Their relationship should be healthy, which called the consummate love; the one that includes intimacy, passion, and commitment (“Prosocial Behavior”, 2014). When they share their opinions, experience, secrets, and emotions, they get to know each other in an obvious way. When they take care of each other and concern about each other in both happiness and sadness situations, their marriage will be much stronger. Also, they respect and encourage each other, so that their relation tend to be strength. Ben-Zeév (2014), a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Haifa, states that couples have mutual things in their relationship, which make the relationship stronger. As a result, they will be able to raise their own children and build a great family …show more content…
When new married couples are getting a new baby born and become parents for the first time. They might be worry at the beginning somehow because it will be a big change for them, and their responsibility is going to be much bigger. However, if they stand together, they will be able to raise their baby and get another one. When they got a new baby born they take care of the kid and will teach him or her until the kid is able to depend on his or herself and then later it will be the child’s turn to take care of her or his parents (“What Is Marriage? What Is a Family?”, 2015). In addition, all parents set some rules for their children like what time they could watch TV, what time they must be sleeping, and how they must be polite when they talk to their parents. Then if children break any rule sometime, they will be punished like they do not allowed to watch TV in that day. Moreover, the most important thing is that parents should not be very strict with the kids because if they are very strict, that will make the kids alienated from them. As a result, their relationship will be very awkward and difficult. If the parents had been very friendly, trusting, and loving with their children from the beginning, they will be well succeed in building a good relationship with their children when they become adults (Oswalt,