How a person turns out has a lot to do with genetics. Both parents can be short, but if a dominant gene for being called is given to their child, their child will be tall.
They get married without any one knowing because their families are bitter enemies and if they told their parents about their love they would be against it.
The kids. Depends on how the parents handle it. There are happy divorces where the kid can stay and parents move in and out. If they handle it bad and the kids don't have access to both parents it's the kids who suffer but it can also be the parents who's future is gone and they find themselves left and cheated on. They have a bigger future to rebuild on their own without help.
He will leave & you deserve it. YOU CHEATED ON HIM. It's not fair to him to be cheated on without knowing & it's unfair for you to leave HIM because YOU cheated. Cheating, if you want to cheat then face the consequences.
No.
100%
in what ways do people rebel against their families
Yes absolutely. The majority of teens getting into trouble with the law and becoming teen parents, they grew up without a dad present. That kind of says it all.
A child without parents is an orphan.
WATERSALTMILK
You cannot, unless you trade with someone who cheated.
They go home without medals.
Family life in Canada is as diverse as its people. While many families are made up of two parents with children, there are many other types of families as well. In Canada, you may form the type of family that works best for you. For example, Canada has over one million single-parent families, with women heading most. There are hundreds of thousands of stepfamilies---created when adults who already have children marry one another---and many common-law unions (unmarried people who live together) with and without children. Sometimes grandparents raise their grandchildren or uncles and aunts raise their nieces and nephews. Some parents adopt children. Other families are made up of same-sex couples, with or without children, and many couples have no children. Sometimes extended families live together, with parents, children, uncles, aunts, cousins and grandparents all living under one roof. It is common in Canada for two-parent families to have both parents working outside the home.