Walking on Eggshells: Navigating the Delicate Relationship Between Adult Children and Parents


Walking on Eggshells: Navigating the Delicate Relationship Between Adult Children and Parents by Anchor

List Price: $15.00
Price: $10.20
You Save: $4.80 (32%)

On giving advice:
They Don’t Want It.
They Don’t Hear It.
They Resent It.
Don’t Give It.


We raise our children to be independent and lead fulfilling lives, but when they finally do, staying close becomes more complicated than ever. And for every bewildered mother who wonders why her children don’t call, there is a frustrated son or daughter who just wants to be treated like a grownup. Now, renowned editor Jane Isay delivers the perfect gift to both parents and their adult children—real-life wisdom and advice on how to stay together without falling apart.

Using extensive interviews with people from ages twenty-five to seventy, Isay shows that we’re far from alone in our struggles to make this new, adult relationship work. She offers up groundbreaking insights and deeply moving stories that will inspire those in even the toughest situations. Isay’s warmth and wit shine through on every page as she charts an invaluable course through the confusing, and often painful, interactions parents and children can face. Walking on Eggshells is the much-needed road map that will keep you connected to the people you love most. Read more...

Jane Isay, the editor who discovered Mary Pipher's Reviving Ophelia and commissioned Rachel Simmons' Odd Girl Out, has written an insightful, compelling book about "the delicate lifelong bond between grown kids and their parents." Isay traveled across the country and interviewed nearly 75 people (including dozens of parents and grown children), and Walking on Eggshells shares moving stories that will help parents and grown children build strong new adult relationships with one another. We asked Po Bronson, author of Why Do I Love These People?, to read Isay's book and give us his take. Read his review below. --Daphne Durham


Guest Reviewer: Po Bronson

Po Bronson is the author of the brilliant bestseller What Should I Do with My Life?, the powerful and poignant Why Do I Love These People?, a hilarious novel called The Bombadiers, and The Nudist on the Late Shift, a collection of "true stories" about Silicon Valley.

When we tell family stories, we so often focus on the beginning and the end. The beginning is the two decades of our childhood and adolescence, and it's been the favorite narrative arc ever since Freud. What happens in your childhood does not stay in your childhood--it haunts the rest of your life. In the last decade, we've suddenly heard more stories of the end--narratives constructed around a parent's death, and often the year spent caring for that parent on their deathbed.

Because these are the conventional narratives, they often distract our attention from the many decades in between. We barely even have a terminology for these years--and the terms we employ sound like oxymorons: "Adult Children," "Parents of Adults." There's an old saying: you can choose your friends, but you can't choose your family. In the beginning this is true--we're in the care of our parents, like it or not. And in the ending this is also true--they're in our care, like it or not. But in the long middle, this isn't so true. The middle is a period where both child and parent can keep their distance, if they prefer. And often do, harboring resentment. We too often accept that this is just the way it is. "She's never going to change" is a common, fatalist refrain.

In Walking on Eggshells, Jane Isay shines a much-needed light on these years. With a graceful respect for the families she investigates, she tells their stories--how they lost their love, and how they regained it. Isay covers the many ways families develop resentment, and the many techniques they employed to make peace. She shows that small changes in routine can go a long way to restoring goodwill. But it's not a self-help book; it's more of a literary contemplation, and we learn more by inspiration than by emulation.

Though this book addresses the parents directly, I suspect it will be passed back and forth, between generations, in many a family. --Po Bronson



Read more...

Adult Children of Alcoholics


Adult Children of Alcoholics by HCI

List Price: $12.95
Price: $10.36
You Save: $2.59 (20%)
          Features:
  • ISBN13: 9781558741126
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

Ten years ago, Janet Woititz broke new ground in our understanding of what it is to be an Adult Child of an Alcoholic. Today she re-examines the movement and its inclusion of Adult Children from various dysfunctional family backgrounds who share the same characteristics. After more than ten years of working with ACoAs she shares the recovery hints that she has found to work. Read Adult Children of Alcoholics to see where the journey began and for ideas on where to go from here.

