A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Types of Marriage

Childless Family
Childless Family

Childless couples are often better off financially than their counterparts. They don’t have to support a child or children from birth to eighteen years old. Couples who don’t have children have more time to devote to each other. This helps get closer. That’s not to say couples with children aren’t close in their marriage.

Extended Family
Extended Family

Myth: After marriage, my relationship with his parents will be the same as when we were dating. Reality: In a family's eyes, being his girlfriend or fiancée is totally different from being his wife. Walking down the aisle is the first of many steps you will take toward becoming a part of your ...

Grandparent Family
Grandparent Family

Family therapists are specially trained to understand the complicated feelings and relationships within grandparent-headed families. If you feel that your family could benefit from family therapy, find a therapist who has experience working with grandparent-headed families.

source: aamft.org
Nuclear Family
Nuclear Family

Nuclear family, also called elementary family, in sociology and anthropology, a group of people who are united by ties of partnership and parenthood and consisting of a pair of adults and their socially recognized children. Typically, but not always, the adults in a nuclear family are married.

image: sheknows.com
Single Parent Family
Single Parent Family

The economics of single-parent family life mean that single mothers are disproportionately represented ... in handbook of marriage and the family, ed. m. b ...

Stepfamily
Stepfamily

Stepfamilies: Love, Marriage and Parenting in the First Decade, by J. Bray and J. Kelly, 1999. New York: Broadway Books. Why Marriages Succeed or Fail: What You Can Learn from the Breakthrough Research to Make Your Marriage Last, by J. Gottman, 1994.

source: aamft.org