Episodes
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Is your child's picky eating a sign of something more? Listen in to discover support and insights with my guest, Jaclyn Pederson.
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Feeding matters; parents often complain about their child's picky eating habits. We start to wonder if weâre doing something wrong, if our child is a picky eater, or if thereâs more to this ordeal. Today, my guest sheds light on a little-known eating disorder that is way more prevalent than we imagine.
What We Talked About:Understanding Pediatric Feeding Disorder (PFD) and how it differs from picky eating.
The Four Domains in Pediatric Feeding Disorder
How should you proceed if you suspect our child has PFD?
Early awareness of PFD and its impact on long-term health outcomes
Why is almost no one talking about PFD, even though it is more common than autism or cerebral palsy?
The challenges and complexities of treating PFD and how you can help your child.
Can lip and tongue ties be the culprits in the feeding journey?
The significance of establishing a supportive team including healthcare professionals
Things to RememberâParenting is finding beauty in the highest of highs and the lowest of lows.â
âFeeding skills is something that a parent can help a child with. It is a learned task.â
âChildren are picky, and itâs a very common thing that happens in toddler development.â
âIt's definitely important for parents to always offer nutritious foods.â
âTake it slow and let your child lead the way. They control what goes in their body.â
âAt the end of the day, you and your child are trying to establish a successful feeding.â
-Jaclyn Pederson
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Do you strongly feel that staying home would be best for your child? Listen in to find out why your hunch is correct and critical.
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We know in our mama's heart that staying home with our children is important because they need us to. Today, my guest confirmed this instinct we have as mothers and why it is critical to do so.
What We Talked About:Understanding why the first three years are critical for our child's long-term mental health
Why are daycare centers not equipped to support our childrenâs attachment needs
What is âconsistency of care,â and why is it essential in the early years?
What are other critical stages for our childrenâs mental health?
The important revolution that needs to happen for the health of families
Things to RememberâThere is no parenting without presence.â
âWithout guilt, our conscience isnât working.â
âThe foundation of resilience is that feeling of security in the first three years.â
âMothers are very attuned to babies' distress.â
âIf you are present for your children in the first three years, youâre encouraging a tremendous amount of neural connections to be formed.â
âYour babies are not resilient; your babies are incredibly vulnerable, and they need you.â
-Erica Komisar
âThere are many who hold, as I do, that the most important period of life is not the age of university studies, but the first one, the period from birth to the age of six. For that is the time when man's intelligence itself, his greatest implement, is being formed. But not only his intelligence; the full totality of his psychic powers.â - Dr. Maria Montessori
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Episodes manquant?
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Are you curious about the magic of daily rituals? Listen in and learn from my guest, Britta Bushnell, how they can transform your life.
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Iâve always been fascinated by the transformative process of birth, and why I became a birth doula. Today, Iâm excited to be speaking with Britta, a seasoned childbirth educator to explore how birth is truly the first and most crucial initiation into parenthood.
What We Talked About:The importance of childbirth as an initiation into parenthood.
Mythology and storytelling as meaning-making practices for adults and kids.
Incorporating rituals into family life to help you live and share your values.
How perfectionism can both hinder and help in our parenting
Practical tips for crafting seamless transitions between work and parenting
Things to RememberâParenting is a messy, creative, unknowable magical thing that creates a being on the other side.â
âParenthood is like a yoga practice, that idea of coming to the mat every day and knowing that some days are better and some days are worse, yet you still show up and do your best.â
âWhat causes us the most suffering is the resistance to what is happening.â
âParenthood teaches us an openness to the unbidden.â
âPerfectionism is a strategy, and as a strategy, it most often gets in our way.â
âInfants respond well to rhythm and predictability in their lives.â
âTo find ways to be tender with ourselves and to forgive ourselves. That is the true antidote to perfectionism's toxins.â
âChildren help to create the fabric of the values of the family.â
-Britta Bushnell
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Do you want to foster confidence in your teen better? Listen in and discover how you can start today at home.
