THE Mama FILES
MEET OUR TEAM AMY L. FOREMAN
PUBLISHER EDITORIAL
AMANDA MILLER MANAGING EDITOR AMANDA CIANI MADELINE PISTORIUS AMELIA ROESSLER JULIANNA STEEN ASSOCIATE EDITORS ART/PRODUCTION CHLOE ALLEN PRODUCTION MANAGER KAYLA DUPREE MADELINE MILETELLO ASAREL SMITH
The Season of Letting Go I t’s hard to believe I’m about to let my old- est spread her wings and leave the nest. Is she ready? My honest answer is no. Do I feel like she’s been taught everything she needs to survive on her own? Again…no. Somewhere around the transition to high school, I look back and wonder if I started to miss the mark. I always wanted to be a great mother—but also someone she would still talk to. Somewhere along the way, I may have leaned a little too far into “friend” and not enough into “push her harder.”That balance is tricky, and no one hands you a manual when they hand you a newborn.
MCKINNA SPROLES GRAPHIC DESIGNERS MORGAN ESPENAN DIGITAL CONTENT COORDINATOR SARAH MILLER CLIENT SUCCESS MANAGER SABRINA SMITH BREE WRAY CLIENT SUCCESS SPECIALIST JILLIAN NORMAN PRODUCTION INTERN ADVERTISING/MARKETING
want these kids to grow into independent adults. But research shows the teenage brain isn’t fully developed until the mid-to-late twenties (around age 25 on average). So expecting 15-, 16-, or 17-year-olds to make life-altering decisions without consistent parental involvement feels… ambitious. Needless to say, I’ve learned a few things I hope can help other parents navigate this season. First: Get access to your child’s email and Common App account. Better yet, create a new, professional email address with their name in it. Use the same email and password across platforms (write it down somewhere safe). This has been a lifesaver. I can track deadlines, spot scholarship opportunities, and gently remind her before the clock runs out. And speaking of scholarships—apply for all of them. You truly can’t apply for too many. The worst that happens? You don’t get them all. The best? You do. My one regret? Not doing more college tours. Maybe we’ll still squeeze a few in. As much as I want her to stay close to home (where I can “accidentally” drop off groceries), there’s a big world out there, and I want her to explore it. I want her to become the independent, fierce young woman she’s already becoming. My mini-me—just a little smarter, a little sassier, with bigger goals…and the same big heart that loves big.
ASHLEY ZANDERS SALES OPERATIONS CRYSTAL BARRETT
ANTOINE COURTNEY KAYLA FRICKS GOMEZ RYN WHITESIDE SENIOR ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES CAMILLE CAVIN
JENNIFER HOFFMANN KAYLEIGH MONTANA JILLIAN WRAY ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES ELISABETH BARRETT
Is she a bad kid? Absolutely not.
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She has the biggest heart. She’s compas- sionate. She loves children. She stands up to bullies and fiercely protects the people she cares about. Sometimes she loves too much, trusts too easily, and gives her heart away when it isn’t always deserved. As we close out her high school years and step into the college chapter, it’s bitter- sweet—heavy on the sweet, if I’m being honest. It’s been a learning experience for both of us. I’m incredibly grateful her school provides a college counselor to guide students through the process. My only frustration? Parents are largely cut out. We receive the same reminder emails the students do, but unless you’re having regular conversations at home, things get missed. I understand the intention—they
And maybe that means I didn’t do such a bad job after all.
Amy L. Foreman Publisher
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CINCINNATI FAMILY MAGAZINE is published monthly by FAMILY RESOURCE GROUP INC. (FRG) and distributed free of charge. Subscriptions accepted. Only authorized distributors may deliver and pick up the magazine. Paid advertisements appear in FRG publications, including print and other digital formats. FRG does not endorse or evaluate the product, service, or company, nor any claims made by the advertisement. We reserve the right to edit, reject, or comment editorially on all materials contributed. Some content in this magazine was created with assistance from AI tools and has been reviewed and edited by our human editorial team. We cannot be held responsible for the return of any unsolicited material. CINCINNATI FAMILY MAGAZINE Copyright 2026. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission prohibited. Email amy@frg.inc to tell me about topics you’d like to see in future issues.
6 MARCH 2026 | CINCINNATIFAMILYMAGAZINE.COM
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