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If you ever want to review articles in past issues of Connecting! They are now available in our newsletter archives. |
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| OUT AND ABOUT |
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Making the Best of A Wild Ride
of Elizabeth Coplan and her co-creators and co-authors at A Wild Ride. If you would like to reprint Hand in Hand articles on your own blog, contact us today. |
| The CONNECTED PARENT |
Beyond "Yuck!", Part 2
This month's Connected Parent article continues with more suggestions to help with your picky eater. Read the full article here. |
| CONNECT NOW |
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| Online Discussion Group for Hand in Hand
Do you ever want to connect with a warm, supportive and knowledgeable community--at three in the morning? Just in case you feel the need, the Hand in Hand discussion group is there for you, twenty-four hours a day.
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| HOW YOU CAN HELP |
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Seeking Finance Chair
Are you interested in helping to nurture parent-child connections? Would you like to be part of our growth oriented organization? We are searching for a board member who could serve as chair of our Finance Committee. We would be asking this person to work closely with the staff in our Palo Alto office.
We are looking for someone who has:
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a professional background in finance or accounting sufficient to qualify as the chair of the Finance Committee
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experience serving on the board of a non-profit
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time and enthusiasm to devote to the Hand in Hand board.
Contact us for details. | |
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| PARENTING TIP |
Keeping Feelings Moving
One of our longtime instructors tells a story about an interaction with her daughter that happened early in her divorce. The instructor was angry and frustrated with her soon-to-be ex-husband. She had just ended a difficult phone conversation with him. She was teeming with emotion as she stood at the kitchen sink in tears. Her young daughter came into the room and asked her what was wrong. She told the girl, honestly but briefly, "I'm upset about your dad." The daughter opened her arms and ran across the room to hug her mother saying, "I miss him too," and burst into tears.
In this moment, parent and child were able to share comfort and connection, even though their feelings of upset had different beginnings and tones. Children need to share their feelings with us. They need our loving attention in order to feel safe enough to fully experience their often intense and sometimes frightening emotions. Human beings of all ages have a basic need to "feel felt." We are social animals built to experience and share our lives with others like us. When the full range of our emotional experience is welcomed, we feel connected, whole and well.
One thing we all know about emotions is that they rapidly change. (The word emotion comes from the French esmovoir "to set in motion, i.e. to move the feelings.") Tempers can flare in an instant. And just as easily, an experience that made us furious when it happened becomes an amusing anecdote once we get a little distance from it. The classmate we couldn't stand in fifth grade becomes much more appealing as Senior Prom rolls around. Our mood fluctuates like internal weather; sometimes our attitude is sunny, sometimes it is stormy, but it is always ready to flow into something else.
Being stuck in one emotion is a sure sign that children need our loving attention in order to coax the natural process of emotional flexibility back into action. Our warm acceptance brings out the upset that is clogging the works and allows the child to feel felt as they share whatever rain needs to fall before their internal skies can be sunny again. "Sounds easy on paper," you say, "But how exactly do I do that?"
Tomorrow, set aside some time to notice what your child is feeling. Do they wake up grumpy or delighted? Are they pleased they dressed themselves or dismayed that Special Time is over? Watch how they shift through a range of feelings over a short amount of time. Notice when feelings get "stuck" or carried from one situation into the next. Be aware of any tension building.
When upset builds (which happens to all of us sooner or later), go to your child, make eye contact, touch him warmly and reassuringly, show your interest, and see what happens. As children take in your willingness to share emotional moments with them, they will increasingly accept your offers of connection to show you the feelings they carry, so they don't have to manage them alone.
As your child's built up feelings start to find expression, your job is to attend to these emotions. We call this Staylistening, and it's your key to helping your child feel felt. His emotions might be loud and they probably won't be pretty, but they are normal. Listening to the feelings loosens their hold on your child. There's nothing you need to fix or change. Simply give your child your warm, caring attention. You don't need to agree that the emotions are warranted or feel responsible for redirecting your child into a different, more sensible response.
