Advocates For Progressive Change

Advocates For Progressive Change Welcome to Positive Family Circle, a space where families come together to grow, uplift, and shine. Together, let's circulate positivity.

Here, we celebrate gratitude, encourage love, and share inspiration to create brighter homes and hearts.

I don’t know who needs to hear this, but you can’t spoil a newborn baby!So pick them up if they cry. Snuggle them, cuddl...
28/11/2025

I don’t know who needs to hear this, but you can’t spoil a newborn baby!

So pick them up if they cry. Snuggle them, cuddle them, feed them what they need and respond to their cues because all of that is attachment, security and safety.

A time will come when they learn to be independent, but right now they need you, and that’s okay ❤️

A woman wrote this with this image below, what’s your thought?

To lower your blood pressure Best fruit- Pomegranate Best vegetable - Beetroot Best spice- Garlic Best herb - Hibiscus 🌺...
27/11/2025

To lower your blood pressure

Best fruit- Pomegranate
Best vegetable - Beetroot
Best spice- Garlic
Best herb - Hibiscus 🌺 ( zobo leaves)
Best tea - Green tea
Best seed - Flaxseed
Best nut- Pistachio
Best oil- Extra virgin Olive oil
Best legumes - Soybeans
Best grain- Oats
Best treat - Dark chocolate
Best super food - Avocado 🥑

Sleep very well for a minimum of 8 to 9 hours every day, poor sleep does a great harm to you.

Be selfish with your health, if anything happens to you today, people will only spend a maximum of one week mourning you. Yes they love you, but your absence won't stop their progress. Know this and know that nobody else can ever take care of you as much as you will take care of yourself.

Na who dl£ lose. Nobody really send you.

Do all you can to stay alive.

Parents, Gather Round…�Failing to guide your children in managing their emotions means the world will deliver those less...
25/11/2025

Parents, Gather Round…
�Failing to guide your children in managing their emotions means the world will deliver those lessons harshly instead. Before you grumble that your kid “flares up too easily”… or declare them “incredibly willful”… take a moment to consider:
Has this child been properly instructed on dealing with their feelings?
�Mastering emotions isn’t innate—it’s learned through guidance, not passed down genetically or acquired effortlessly.

Here’s a guide for fostering composed, resilient, and disciplined young ones:

1️⃣ Guide Them in Identifying Emotions�Misbehavior often stems from an inability to articulate inner turmoil. Introduce basic expressions such as:�“I’m upset.”�“I’m irritated.”�“I feel excluded.”�“I feel ashamed.”�Once labeled, emotions become easier to handle.

2️⃣ Demonstrate Serenity in Your Behavior�Youngsters imitate actions over instructions. If you respond to pressure with outbursts, turn minor irritations into arguments, or lash out when frustrated—they’ll replicate it effortlessly. Exhibit the poise you expect from them.

3️⃣ Affirm That Emotions Are Acceptable, But Behaviors Have Limits�Feeling furious, swamped, or tearful is perfectly fine. However, lashing out physically, yelling, showing disrespect, or causing damage isn’t. Establish these guidelines from the start.

4️⃣ Instill the “Think Before Acting” Principle�A brief five-second delay can avert countless regrets. Instruct them to inhale deeply, pause, or retreat momentarily. True restraint starts with intentional hesitation.

5️⃣ Foster an Open Environment for Dialogue�When children trust they can share without ridicule, criticism, or raised voices, they communicate rather than erupt. Turn your household into that secure space.

6️⃣ Impart Practical Relaxation Techniques�Serenity is a trainable ability—share it! Include methods like:�✔️ Slow, deep breaths�✔️ Hydrating with a sip of water�✔️ Solitary reflection time�✔️ Writing in a diary�✔️ Discussing feelings openly

7️⃣ Refrain from Belittling Their Emotions�Steer clear of remarks such as: “You’re overly dramatic,” “Quit whining like an infant,” or “That’s excessive.” Criticism fosters suppression, not fortitude.

8️⃣ Offer Guidance Softly, Without Hostility�Avoid escalating their intensity with yours. Kindly explain alternatives: “Here’s a better approach next time.” Gentle redirection cultivates self-discipline.

