DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

How to Approach Even the Hardest Family Discussions

December 6, 2025
in News
How to Approach Even the Hardest Family Discussions

This is an edition of The Wonder Reader, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a set of stories to spark your curiosity and fill you with delight. Sign up here to get it every Saturday morning.

“Talking about politics at our family gatherings can be like smoking a cigarette at a gas station—there’s a good chance it will make the whole place explode,” the journalist Elizabeth Harris wrote last year. So she tried to approach these conversations like a reporter: “I wasn’t looking to have a back-and-forth; I was looking for information. I wanted to know what they thought and why.”

Politics isn’t the only topic that can feel impossible to discuss. Families struggle to talk about their history, about what they need from one another, about the things they regret or haven’t forgiven one another for. The holidays can sometimes feel like the powder keg Harris described, where everyone is trying to avoid saying the wrong thing. But maybe there’s another way. Today’s newsletter explores how to approach even the hardest family conversations.


On Family Conversations

The Questions We Don’t Ask Our Families but Should

By Elizabeth Keating

Many people don’t know very much about their older relatives. But if we don’t ask, we risk never knowing our own history. (From 2022)

Read the article.

How to Not Fight With Your Family About Politics

By Elizabeth Harris

This holiday, ask questions like a reporter.

Read the article.

Why We Speak More Weirdly at Home

By Kathryn Hymes

When people share a space, their collective experience can sprout its own vocabulary, known as a familect. (From 2021)

Read the article.


Still Curious?

  • Couples therapy, but for siblings: The practice isn’t common. Maybe it should be, Faith Hill wrote last year.
  • The longest relationships of our lives: As brothers and sisters grow up, what they do can determine whether they stay stuck in their childhood roles—or break free of them, Angela Chen wrote in 2023.

Other Diversions

  • The books that made us think the most this year
  • No NFL game has ever ended in a score of 36–23.
  • Colorful stars of all ages

PS

An image of sunrise on the beach
Courtesy of Karen P.

I recently asked readers to share a photo of something that sparks their sense of awe in the world. Today’s submission is from Karen P., who describes her view of “life in retirement at Sunrise Beach in Marshfield, Massachusetts.”

I’ll continue to feature your responses in the coming weeks.

— Isabel

The post How to Approach Even the Hardest Family Discussions appeared first on The Atlantic.

An Emboldened Trump Places His Bets From Caracas to Tehran
News

An Emboldened Trump Places His Bets From Caracas to Tehran

by New York Times
January 14, 2026

President Trump has put some big bets on the table, all at once. He is gambling that he can exploit ...

Read more
News

ICE Prosecutor Revealed as Racist Troll Is Back at Work

January 14, 2026
News

A millennial who hit a 7-figure net worth after quitting corporate life to be a content creator explains how to make money online

January 14, 2026
News

Illinois surgeon Michael McKee evaded medical malpractice suit for years before allegedly killing ex-wife, dentist husband

January 14, 2026
News

Thom Tillis wants you to know something: ‘I’m sick of stupid’

January 14, 2026
The Art of a Good Awards-Show Speech

The Art of a Good Awards-Show Speech

January 14, 2026
What Comes Next for Venezuela — and Who Decides?

What Comes Next for Venezuela — and Who Decides?

January 14, 2026
Drum Diplomacy: Leaders of Japan and South Korea in Sync to K-pop

Drum Diplomacy: Leaders of Japan and South Korea in Sync to K-pop

January 14, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025