About Us
Last updated: July 17, 2026
About Quantly.top
Who This Site Is For
Quantly.top is written for anyone who wants to understand family relationships better — without jargon, shame, or oversimplification. Whether you are a new parent trying to set boundaries with extended family, a partner navigating in-law dynamics, a sibling rebuilding trust after a conflict, or an adult child learning to communicate with aging parents, this blog is for you.
We assume you have no background in psychology or counseling. Every article starts from the ground up, using everyday analogies (like comparing sibling rivalry to shared bicycle ownership, or explaining attachment styles through how people pack a suitcase). Our goal is to make relationship skills feel approachable, not academic.
Topics We Cover
Our editorial focus stays inside the world of family relationships. You will find articles organized around these core areas:
- Parent–child dynamics — from toddler years to adult children, including aging parents and caregiving.
- Marriage and partnership within the family system — co-parenting, blended families, and maintaining connection under stress.
- Sibling relationships — rivalry, loyalty, distance, and reconnection across life stages.
- Extended family and in-laws — boundaries, holidays, cultural differences, and multigenerational living.
- Conflict repair and communication — practical scripts, apology language, and rebuilding trust after a fallout.
- Family patterns and change — how habits get passed down, and how to shift them without blame.
Every article is written with concrete examples you can recognize from real life. We avoid vague advice like “communicate better” and instead show you what that sounds like in a kitchen-table conversation.
Our Editorial Standards
We take trust seriously. This is a content publication, not a consulting firm or a store. We do not sell relationship coaching, and we never invent expert credentials. Here is how we maintain quality:
- Factual grounding. When we reference research (attachment theory, conflict resolution models, developmental psychology), we link to peer-reviewed studies or established professional sources. We do not make up statistics.
- Regular updates. Family dynamics change as society changes. We review our most popular articles every six months and update them when new research emerges or when common practices shift (for example, updated guidance on screen time boundaries or co-parenting communication tools).
- No fake personas. You will not find a “Founder & CEO” with a stock photo or a team page listing invented therapists. Quantly.top is edited by a small group of writers and editors who share a commitment to clear, humble writing. We do not claim decades of clinical experience — we claim careful research and a dedication to explaining things plainly.
- Corrections policy. If we make a mistake, we correct it promptly and note the change at the bottom of the article. Readers can always reach us to flag errors.
Why We Started Quantly.top
Most relationship advice falls into two extremes: either it is so vague it is useless, or it is so clinical it feels cold. We wanted a middle ground — a place where a tired parent or a frustrated sibling could find an explanation that actually makes sense, with an analogy that sticks. We also noticed that family relationships are often treated as an afterthought in the self-help world, buried under career advice or romantic relationship tips. Family is the first relationship we ever know, and it deserves its own thoughtful, dedicated space.
Contact Us
We welcome questions, suggestions, or corrections. If you have an idea for a topic, or if something in an article did not sit right, please reach out.
Email: [email protected]
Mailing address: 6967 Main St, Lewiston, Maine 50807
We read every message, though we cannot always reply individually. Your input helps us decide what to cover next.