9️⃣ Incorporate Biblical Insights for Growth�“Be quick to hear, slow to speak, and slow to anger…” – James 1:19�Emphasize that forbearance, compassion, and restraint signify true power, not frailty.

🔟 Embody the Principles You Advocate�Emotional maturity in children arises from your consistent example, not mere words. Lead through actions.
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Parents, nurturing emotional regulation is profound work—it influences their social bonds, self-assurance, partnerships, decisions, and ultimately their life’s trajectory. Let’s prepare them effectively! 💪❤️

Read this masterpiece 👌. May God help us ‎10 Wrong Parenting Styles That Create Broken Adults - Bisi Adewale‎‎Marriage i...
22/11/2025

Read this masterpiece 👌. May God help us

‎10 Wrong Parenting Styles That Create Broken Adults - Bisi Adewale

‎Marriage is beautiful, but parenting is one of its greatest assignments. Unfortunately, many adults today are damaged not by demons or destiny, but by the parenting style they were exposed to. As a marriage counselor, I’ve seen husbands and wives still bleeding from childhood, raising their own kids with inherited pain.

‎Dear parents, parenting is a ministry. We must be careful not to produce well-fed children with empty souls. Below are 10 parenting styles that may look normal today, yet they produce broken adults tomorrow.

‎1. The Shouting and Beating Style
‎Some parents believe the only language children understand is shouting and slapping. Every little mistake is met with verbal abuse. These kids grow up afraid, insecure, and emotionally crippled. They may obey you out of fear, but they will resent you deep inside.

‎2. The Over-Pampering Style
‎This looks like love, but it destroys. Children who are never corrected become adults who cannot take responsibility. They grow up thinking the world owes them everything. Tomorrow, their spouse suffers it. Overpampered boys become lazy husbands; overpampered girls become entitled wives.

‎3. The Too-Busy Parenting Style
‎Both parents are pursuing money, ministry, or fame. The children are raised by house-helps, gadgets and cartoons. These kids grow up emotionally detached. They know their parents pay school fees, but they don’t feel loved. Tomorrow, they struggle to love or trust anyone deeply.

‎4. The Comparison Style
‎“What’s wrong with you? See your brother!” These words break something inside a child. Comparison breeds jealousy, hatred and low self-esteem. Such children become adults who feel insignificant, who compete instead of connect, all because home trained them to feel inferior.

‎5. The Military Parenting Style
‎Rigid rules, no affection, no smile, no praise. Only “Yes sir, No ma.” The children grow up like soldiers, not sons. They find it hard to receive love or show emotion later in life, even in marriage. They obey you, but their hearts are lonely.

‎6. The Public Shaming Style
‎Parents who insult their children in public, calling them names, embarrassing them in front of others. Such children grow up feeling worthless. They become adults who hide, avoid people, or over-perform just to prove they are not useless.

‎7. The Neglect Style
‎Some parents are physically present but emotionally absent. They never listen, never notice sorrow in their child’s face, never ask “How are you really doing?” These children feel unseen. They grow up emotionally dehydrated, always looking for attention from the wrong hands.

‎8. The Hypocritical Style
‎Parents who teach Bible at home but live another life outside. Or parents who praise God in church but fight like enemies at home. Children see everything! Hypocrisy confuses them. They grow up hating religion, distrusting people, and repeating the same double life.

‎9. The Over-Control Style
‎Parents who decide everything: school, course, career, who to marry. They suffocate their child’s destiny. That child grows up either rebellious or totally weak. Such adults cannot make decisions, and they blame everybody for how their life turned out.

‎10. The Conditional Love Style
‎Parents who only show affection when a child performs well. “You got A’s? I love you. You misbehave? I withdraw love.” This creates adults who are performance-driven. They never feel enough. They end up trying to earn love from friends, spouse, even from God — because home taught them that you are only loved when you are perfect.

‎Final Thoughts
‎Dear parents, children don’t just grow; they are trained. Some of us are still healing from childhood wounds, yet God is counting on us to break this evil cycle. Let us raise emotionally whole children. Let us correct with love, discipline with wisdom, listen with our heart, and guide them with prayer.