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Helping our teenagers feel confident is critical to their well-being and future success, starting at home. Karleen shares her personal and professional experience as a conflict resolution expert. Listen in to acquire the tools to nurture the confidence your teens need to thrive in life.
We Talked About:What five universal skills do experts use to resolve conflicts, and how can you use them at home?
What unwanted baggage gets in the way of building your teenâs self-confidence and resiliency?
How conflict resolution skills can enhance parenting, especially with teens.
Curiosity, attitude, and masterful listening are significant tools in resolving family conflicts.
Real-life examples and practical strategies for applying conflict resolution techniques in parenting situations.
Things to RememberâEven when you get it right, even when you have it right, you can still get it wrong.â
âCuriosity is not just asking questions.â
âMaster listening in a conflict situation means you're filling in the gaps.â
âAnytime you're in a conflict, the most important part is connecting with that person.â
âWhen you want to build confidence in your children, allow them into the solution to bring them back in and give them a space for it.â
âSometimes situations are for our children to sort through.â
âYouâre absolutely meant to be the parent for your child.â
-Karleen Savage
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Is your child's screen time stealing precious moments? Listen in as my guest, Katherine Martinko, shares how to unplug and reclaim childhood.
What We Talked About:
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Katherineâs desire to write her book âChildhood Unplugged.ââ
The effects of excessive screen time have on our children's development and mental health
Navigating digital media use and fostering offline activities
Setting boundaries around screen time and social media use.
Modeling appropriate use of our digital devices to shape healthy screen habits for our children.
Alternative communication methods and developing human communication skills
Things to RememberâParenting is about conveying the principles that you believe to be the most important in life to your children and setting them off in the world on the right foot and watching them succeed.â
âThe benefits of having a smartphone simply do not outweigh the cons.â
âHandling a smartphone is on par with handling a car. Kids need that level of responsibility and emotional maturity to do it.â
âWhen you give kids responsibilities around the house, they have less time to hang out in their bedrooms, scroll on their phones, or play video games.â
âWe're too caught up with the idea that just because this technology is new and exciting, it is, therefore, good, but we're losing a lot in the process.â
âIt is up to us as parents to protect our children from the negative effects of this highly addictive substance the same way that we would limit our children's access to drugs, alcohol, and cigarettes.â
âWe promote better independence in children if you're not surveilling them.â
-Katherine Martinko
âTechnology is taking us to a place where children are forgetting to play. We need to rescue childhood.â - Mariana Carazo
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How far would you go to save your child's vision? Listen in as Stephen Johnston shares his mission to fight blindness for his son and thousands of others.
Click here for the show notes and extra resources.Itâs hard to imagine losing one sight, and even more heartbreaking to discover that your child is. My guest today is a father on a mission to find a cure not only for his child but all persons affected by the onset of blindness.
What We Talked About:The Precursor of Bardet-Biedl Syndrome
How Steve's parenting approach changed after his son's diagnosis
Steve's journey in creating a nonprofit organization, "A Race Against Blindness"
The importance of mental toughness and perseverance
How Steve and his family found strength and resilience in the face of adversity
Things to RememberâTomorrow is not guaranteed. Anything can happen at any given time.â
âEverybody can make a difference. It doesn't matter how many or how few resources anyone has. Everybody can make a difference.ââStart doing things that might prepare your children for challenges.â
âMake sure you have a support network for you and the kids, and youâll be able to get through whatever it is.â
âChallenges are coming for all of us at some point or another, and the more we prepare ourselves to face those head-on as they happen, the better off we are.â
-Stephen Johnston
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Do you have difficulty overcoming past trauma to start living the life you desire? Tune in to listen to Karenaâs transformative insights.
