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Reclaiming your choice: and parenting from your center
The more we know and remember our center, the less control our emotional states have over us. This is how we learn to parent ourselves from that wise and loving center. To bring healing and change to the parts of us that cry out to us through states of unease, tension, anxiety, deep sadness, anger, rage. And from this same solid center, to receive and really soak in the moments of ease, happiness, joy, contentment, and enthusiasm.
Your child should never feel alone with scary news, and neither should you
So many of us had to go it alone
Why I let my separation break my heart
Grief is the process of expanding ourselves to make room for not only the pain, but all of the wisdom, joy and resilience that come with loss.
Accessing your own capacity for healing through grief
Many of us learned to show up with "confidence" and "resilience" to our heartbreaks and disappointments. We deny and repress the pain of our story, and don’t even know there was any value in making room for the painful feelings. Until we choose the path of healing. Which inevitably calls us to know the path of grief.
Kids need a chance to grieve
Two interesting things about grief that you may not know, that can have a huge impact on our parenting and relationships
A break from forced gratitude
Can we rest in remembering our shared humanity and share this with our children?
Too much self-regulation
Self-regulation skills can be incredibly helpful when we are feeling overwhelmed or triggered.
But I don’t believe we are meant to have to self-regulate as often as most of us do every day.
We are meant to have not only the physical and emotional help of a loving village, but the presence of their bodies to help regulate and sooth our nervous systems when we are stressed.
It is unrealistic (and unfair!) to think that we are supposed to reach some point of self-regulation mastery in order to do gentle parenting right.
When we lose our worthiness bearings
it takes time, it takes learning, and it takes togetherness
Are some people more cut out for conscious parenting than others?
the answer may surprise you
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