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How to Stay Connected with Family During Times of Strife

Tuesday, September 2, 2025 • •
When you're at odds with family, healing may take time, but you can still nurture the relationship through consistent love, prayer, humility, and open-hearted actions. By choosing connection over correction and grace over pride, you keep the door open for reconciliation and peace.
How to Stay Connected with Family During Times of Strife

When you’re at odds with family, it can feel heartbreaking—but there are still meaningful things you can do to nurture the relationship, even in the tension. Here’s a list of ideas to keep communication open, model love, and move toward peace:


1. Pray First, Pray Often

  • Ask God to soften hearts on both sides.
  • Pray for them—not about them.
  • Ask for wisdom, humility, and an open door to reconciliation.
  • Let your prayers shape your perspective before your words do.

2. Keep Showing Up in Love

  • Send birthday cards, small gifts, or notes—even if the response is cold.
  • Love does not require agreement.
  • Respect their boundaries, but remain gently present in their lives.

3. Speak Well of Them (Even When They’re Not Around)

  • Guard your tongue, especially in front of others.
  • Bitterness breeds division. Honor their position, even if you’re hurt.
  • If you mess up, be quick to apologize.

4. Own What You Can

  • Reflect on your role in the conflict. Even small things matter.
  • A sincere apology—even for tone, assumptions, or past moments—can soften walls.
  • Example: “I realize I may have hurt you when I said ___. That wasn’t my heart, and I’m truly sorry.”

5. Focus on Connection, Not Correction

  • Avoid making every conversation about the issue.
  • Find neutral, shared experiences like:
    • Inviting them for a meal (without an agenda).
    • Doing a project together (like gardening, cooking, or home repairs).
    • Attending a neutral event like a concert, sports game, or local outing.
  • Sometimes healing happens around the conflict before it happens through it.

6. Give Space (but Stay Open)

  • If they need space, honor that—without closing the door.
  • Text or write occasionally to say:
    “We’re here, we love you, and we’re always open to talk when you’re ready.”

7. Include, Don’t Exclude

  • Keep inviting them to family events, holidays, or simple get-togethers.
  • Even if they decline, the invitation communicates: You’re still part of us.

8. Be Willing to Listen, Not Lecture

  • If they open up, resist the urge to defend yourself.
  • Listen with empathy—even if you disagree with their perspective.
  • Say: “I hear you. That must have hurt. Thank you for being honest with me.”

9. Fight for Unity, Not for Being Right

  • Romans 12:18 says, “If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone.”
  • The goal isn’t winning arguments—it’s winning hearts.

10. Keep Hope Alive

  • Relationships can heal, even after long seasons of strain.
  • Stay faithful in love, and don’t underestimate the power of time, truth, and humility.

Final Thought:

Relationships may not be where you want them to be right now—but you can still choose love, humility, and hope. Sometimes the most powerful bridge is built through small, steady acts of grace.

 

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