If you want to be like everybody else, just imitate the behavior of everyone around you. If you want to be an ordinary family, conform to what you see other families do. If like what you see in the culture around you — and you want to become a reflection of that — act in the ways the culture dictates.
You will become just like the people around you. And you and your children will end up just as dysfunctional as the culture to which you’re allowing yourself to conform.
But what if you want to become extraordinary instead? What if you want your family to have the love, connection and stability you don’t see in ordinary families?
You can choose to be extraordinary. You can be emotionally healthy in a dysfunctional world. You can make conscious choices about what your life will be. But that requires sacrifices. You can’t take the easy way of simply “fitting in.” You have to make hard choices — and it requires you to be constantly at war with a sick and brutal culture which demands mindless conformity.

Not satire this time: In New Zealand, one model cries discrimination
In the great new culture war over Thanksgiving shopping, I’m neutral
Science or bias? What if there’s no proof that eating fat will kill you?
My Twitter suspension is reminder that free speech is under assault
Life as misunderstood stranger feels like walking through a fog
How can a child process seeing his mother trying to stab father?
Health risk and social costs make drinking alcohol a very poor risk