Your child will feel felt whenever you can act as a generous and interested audience that is ready to share in the processing of these feelings. (His appreciation of your steadfast caring comes at the end of his emotional outburst, though--he can't manage to give you love or reassurance during the upset.) His great big feelings can then dissolve into the flow of feelings that move and change with your child through the day. You might also want to read the Listening to Children booklets if you'd like specifics on Reaching for Your Angry Child or Healing Children's Fears.
Our Success Story this month shows how one parent's practice of Staylistening improved things for her family. We hope you will share your own success stories with us, too.
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| PARENT SUCCESS STORY |
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Overcoming a Rocky Homecoming
I took my daughter, who is almost two now, to visit my parents. We were there four days without her Dad. This was a long separation for us. When her Dad arrived there, she smiled and was happy to see him. But when he approached her, she suddenly became unhappy, and held up her hands to ward him off, saying, "No, no! Bye-bye! Bye-bye!" and shaking her head. He tried to pick her up, but she kept this up, pushing him away and saying, "No, no! Bye-bye!" and waving as though she wanted him to go. My husband put her down and felt offended.
I could see what was going on, so I told him, "Don't go away. She's having some feelings about you being gone that she has to work through. If you pick her up, she can work it through." I kind of played "coach" to help them reconnect with each other. He picked her up again, and she got unhappier. I told him to stroke her hair, tell her you're glad to see her, and how much you love her, and that's what he did. She began to cry, and kept trying to push him away, saying "No, no!" and "Bye bye!" He did well, although it was hard for him. He said, "I love you, I'm so glad to see you. I want to hold you because I'm back and I missed you," and she kept struggling and crying. I rubbed his back and whispered that he was doing great, that this was just what she needed to hear, and I also rubbed her back and listened to her feelings. But I really stayed pretty quiet and let him be the one to reassure her. I just reminded him now and then that she was just having her feelings. She struggled and cried for probably ten or fifteen minutes, but it felt longer! Then she calmed down and said she wanted to go play ball, and the two of them went out on the grass and played ball. It was awesome because you could see how good she felt afterwards! She gave him hugs and just loved being with him, and he felt great about how much she could show her love. My parents saw the whole thing, and they were impressed with what we had done. She has been closer to him since them. Last night, she woke up in the night and was calling for him, instead of for me!
--a mother in Chandler, AZ |
| REVIEW
THE WINNING FAMILY |
Increasing Self-Esteem in Your Children and Yourself
In The Winning Family, Dr. Louise Hart examines the role of parents in helping their children to build healthy levels of self-esteem. Hart recognizes that most parents instinctively raise their children as they themselves were raised. This leads many parents to unintentionally repeat negative patterns that can cause low self-esteem in their children and damage relationships in the family. Hart explains how to break away from such patterns to improve the quality of emotional authenticity-helping children to know, understand and feel comfortable expressing their emotional selves.
"We need to experience a full range of feelings to be fully human. When this does not happen, we unconsciously may pass on our own emotional limitations to our children. Even so, children must learn to deal with all their feelings if they are to live their own lives fully and freely...It can be hard to accept children's feelings--especially if we have trouble accepting our own...When children hurt themselves, they cry and shriek as though their whole world has fallen apart; a few minutes later, once the problem is addressed, they're laughing...Getting comfortable with your feelings can help you reparent yourself as you parent your child."
The discipline section of Hart's book presents a long list of alternatives to punishment. Many of the ideas sound comfortably familiar. "Be playful. Perhaps you have turned a toddler's spoon into an airplane full of food. I once overdramatized great disgust and nausea on finding dirty underwear in the bathroom and found it to be quite effective. When I'd notice untied shoelaces on a walk with my children, I'd try to step on them." Hand in Hand teaches a warm, firm and immediate form of setting limits which supports healthy parent-child connections.
The Winning Family is a book you will return to again and again for Hart's reassuring words, lighthearted confidence in the love of parents for their children and down-to-earth ideas about making the parenting journey a path of self-discovery.
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We hope you enjoy Connecting! and will share it with other parents and professionals who care about nurturing parent-child connections.
Sincerely,
Julianne Idleman Hand in Hand |
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