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What We Talked About:
The negative stories we tell ourselves can be quite damaging to our well-being. My guest today shares how to move beyond so we can rise above the story to live a fulfilling life.Why Karena felt compelled to share her story in her book
Her 3-step process to healing from trauma
Why, as parents, itâs crucial to have self-awareness
How to break free from negative self-talk
The unwanted ripple effects of trauma
How to find joy even in difficult times
Things to RememberâParenting is taking responsibility to cultivate a self-awareness around our past trauma.â
âWhat our brain does in the face of trauma is that it tries to keep us safe by writing these stories that keep us in a little box.â
âWe have the power to heal. Weâre just afraid to do it.â
âThere is more for us than just the pain we carry around.â
âWe are all here to experience joy and happiness.â
âThe powerful notion of honoring your emotions and feeling them in real time goes a long way toward mental and emotional well-being.â
â Karena Kilcoyne
âAuthenticity is the daily practice of letting go of who we think weâre supposed to be and embracing who we are.â â BrenĂ© Brown.
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Do you struggle with digital consumption, whether you or your children in your home? Listen in and learn what we now know about how technology impacts our children.
What We Talked About:
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Iâm concerned about technology's effects on our childrenâs developing brains. Today, I spoke with Forest Bronzan, a father leading global initiatives, so we can better understand how technology impacts our lives and our children.How technology is changing and impacting the way we raise our children.
The challenges we face in navigating social media
How parents can have open conversations with their children about technology use.
Teaching children critical thinking skills to help them evaluate the information they encounter online.
Setting healthy boundaries around technology use at home.
What is your DORA Score?
Things to RememberâParenting is being nimble to navigate an ever-changing world, and in many cases, that's technology.â
âStart early, have conversations at an early age with your children on what your family values are but also with your community.â
âThe biggest challenge is that high schoolers aren't aware of the negative influences on the internet.â
âParents need to pay closer attention to how their children learn about the world.â
âWe need to look at ourselves... We need to model the behavior ourselves.â
âThere's a lot of challenges and a lot that we don't know yet about the effectiveness of learning apps.â
âThere hasn't been a single study showing a positive benefit of social media before high school.â
âTry to put the phone down as much as possible during those first few years and spend time with your child.â
âTime goes by so fast. You don't want to miss those magical years checking a notification.â
- Forest Bronzan
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What if the teenage years weren't something to fear but a breakthrough opportunity for growth? Listen in as my guest, Ellen Galinsky, unveils a fresh approach.
What We Talked About: What adolescents want us to know about them What exactly are executive function skills, and why are they so crucial to children's development What can parents do to help their children develop executive function skills? Why turning conflicts into opportunities for learning is critical for all Agreeing and setting clear expectations with your children and leaving room for mistakes Things to Remember
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Adolescence is a transformative and extremely important time in human development. In her latest book, The Breakthrough Years, Ellen Galinsky shares what the research and adolescents need us to understand.âParents grow and change in parenthood just like children grow and change.â
"Executive function skills are the building blocks for setting goals, perspective-taking, communicating, collaborating, and problem-solving. They are fundamental to life."
âDon't fix it for the child; instead, help them learn the skills to fix it for themselves.â
âWe need to make mistakes. Making mistakes isn't a mistake. It's the way we learn.â
âWe learn by trial and error, particularly in teenage years.â
âThe most important thing we can do as parents is to help our children find their passion.â
âAdolescents are learning to be brave.â
âWe need to help them be creators. Not Consumers.â
âYoung people who do best in the world have something they care about beyond themselves.â
- Ellen Galinsky
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Do you ever wonder how negative early life experiences shape our childrenâs minds? Listen in as my guest, Marc Hauser explains the effect of early childhood trauma and what we can do about it.
What We Talked About:
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I know how impressionable young brains are and have always been fascinated with the concept of the absorbent mind. Yet, in this episode, we go a little deeper into understanding how early childhood traumas affect brain development. It was not an easy conversation, but an important one nonetheless.What compelled Marc to write about early childhood traumas in âVulnerable Mindsâ
The impact of trauma on children's overall development
The different types of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) and how they can affect children differently.
