Here are a few things you can do to make your 2026 better than 2025.
It’s time to start planning out future plans and activities. Here are 10 ideas to get you started.
It’s still essential to maintain your joy and purpose as senior. Here are a few ways to do exactly that.
When we practice small things, it can give us the power to grow and experience the good in each other. Hey – it’s simple and it’s free.
Whether we’ve reached our goals—or we’re still waiting for our ships to come in—life’s stressors, transitions, and surprises often prove too much. And before long, we find ourselves mumbling: “I think I’m having a midlife crisis.”
There are a thousand reasons for grandparents to worry about their grandchildren as they head into a new school year. But here’s the good news. There’s power in prayer.
Nineteen years ago, our daughter died. This left a five-year-old girl and a seven-month-old boy motherless. Papa and I became instant parents and grandparents.
There are many things in life that we don’t have the power to change. Weather, time…But, one thing that we CAN change is our attitude.
As the story fell from his lips, my world crumbled around me. The perfect life I had been building for seventeen years suddenly collapsed into a pile of lies.
Happy days will be here again. Here are 10 ways to stay positive when life is hard.
Oscar Wilde once said, “With age comes wisdom.” Personally, I’ve found that to be true.
Most of us can’t change on our own. We need the power of the Holy Spirit at work in our lives as well as the trusted input of mentors, friends, family, counselors, pastors, and more.
In times like these, we want to get better as fast as possible so we can get back to our lives, and trusting God during this time can be difficult. We usually feel our worst when we’re sick, and that is when we need God the most. If it’s hard for you to trust God when you’re sick, here is how to trust him when you aren’t feeling your best.
Getting married for the second (or more) time is challenging. Dealing with the pain from a divorce or death of a spouse is hard enough; adding the demands of blending families with children is even more stressful.






