Navigating family transitions with grace.

• 1. Stay diplomatic and keep a smile on your face at all times. Otherwise, he will be hers forever; things have already started.

• 2. Start calling him and sending him lists of things to buy. Ask his girlfriend to help him shop for the house, and ask him to buy things you like, such as ice cream or specific meals.

• 3. “My card is stuck. Could you please pay this bill for me?”

• 4. Start with small financial requests—perhaps two expenses per week.

• 5. It’s possible that his girlfriend is guiding him to act this way.

• 6. Take him along when visiting friends and relatives. Have a few relatives ask him about his contributions to the home and remind him how hard his mother worked for him.

• 7. Plant the idea of buying a new, bigger house so that you can all live together happily forever.

• 8. Look at properties on Instagram and start going out to view them. This will keep him busy and focused on you.

• 9. Look for a new, fancy car and have him go on a few test drives. Let him spend some money on himself as well.

Summary: The strategy is simple: keep him busy and keep him spending on the home.

From Distance to Understanding: Connecting with Your Teen in a Digital World.

Problem –

There comes a phase when your once‑talkative child turns quiet, and the home that echoed with laughter feels strangely silent. You want to understand what’s happening inside their mind, but every attempt at conversation feels like a closed door. It’s not rejection—it’s a part of growing up in a world so different from the one we knew. Between screens, constant notifications, and endless distractions, our teens are often lost in noise they can’t escape. Yet beneath their silence, they still crave love, patience, and acceptance. Reconnecting with them isn’t about forcing closeness; it’s about creating gentle moments where trust can quietly return.

Solution –

You’re not alone — almost 80% of parents go through this. It’s called the generation gap. Our kids have gadgets to keep them company, something we never had growing up. For them, these screens are like endless libraries where new things appear every second. Naturally, we seem invisible to them unless they need us for something. They’re simply living in a different era.


What helped me bond better with my youngest is doing small, real-life activities together — solo market trips to buy something urgent, casual shopping outings, asking for their advice when purchasing online, and intentionally disconnecting the Wi-Fi for a few hours every week. I also give simple tasks like doing dishes, laundry, cleaning their room, chopping vegetables, or talking to a relative over a call. These small steps have worked for me, and our relationship has improved a lot over the past year.