The Adverse Ts framework.
Creating safe environments for children to heal
Traumatic signatures and how they shape children's responses to adversity.
Ways to help children develop resilience and cope with adversity.
Things to RememberâWe need to understand both the nature of experiences and the nature of the responses.â
âThe earlier adversity occurs, the more likely the damage will occur because the brain is in a fragile state of development.â
âThe essence of the magic comes from building trusting relationships.â
âHow you help a child who's been abused is different from how you help a child who's been neglected.â
âDifferent kinds of traumatic experiences can greatly delay the natural development of certain kinds of cognitive, social, and emotional skills.â
âStress will derail three key parts of learning: Attention, Short-Term Memory, and Self-Regulation.â
âItâs important to recognize that many parents have their own history of traumatic experiences.â
- Marc Hauser
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What does it take to navigate the unique journey of parenting a disabled child? Listen to Kelley Coleman as she shares her inspiring insights.
Click here for the entire show notes and more from Jeanne-Marie.I created this podcast to serve parents, all parents, and today Kelley shares what it takes to parent a disabled child and shares with us her guide to doing so.
What We Talked About:Why Kelley wrote âEverything No One Tells You About Parenting a Disabled Childâ
The importance of having conversations about disability.
Challenges of navigating the support system for disabled children
Strategies and resources for navigating the complexities of caring for a disabled child.
The impact of disability on siblings.
Things to RememberâParenting is about us, the parents. We do not need to try to make our children into something but instead, model the behavior that we would like our children to learn.â
âWe are all the best parents for our unique child, and we all do great things.â
âTime is a huge privilege, and we must acknowledge that.â
âEveryone and every child deserves the same access.â
âParenting and being a caregiver are two distinct jobs when they merge; that's two full-time jobs!â
âWe talk about disability as one of the many facets of who my child is a whole and complete human.â
âIt reduces our ignorance when we are genuinely curious about other humans as humans.â
âThe number one determiner of how a child will feel about their sibling's disability is how the parents feel about the disability and what they are projecting.â
-Kelley Coleman
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How can you benefit from the Montessori approach? Listen to Simone and Junnifa as they reveal the key ingredients for fostering a thriving Montessori child at home.
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What a delight to have two of my Montessori friends on the podcast together. Our paths have crossed many times, and today, Iâm excited to learn more about Simone and Junnifasâ latest endeavor, their book The Montessori Child.
What We Talked About:Childrenâs Unconscious and Conscious Mind
The different planes of development in Montessori
The importance of sensory learning
Shifting from setting rules to creating agreements collaboratively.
Supporting Independence While Offering Support
The Montessori approach for the whole child
Things to Remember:âParenting is the process of being with our children, guiding them and accompanying them.â
âChildren change as they grow.â
âIt takes some consciousness to start seeing that our children are more capable of doing things as they get older.â
âIf you open your eyes, you'll see that each of our children is unique and different. Focus on those things that make them who they are.â
- Junnifa Uzodike
âBe the childâs guide on their journey, accept them for who they are, and step back to see that they are capable.â
âTeenagers just want to be able to feel they belong and make a change in the world.â
âJust let yourself grow through the highs and lows of everything that you learned.â
- Simone Davies
âNever help a child with a task at which he feels he can succeed.â - Dr. Maria Montessori
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Are you ready to rewrite the fatherhood script? Listen in as how my guest, Nick Adams, redefined fatherhood.
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We all want to do better than our parents. It is part of parenting. Today, my guest shared his guide to being the father he wishes he had had.
What We Talked About:Why Nick felt the need to write his book
Why is the father's role so important
The Five Big Stones of Effective Fatherhood
Common Challenges Fathers Face
Building solid and loving relationships between fathers and their children.
