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Happy Tuesday!!
My brother is coming in this weekend from Yellow Springs, Ohio so am getting my tour 
guide hat on!

If you missed yesterday's
FREE Q AND A!
you can hear the replay here:
 
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  1. How Do I Protect the Non-Estranged Children in My Will?
     
    Cutting a child out of a will may also create lifelong, unresolvable problems for the siblings that survive. If a troubled and angry estranged sibling decided to create a  problem for the other siblings in court, he or she could easily cost them thousands of dollars in court fees trying to defend themselves. 
     
    In addition, any chance that the estranged child would or could reconcile with the siblings if he's also estranged from them is also diminished if not eradicated because of the rivalry or bitterness that will ensue.
     
    But the other question is what is the meaning of your will? 
     
    In tonight's webinar, we'll address this question along with the following:
  • Why is money so often problematic in parent/adult child relations?
  • How do changing patterns of parenting affect the issues around money?
  • Why is using money as leverage sometimes the right thing to do?
  • What are three or four good ways to say no to your adult child?
  • Why is saying yes or no without a guilt trip so important if your adult child makes a request for money?
  • Why is being direct about your intentions so important if you're saying yes or no to a request for money?
  • What does it mean to "say no with a moral lesson?"
  • What is a good way to say no to a money request from an abusive adult child?
  • Why is the topic of money in blended families so often difficult?
  • What are some guidelines for blended families to follow around wills and money?
  • What are the pros of leaving your child in your will?
  • How should you phrase it if you're going to cut them out of your will
TONIGHT
 Tuesday, June 7
530 PM Pacific, 630 PM Mountain,  
    730 PM Central, 830 PM Eastern
SHOULD I CUT THEM OUT OF MY WILL?
Handling the Issue of Money, Gifts, and Inheritance

FREE STUDY GUIDE HERE



Tuesday, June 14
530 PM Pacific, 630 PM Mountain,  
    730 PM Central, 830 PM Eastern 
DOES MY CHILD HAVE A PERSONALITY DISORDER OR OTHER MENTAL ILLNESS?
Understanding Its Role in Estrangement
 

 Tuesday, June 21
530 PM Pacific, 630 PM Mountain,  
    730 PM Central, 830 PM Eastern
MY ESTRANGED CHILD IS BACK: NOW WHAT?
Learning How to Navigate Early 
Reconciliation



 Each webinar comes with:
  • Free study guide
  • Link to the live webinar to listen to over the phone or computer
  • Q and A during live webinar
  • Complete transcript of lecture after it airs
  • Link to the webinar recording after it airs
To hear what others are saying about the webinars, go  here


CAN'T MAKE THE WEBINARS AT THE TIME SCHEDULED?

No problem- you'll still get the full transcript of the lecture, the study guide, and the link to the recording. project_startup.jpg





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NEED A 1:1?  email me at [email protected]

WANT TO CONTACT OTHER  ESTRANGED PARENTS?
go here
 
About Dr. Coleman

Dr. Coleman is a psychologist in private practice in the San Francisco Bay Area and a Senior Fellow with the Council on Contemporary Families, a non-partisan organization of leading sociologists, historians, psychologists and demographers dedicated to providing the press and public with the latest research and best-practice findings about American families. He has lectured at Harvard University, The University of California at Berkeley, The University of London, Cornell Weill Medical School, and blogs on parent-adult child relationships for the U.C. Berkeley publication, Greater Good Magazine.

Dr. Coleman is frequently contacted by the media for opinions and commentary about changes in the American family. He has been a frequent guest on the Today Show, NPR, and The BBC, and has also been featured on Sesame Street, 20/20, Good Morning America, America Online Coaches, PBS, and numerous news programs for FOX, ABC, CNN, and NBC television. His advice has appeared in The New York Times, The Times of London, The Shriver Report, Fortune, Newsweek, The Chicago Tribune, The Wall Street Journal, Slate, Psychology Today, U.S. World and News Report, Parenting Magazine, The Baltimore Sun and many others.

He is the author of numerous articles and chapters and has written four books: The Marriage Makeover: Finding Happiness in Imperfect Harmony (St. Martin's Press); The Lazy Husband: How to Get Men to Do More Parenting and Housework (St. Martin's Press); When Parents Hurt: Compassionate Strategies When You and Your Grown Child Don't Get Along (HarperCollins); and Married with Twins: Life, Love and the Pursuit of Marital Harmony. His books have been translated into Chinese, Croatian, and Korean, and are also available in the U.K., Canada, and Australia.

He is the co-editor, along with historian Stephanie Coontz of seven online volumes of Unconventional Wisdom: News You Can Use, a compendium of noteworthy research on the contemporary family, gender, sexuality, poverty, and work-family issues.