Why We Started Doing Weekly Family Councils (And Why We Still Need Them Right Now)

Why We Started Doing Weekly Family Councils (And Why We Still Need Them Right Now)

A few years ago, our kids were fighting constantly. Everything felt reactive. Small things turned into big blowups, and it felt like we were always behind. I remember feeling frustrated and worn down, wondering what we were missing.

I prayed for guidance, not because I needed a perfect system, but because what we were doing clearly wasn’t working.

The answer that kept coming back was simple: family councils.

Not rigid meetings. Not lectures. Just intentional conversations where everyone could slow down and feel heard.

What Changed When We Made Space to Listen

At the time, we were already using a visual calendar, which helped with logistics. But we needed something more relational. Something that addressed what our kids were carrying emotionally, not just what was coming up on the schedule.

Sundays became our anchor point. We’d sit down together, look at the week ahead, and talk through excitement, nerves, frustrations, and needs. It gave each of our kids a chance to speak up without having to compete for attention or wait until things boiled over.

That rhythm changed the tone in our home.

What Elder Ballard Taught About Family Councils

As we looked for guidance, we kept coming back to Elder Ballard’s teachings on family councils. What stood out to me most was how practical and grounded his counsel was.

He taught that family councils are different from family home evening. They aren’t about instruction or performance. They are about parents listening. About creating a climate where every voice matters and every family member feels valued.

Elder Ballard also promised that family councils help protect our homes from distraction and disconnection. That hit home for me. Especially now.

The world is loud. Our kids feel it. Even when they can’t name it, it shows up in their behavior, their anxiety, and their emotional regulation. Family councils give them a place to land.

He also taught that when families council together with love and invite the Lord into the conversation, problems are noticed earlier. Things don’t fester as long. Relationships strengthen before they fracture.

I’ve seen that play out in our home again and again.

When We Skip Family Council, We Feel It

When we let family councils slide, things unravel faster. Not just for the kids, for all of us.

More meltdowns.
More tension.
More miscommunication.

That realization is actually what led me to create Fern Family. I wanted tools that made these conversations easier, especially for families who already feel stretched thin.

What Is a Family Council?

A family council is a regular meeting where families talk through plans, challenges, and emotions together.

It’s not about fixing everything in one sitting.
It’s about staying connected.
It’s about listening before things escalate.

How We Run Family Councils in Our Home

We keep it simple. That’s what makes it sustainable.

We pick a regular time.
Ours is usually Sunday. Consistency matters more than length.

We ask intentional questions.
These are the questions we ask every week:

  • Does anyone have a problem they’d like help solving?
    Then we follow up with: What do you think we should do? How can we help?

  • How are chores and responsibilities going?
    Is anything feeling hard? Does someone need support?

  • What do we have planned for the week?
    We look at the monthly calendar and update anything that’s changed.
    Tests. Practices. Play dates.
    What are you excited for? What are you nervous about?

  • What has someone in our family done for you this week that you appreciated?
    We don’t rush this one. It helps our kids notice effort, not just outcomes.

  • How can we pray for you this week?
    This gives our kids language for what they need, even when they don’t quite have the words yet.

We write things down.
We use a whiteboard or paper so nothing gets lost.

Everyone participates.
Age doesn’t matter. We wait for Crew to run a lap around the table before he answers. Everyone’s voice counts.

We end with gratitude.
It helps reset the tone and reminds us we’re on the same team.

Why Family Councils Matter Right Now

Family councils won’t fix the world. But they do something important.

They give our kids a steady place in the middle of uncertainty.
They help us catch things early.
They build trust over time.

Elder Ballard taught that strong families strengthen communities. I believe that starts in small, consistent moments like these.

Want Help Getting Started?

If you want to make family councils feel more natural and less awkward, I’ve put together the exact questions we use in our home.

They’re simple. They’re practical. And they’re free.

You can download:

  • The full family council questions

  • A printable you can use right away

  • Plus other types of councils we use throughout the month

Scroll down to grab the free download and start where you are.

You don’t have to do this perfectly.
You just have to keep showing up.

xoxo, Lisa

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