Things to Remember:âParenting is maintaining relationships and raising significant, effective adults.â
âInstead of stressing over all of the things you could be trying to do, letâs focus on the truly important things.â
âFatherhood is a superpower.â
âThereâs power just in being.â
âA huge part of my parenting is having a life-long relationship with my children and helping them become effective, responsible adults.â
âParents need to see the best in their children and help them see the best in themselves.â
âThe goal of parenthood is not perfection. Itâs progress.â
-Nick Adams
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Have you ever wondered⊠âWhat have I gotten myself into!?â When reflecting on your parenting journey? You are not alone!
Youâre amazing! I wanted to share my love and gratitude for you and invite you to join me in my Keep Cool & Carry On Discipline Challenge. Letâs debunk the myth that parenting has to be hard together.
What I Talked About:
Click here for more from Jeanne-Marie, your parenting mentor.Changing our mindset to debunk the myth that parenting has to be hard
The foundation of Positive Discipline
My Free 7-Day Keep Cool & Carry On! Discipline Challenge
Looking forward to the doors of the Parenting School opening soon
Things to Remember:âWith a positive and intentional mindset, parenting can be a joyous, fulfilling adventure.â
âWe all strive to have significance and belonging. Our children's behavior informs us whether or not they feel they have significance and belonging.â
âThe essence of discipline is to develop self-discipline.â
â Jeanne-Marie Paynel
âToo often we forget that discipline really means to teach, not to punish. A disciple is a student, not a recipient of behavioral consequences.â â Daniel J. Siegel
âOf all things, Love is the most potent.â
âDiscipline must come through liberty.â
â Dr. Maria Montessori
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Are you curious about the psychology behind your child's actions? Tune in as my guest, Dr. Tasha Brown shares her insights and expert notes.
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When working with parents or, as apparent myself, I often wonder if this situation warrants seeking the advice of a professional psychologist. Today, Dr. Tasha Brown helps us clarify when it is essential to seek them out.
What We Talked About:How to know when you and your child need to meet with a psychologist
Dr. Tashaâs Parent Management Training
The difference between Labeled intentional praise and unlabeled praise.
Positive reinforcement and "cool down" spaces instead of punitive âtimeouts.â
Age-appropriate expectations for children
Early signs of depression in adolescent girls and how to support them
Things to Remember:âWhen you work with children, youâre not just working with an individual. Youâre working with a family.â
âWe know that the more attention we give to certain behaviors, the more we see them, even if theyâre negative.â
âWhen itâs important to the family's well-being that the child listens right away, we teach parents how to make appropriate requests of their children.â
âSet the expectations but also manage your expectations.â
âWhen children have what we call âprotective factors,â it decreases their likelihood of anxiety and depression as adolescents.â
âChildren are not born with the language they need to express their BIG emotions. The adults in their lives model and teach them how to communicate effectively.â
â Dr. Tasha Brown
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Are you highly connected to your intuition? Listen in as my guest shares some insight on how you can activate your inner wisdom.
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We are all gifted with powerful intuition; whether we choose to listen to it or not is another question. Today, my guest shared some important strategies to tune into our own and help our children do the same.
What We Talked About:How can we tune into our inner knowing
Supporting and protecting our highly intuitive children
Healing your inner child to become more present as a parent.
Connecting with your child on a soul level
Things to Remember:âWhen we can connect with our children simultaneously on the human and the soul level, thatâs when the magic happens.â
âWhen tapping into your intuition, you connect with your soul.â
âIntuition is that deep knowing that you have that has nothing to do with what you know with your mind, and it is always right.â
âOur natural resting state as the soul is a perfect state of well-being.â
âConnecting with your intuition is learning to trust it.â
âYour intuition will tell you what is the most aligned choice or truth in the now.â
- Victoria Shaw
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Curious about the impact of asking yourself some powerful questions? Tune in as my guest, Allison Task, shares insights on attunement and connection.
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Asking powerful questions is fundamental to being attuned to ourselves and our children. Today, my guest, a life coach and mother of four, helps parents through life-changing transitions.
