The following is a list of ways to help marriages get off to a healthy start:
1. Newly married couples should leave their parents and cleave unto their spouses
Every marriage can have a healthy start. In fact, let's start in the very beginning.....(Genesis 2:24). "Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife; and they shall be one flesh." This is one of the first scriptures found in the Old Testament regarding family relationships. Elder Marvin J. Ashton teaches:
Certainly a now-married man should cleave unto his wife in faithfulness, protection, comfort, and total support, but in leaving father, mother, and other family members, it was never intended that they now be ignored, abandoned, shunned, or deserted. They are still family, a great source of strength.... Wise parents, whose children have left to start their own families, realize their family role still continues, not in a realm of domination, control, regulation, supervision, or imposition, but in love, concern, and encouragement.
2. Create a marital identity
Seek parental support in this endeavor. Remember, "parents give their children two things: roots to grow, and wings to fly." Establish your own home, your own traditions, your own marital identity.3. Accept differences in your in-laws family
From Poduska's "Til Debt Do Us Part" chapter 2, "What We Bring with Us" we learn that every family has rules; explicit family rules, implicit family rules, and intuitive family rules. Relationships will be improved if you take the time to make an inventory of your different family rules, take note of rules that are a source of conflict, talk about when family rules are broken, learn to cope with family financial rules by evaluating birth-order clusters, discover financially effective personality characteristics, and finally, evaluate your task satisfaction scale.
4. Include the new spouses in the extended family
Communication is key in helping families form healthy relationships. "Parents can be most supportive by encouraging their child's relationship with his or her in-laws, by inquiring sometimes about the well-being of the other in-laws, and by avoiding duplicating in a competitive way what they other set of in-laws does (Helping and Healing Our Families, pg. 332).
Extended families are a blessing to newly married couples. It is summarized best in the Proclamation, "Extended families should lend support when needed." When both parents and children can remember these words, eternal relationships will flourish!











