what is family in your life means
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family means support and love which nobody else can give us in the world as because everybody is behind money but our parents want us to study they dont care about the money and give us everythin in one say and never deny so for me family is the very precious gift from god
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The concept of family is changing. The causes and effects are many, including globalization, technology and changing values, as gbtimes has shown during February.
These transformations do not, however, mean that family has lost its meaning. On the contrary: we asked people in nine countries what family means to them and everywhere our reporters went, from Lithuania through Hungary, Serbia, Macedonia and Romania to Greece, Turkey, Georgia and Kyrgyzstan almost everyone made clear that their family is the most important thing in their lives.
“My family is my nest. In it I share laughter, joy, tears, successes, failures and problems. Everything is easier when you have someone to share it with,” Lucija from Macedonia explains.
Family’s importance changes with age
The role of family is not only changing in society as a whole, it also changes during the course of a person's life. For 18-year-old Salome Buava in Georgia, her career is her main priority for now.
In Hungary, however, Dániel recommends having children at a young age. He was only 23 years old when his son was born. “I have never regretted it. To be a young father is a very good thing. I love to think that when I am 43 years old my son will be 20,” says the now 32-year-old.
For Dániel’s 68-year-old countryman Kálmán, family took on a new meaning when he became a grandfather. “As I come closer and closer to 70, I consider my grandchildren a blessing from God. They can give so much pleasure and peace to a man who is in the last stretch of his life; it’s a kind of feeling that you can’t find anywhere else anymore.”
64-year-old Nora Burjanadze in Georgia agrees that grandchildren are greatly important. “Children are good, but grandchildren are even better,” she says. “It's great to have a good family, and it is so important for a family to be big. I have only one grandchild; it breaks my heart.”
These transformations do not, however, mean that family has lost its meaning. On the contrary: we asked people in nine countries what family means to them and everywhere our reporters went, from Lithuania through Hungary, Serbia, Macedonia and Romania to Greece, Turkey, Georgia and Kyrgyzstan almost everyone made clear that their family is the most important thing in their lives.
“My family is my nest. In it I share laughter, joy, tears, successes, failures and problems. Everything is easier when you have someone to share it with,” Lucija from Macedonia explains.
Family’s importance changes with age
The role of family is not only changing in society as a whole, it also changes during the course of a person's life. For 18-year-old Salome Buava in Georgia, her career is her main priority for now.
In Hungary, however, Dániel recommends having children at a young age. He was only 23 years old when his son was born. “I have never regretted it. To be a young father is a very good thing. I love to think that when I am 43 years old my son will be 20,” says the now 32-year-old.
For Dániel’s 68-year-old countryman Kálmán, family took on a new meaning when he became a grandfather. “As I come closer and closer to 70, I consider my grandchildren a blessing from God. They can give so much pleasure and peace to a man who is in the last stretch of his life; it’s a kind of feeling that you can’t find anywhere else anymore.”
64-year-old Nora Burjanadze in Georgia agrees that grandchildren are greatly important. “Children are good, but grandchildren are even better,” she says. “It's great to have a good family, and it is so important for a family to be big. I have only one grandchild; it breaks my heart.”
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