Read more...

Setting Boundaries(TM) with Your Adult Children: Six Steps to Hope and Healing for Struggling Parents


Setting Boundaries(TM) with Your Adult Children: Six Steps to Hope and Healing for Struggling Parents by Harvest House Publishers

List Price: $12.99
Price: $10.39
You Save: $2.60 (20%)

This important and compassionate new book from the creator of the successful God Allows U-Turns series will help parents and grandparents of the many adult children who continue to make life painful for their loved ones.

Writing from firsthand experience, Allison identifies the lies that kept her, and ultimately her son in bondage—and how she overcame them. Additional real life stories from other parents are woven through the text.

A tough–love book to help readers cope with dysfunctional adult children, Setting Boundaries with Your Adult Children will empower families by offering hope and healing through S.A.N.I.T.Y.—a six–step program to help parents regain control in their homes and in their lives.

  • S = STOP Enabling, STOP Blaming Yourself, and STOP the Flow of Money
  • A = Assemble a Support Group
  • N = Nip Excuses in the Bud
  • I = Implement Rules/Boundaries
  • T = Trust Your Instincts
  • Y = Yield Everything to God

Foreword by Carol Kent (When I Lay My Isaac Down)

Read more...

Struggle for Intimacy (Adult Children of Alcoholics series)


Struggle for Intimacy (Adult Children of Alcoholics series) by HCI

List Price: $10.95
Price: $5.61
You Save: $5.34 (49%)

Janet Woititz, mother of the recovery movement, sensitively addresses the barriers of trust and intimacy that children learn in an alcoholic family. She provides suggestions for building loving relationships with friends, partners, and spouses.

Read more...

The Effects of Baby Boomers Raising Grandchildren

Friendships are not the only relationships impacted by this new role, other family members such as adult children may become jealous of the amount of time their parent spends raising a grandchild. That is why support groups are so crucial;


Moms Talk: How Young Is Too Young To Marry?

An adult child is never going to listen to their parents to suggest waiting to get married once the child has marriage on the brain. or, maybe, I at least would not have if my parents had tried. as parents, sometimes our job is to just let kids make


Shannon Tweed: 'Gene Simmons relationship is in trouble'

The couple have been in a committed relationship for more than 20 years and have two adult children together, but Tweed told PostMedia that she has grown tired of Simmons flaunting his sexuality in public. The season premiere of their reality series


Borders Closing: Five Things Barnes and Noble Can Do to Survive
Borders Closing: Five Things Barnes and Noble Can Do to Survive

That's why the chain has already been expanding into children's toys and adult puzzles and gifts and gadgets areas to diversify beyond books. The company's prime real estate advantage gives the opportunity for doing just that, but Barnes and Noble must


The Effects of Baby Boomers Raising Grandchildren

21.07.11

"The Boomer" is a column written for adults approaching retirement and those already in their "golden age." It will also promote player interaction by posting e-mail with answers and reader questions. E-mail your questions or topic ideas to thefoxboomer@gmail.com.

I have fond memories of going to the Jersey shore to visit my Nana and Pop. I remember being 7 or 8 years hoping that my stays of a week would turn into something more if I could keep riding the promenade walks, swimming in the ocean and fishing in the entrance.

Source: Fox Business

New book reveals how marriage changes parent-child relationships ...

by Jane Salerno

There is an old adage that goes “A daughter is a daughter all of her life, but a son is a son ’til he takes him a wife.”  Deborah M. Merrill , associate professor of sociology at Clark University explores whether or not this saying accurately describes marriage and intergenerational relationships today in her new book, “When Your Children Marry: How Marriage Changes Relationships with Adult Children” (Rowman & Littlefield, $29.95).

“When Your Children Marry” examines how marriage changes relationships between adult...

Read more...