Your Family Culture is Broken (Here's How to Fix It)

Dec 10, 2025 5:36 am

Hi ,

Quick question: If I asked your teen, "What's it like at home?" what would they say?

"Everyone's always stressed?" "We don't really talk?" "Everyone's just on their phones?"

If that makes you wince, you're not alone.

Most families don't intentionally design their culture. It happens by accident—slowly, until suddenly you don't recognize your own home.

The signs:

  • Everyone retreats to screens and separate spaces
  • Conversations are just logistics
  • Teens choose to be anywhere but home
  • Connection feels forced
  • You're managing a household, not building a family

Here's what this costs:

For teens: increased anxiety, depression, risky behaviors, phone addiction (seeking connection elsewhere)

For parents: chronic stress, loss of influence, guilt

For everyone: lost years that can't be recovered

But here's the hope: Culture can be reset. Starting today.

The Framework:

Week 1: Acknowledge reality Have a blame-free family meeting: "I've noticed we're disconnected. I want to change that. What do you all think?"

Week 2: Define values together "What kind of family do we want to be?" Get everyone's input.

Weeks 3-4: Design daily rhythms Values need practices:

  • Device-free family dinners
  • Weekly family meetings (10 minutes to share highs/lows)
  • One-on-one parent-teen time
  • Phone-free zones

Weeks 5-6: Address elephants Name the unspoken issues. Take responsibility for your part.

One family I worked with was barely speaking. They felt like strangers. Six months after implementing a culture reset, the mom told me, "My son voluntarily hangs out with us now. My daughter shares about her life. We actually enjoy each other. I have my family back."

What changed? They decided connection mattered more than convenience.

This week's action:

  1. Have a conversation with your family about wanting to be more connected
  2. Choose ONE practice to start (I recommend device-free dinners)
  3. Commit for two weeks

Start small. Be consistent. Give it time.

Because the family culture you have is the one you've designed—intentionally or accidentally. The family culture you want is one choice away.

Your teens are only home for a limited time. Don't spend those years merely coexisting.

Next week: What to do when your teen is really struggling (mental health, addiction, crisis).

To families that thrive,

Latifah Ajetunmobi

P.S. The number one regret from parents of adult children? "I wish we'd prioritized family time more." Don't wait until they're gone to wish you'd been more present.

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