‎A healthy child today becomes a healthy spouse tomorrow.

‎Let us not raise broken adults in the name of “I am the parent.”

‎If this blessed you, share it with another parent. Let’s heal homes, one family at a time.

‎©️ Pastor Bisi Adewale

🔺 ONE ASPECT OF PARENTING WE RARELY TALK ABOUT ENOUGH…A few months ago, a mum patiently taught her daughter Ella how to ...
19/11/2025

🔺 ONE ASPECT OF PARENTING WE RARELY TALK ABOUT ENOUGH…

A few months ago, a mum patiently taught her daughter Ella how to iron. Step by step, gently, lovingly. Ella did really well that day.
But last night, Ella ironed the school uniforms… and they came out rough, creased, nothing like they should.

So the mum called her:�“Ella, sweetheart, please come and iron these again.”
Ella grumbled. She was tired. She didn’t want to redo it.
The mum watched this time… and realised Ella had completely forgotten the technique. She wasn’t stretching the fabric, wasn’t holding the iron properly, wasn’t following any of the steps.
The old version of this mum wanted to explode:�“But I taught you this! How could you forget already?!”
But the mum she has chosen to become took a deep breath instead.
She said softly:�“Come, let’s do it together again.”
No anger.�No shaming.�No “What’s wrong with you?”
Just guidance.
She showed Ella how to lay the uniform flat, how to glide the iron, how to smooth the collar and sleeves properly.
Then she handed the iron back to Ella… and within minutes, every step came flooding back. The uniforms came out perfect. Ella beamed.
Parents, please hear this:
Our children do not all learn at the same pace.�Forgetting is not defiance.�It’s not laziness.�It’s not “they just don’t listen.”
Sometimes it simply means:�“They need the lesson one more time… with love.”
If that mum had shouted, Ella would have walked away believing:�“I’m stupid.”�“I can’t do anything right.”�“Mummy gets angry when I don’t get it immediately.”
Instead, because her mum chose connection over correction, patience over perfection… Ella walked away proud, capable, and closer to her mother than before.

Teaching is not a one-time event.�Training is repetition wrapped in grace.�Connection must always come before correction.
Your child is not trying to frustrate you.�They are trying to grow… and growth needs room, repetition, and someone who believes in them even when they stumble.
Let’s stop raising children who are afraid to make mistakes.
�Let’s raise children who know they can try again, because we never crushed their spirit the first time they forgot. This is the kind of parenting that changes everything. You’re doing beautiful work, even on the hard days. Keep going ❤️

18/11/2025

From 10 onwards, your child is forming core beliefs, absorbing influence, and searching for identity. You can notlenger parent casually.

Here's what to do and do actively:

Have real conversations, not just
instructions. Stop only telling them what to do, start talking about why. Talk about values, choices, consequences, and even your own past mistakes. Teens listen more when they feel

Correct with conhection, not control.
Discipline should come from love/ not anger.
The goal isn't to scare them into obedience, but to guide them into wisdom. Connection earns you influence. Control breeds rebellion.

Introduce them to identity, not just rules.
Who do they believe they are? What do they stand for? Help them build a strong inner compass, not just external compliance.
Teach them to think, not just obey.

Open up the hard topics early - S**x. P**n Peer pressure. Depression. Abuse. If they're not hearing about it from you, they're learning it elsewhere.

Equip them with truth before the world feeds them lies.

Start teaching life skils, Emotional
regulation. Money habits.

These are the tools that build successful adults. Don't just raise a student raise a whole human.

Dear parent, the teen years don't have to be chaotic. They can be purposeful if you're intentional.Don't pull back now this is the season to lean in harder.

Be Present. Be Wise. Be Intentional.

15/11/2025
I pray for everyone hoping for fruit of the womb to receive the grace to carry theirs in Abundance in Jesus name. .     ...
05/11/2025

I pray for everyone hoping for fruit of the womb to receive the grace to carry theirs in Abundance in Jesus name.

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