What We Talked About:Helping career-driven women transition into Motherhood
Questions parents can ask themselves to tune in to themselves and their children
Staying attuned to family while traveling for work
Suggestions of what we can do to feel attuned to ourselves and to our child
Things to RememberâTune in to what you want and let go of visions of yourself that are no longer in sync with what you want.â
âThereâs a big difference between what we think will happen when we have our child and what does happen.â
âPhysically attuning with your child can be powerful and connecting.â
âYouâre here to co-regulate with them until they can regulate on their own.â
- Allison task
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Are you curious about cultivating emotional intelligence in your children? Listen in as my guest, Dr. Maiysha Clairborne, shares transformative insights.
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Becoming a parent often reveals unhealed trauma, and our children will activate emotions we did not even know existed, which is why it is so important to do our healing work as we parent.
What We Talked About:What is Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP)
How can we be self-aware as parents
What might be the blind spots we have when parenting
Trauma Responsive Communication
How can we help our children navigate trauma
Things to RememberâFlexibility comes with creatively listening to the deeper context of what our children are communicating.â
âWhen we start to see the behavior as the communication, then we can begin to ask the right questions.â
âCommunication is more than just words. Only 7% of communication are words, 93% is everything else.â
âThe meaning of your communication is the response you get.â
âTrauma has an impact on our thinking, behavior, and communication.â
âGoing through the healing process helps to stop the behaviors, communication, and thoughts that inflict trauma on the younger generation.â
âWe have to practice self-compassion and self-love throughout our parenting journey. Or else we will continue to traumatize and re-traumatize ourselves and that's no good for our children.â
- Dr. Maiysha Clairborne
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Ever wish you could hit pause on your buzzing brain? Listen in as we dive into the secrets of taming our busy minds with Dr. Romie Mushtaq.
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As parents, especially new parents, itâs critical to learn about taming our busy brains if we want to be there for our family and ourselves. Learn about some of the culprits of brain drains.
What We Talked About:The eight weeks brainSHIFT protocol Dr. Romie has created
The importance of unwinding our Busy Brains
The Power of Micro-habits for Brain Improvement
How and why it is essential to restore your sleep cycle
Daily Digital Detox is a way to calm your senses and nervous system
A few essential nutrition biohacks that can benefit brain health
The âadditional stressâ for the new parents and want to watch out for
Things to RememberâParenting starts with showing radical self-compassion to yourself first.â
âSometimes as children, intuitively, we know whatâs going to happen in the future.â
âWe can love what we're doing and still have mental health challenges and burnout.â
âDiet is a four-letter curse word in a brain shift community.â
âA child of any age can sense your anxiety.â
âYour brain is not broken, your mind is not a mess, and your spirit did not depart your soul. Just take our hand, and letâs brain shift together.â
- Dr. Romie
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How do you embrace mindfulness in everyday parenting? Listen in to Mindful Mama Hunter Clarke-Fields as she leads the way to raising good humans every day.
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What a wonderful way to start the new year mindfully! I'm thrilled to have Hunter back on the podcast to share her mindfulness approach to raising good humans every day.
What We Talked About:Her definition of Mindfulness
Learning to be in a âbeing modeâ
Hunterâs C.L.E.A.R Method
How to be more present with our children
Nurturing Mindfulness with Our Children
The Raising Good Humans Guided Journal
Understanding what âunskilled wordsâ are in Parenting
Things to RememberâMindfulness is an incredible tool to help us be less reactive.â
âBlaming and shaming doesnât work.â
âWe do not have to fix and solve all our children's problems.â
âWhat our children ultimately want from us is to be seen, heard and accepted.â
âYou wouldnât be a great parent if you didnât mess up sometimes.â
- Hunter Clarke-Fields
âWhen you love someone, the best thing you can offer is your presence. How can you love if you are not there.â - Thich Nhat Hanh
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