditioner for Long Hair – 12 Oz


$6.44


Clairol Herbal Essences Long Term Relationship Hair Conditioner with a fusion of red raspberry and satin extracts.

Select Ankle Support M


Select Ankle Support M


$12.99


Select Ankle Support. Neoprene brace that supports and warms the ankle relieving pain in the ankle joint. 4 mm neoprene.Ankle support in 0.2″ SBR-neoprene. Provides warmth, support and pain relief to the ankle joint.



 15 Steps Toward Improving Your Marriage


15 Steps Toward Improving Your Marriage


$0.99


Staying Happily MarriedIn recent years, the demand for marriage and family therapists, also known as MFTs, has dramatically increased. A Marriage and family therapist (MFT) is a mental health professional, highly trained in the area of bringing a perspective that is family-oriented to health care. Basically, what MFTs do is evaluate and treat emotional and mental disorders, including but not limited to behavioral and health issues. Relationship issues are also within an MFT’s area of specialty.MFTs play a crucial role in keeping marriages and families intact. But looking at it in another perspective, MFTs are more support groups rather than problem solvers that can cure marriages and restore family relationships.

 A Manic Marriage


A Manic Marriage


$9.36


Having lived with someone suffering from Bipolar Mood Disorder for over twenty years, Nina is better qualified than most to speak about the affect this condition has on relationships. From caring for her partner whilst he was suicidal with depression to visiting him in a state mental asylum after he was committed during a manic episode, she’s seen first hand the ups and downs of bipolar.This story is a journal account of her tumultuous relationship in amongst worldwide travel and finally marriage. Juggling motherhood, a career in journalism and photography, and a partner who refused treatment, she has been left with some battle scars. However, she has persevered and through her book, support groups, and community workshops on Bipolar Awareness her knowledge is now helping fellow supporters conquer and befriend this monster she calls Bipolar.

 A Thousand Voices In The Night


A Thousand Voices In The Night


$8.82


The “Thousand Voices in the Night” are friends, neighbors, strangers you pass every day, even family members. They are the wounded whose walk with the Lord has been impacted by abuse, and are searching for answers. They are the hurting with which God seeks to restore a lasting, loving,healing relationship. Debi knows because for so many years her voice was one of them. Growing up in an abusive home where she endured years of emotional, physical and sexual abuse she often wondered where God was in her life, and if He ever heard her prayers. If He did hear, did He really care? Yet hers is not a story of defeat, but of victory! Allow Debi to infect you with her zest for life, her deep and abiding faith in Jesus Christ and her passion for helping others as she shares her remarkable story of a life truly redeemed.Debi resides in Athens, Alabama with her husband Harry and daughters Kimberly and Kristin. She holds a Masters in Educational Psychology from the University of Texas. For the past twenty years Debi has dedicated her life to preventing and helping others overcome the damaging effects of child abuse and domestic violence by serving with a number of various agencies and organizations including: the Army Family Advocacy Program, Family and Child Educational Services of Coffee County, the National Children’s Advocacy Center, the Huntsville Association for Pastoral Care, Partnership for a Drug Free Community, and the Mental Health Center of Madison County. As a regional trainer with the North Alabama Conference of the United Methodist Church she has assisted numerous churches of various denominations throughout Alabama develop policies and procedures toprotect children in their care from being hurt. Since 1992 she has facilitated support groups for adult survivors of childhood abuse.

 Acculturative stress and psychological distress in adult female Liberian refugees in the United States.


Acculturative stress and psychological distress in adult female Liberian refugees in the United States.


$49.99


Acculturative stress has been identified as a major source of psychological distress in immigrants and refugees (Williams & Berry, 1991; Hovey & Magana, 2002). Acculturative stress is the term used to refer to stressors that are identified as having their source in the process of acculturation (Greenland & Brown, 2005). Acculturative stress does not result in psychological distress for all immigrants or refugees. The relationship between acculturative stress and psychological distress is probabilistic rather than deterministic (Berry, 2005; Williams & Berry, 1991; Berry, Kim, Minde & Mok, 1987). According to the acculturative stress model, five sets of individual and group characteristics moderate the psychological consequences of acculturation for individuals and groups (Berry, 2005; Williams & Berry, 1991; Berry, 1990; Berry et al., 1987). These five sets of individual and group characteristics are the type of acculturating group, mode of acculturation, nature of the host society, demographic and social characteristics, and psychological characteristics. Of these five sets of characteristics, social and demographic characteristics have been the most researched in studies of immigrant and refugee psychological wellbeing (Farver, Nrang & Bhadha, 2002; Lim, Heiby, Brissin & Griffin, 2002; Lieber, Dorothy, Nihira & Mink, 2001). Age at immigration, time spent in the host country, gender, fluency of spoken English, socioeconomic status (SES), social support, religiosity, health, and pre-migration traumatic experiences are some of the social and demographic characteristics that have been found to strongly moderate the relationship between acculturative stress and psychological distress in immigrants and refugees. Research with these conclusions was conducted with mainly larger Hispanic and Asian immigrant and refugee groups in the U.S. (Takeuchi et al., 2007; Hsu, Davies, & Hansen, 2004). Few of these studies involved African refugees (Rumbaut, 1999). This study used a

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to our Newsletter