A Quote by Harshvardhan Rane

I've seen the best and worst of times. My parents were divorced when I was a child. I was brought up by my father. — © Harshvardhan Rane
I've seen the best and worst of times. My parents were divorced when I was a child. I was brought up by my father.
The word 'divorce' wasn't foreign to me. As a child of the 1970s, I grew up as part of a generation of kids whose parents got divorced, and it wasn't seen as this terrible thing. Maybe that's why I believed what my father told me and Reina that day: that everything would be okay. But it wasn't.
My parents were divorced when I was young. I was really brought up by my mother's side of the family.
My own parents divorced when I was six. I was raised with my brother Joel by our mother on the East Coast, visiting my father in Los Angeles during holidays. When your parents are divorced, you don't know anything else, do you?
My parents were divorced and I didn't grow up with my father, but I spent a lot of time around him, and his influence on me has been profound.
We had to make ends meet. My parents were divorced, so my father wasn't really in my life. We grew up like most kids, just wanting things.
My parents were divorced and I would spend weekends with my father.
If a child has divorced parents, the best thing you can do is help add stability to their lives.
My parents were divorced when I was three, and both my father and mother moved back into the homes of their parents. I spent the school year with my mother, and the summers with my dad.
My parents got divorced and military school gave me a structure. A lot of kids my age were children of divorced parents. They didn't know what to do with the kids.
My parents divorced when I was young but I was brought up in two really loving households. I didn't have a contentious relationship with my mom or dad.
My father's family were liquidated during the Cultural Revolution in China because they were landowners. He was the only one to escape. I was born and brought up in Taiwan. But you absorb the trauma. My parents had no sense of security.
That's the irony in the work: the best stories are the worst things that happen. My best times were somebody else's worst.
Any father…must finally give his child up to the wilderness and trust to the providence of God. It seems almost a cruelty for one generation to beget another when parents can secure so little for their children, so little safety, even in the best circumstances. Great faith is required to give the child up, trusting God to honor the parents’ love for him by assuring that there will indeed be angels in that wilderness.
My parents were divorced when I was seven years old and later we kids moved all over first with my mother and then with my father.
When my parents were divorced in the late '70s, early '80s, the climate was that you should screw over your ex as much as possible - get the worst lawyer in the world, all that. That's not what people are out to do anymore. It feels cruddy to try and destroy each other just because you're breaking up.
The worst thing you can do to a child, and I've seen it happen so many times, is the silver spoon.
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