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| HOW YOU CAN HELP |
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Organizers Needed
The Family Pillow Play Day will be taking place again this year. Tentatively set for June 21, planning has already begun. If you're able to help out with the organization and staffing of this fun and exciting event, please contact Todd Erickson.
This Fall, Hand in Hand will host our first ever fundraising luncheon to support the growth and expansion of the organization and extend our support to parents of all socioeconomic circumstances. Volunteers are needed to insure the success of this event. If you can help, please contact Teresa Kelleher-Zepeda.
Contact us for details. |
| CONNECT NOW |
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| Study Group Leaders Unite
Have you ever thought about starting a Study Group with the Listening to Children booklets? There's a guide available on our website to help you get started. Or maybe you already have a group working through these booklets together.
Either way we'd like to invite you to join the new online Discussion Group for Hand in Hand Study Group Leaders. Contact us and let us know about your group. We'll be happy to connect you with other parents bringing together groups in their own neighborhoods. | |
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| PARENTING TIP |

I had about had it with not being able to go to the bathroom alone. My normally independent and self-directed daughter was going through a fearful stage where she would literally scream if she discovered she was alone in a room, even if she could hear you right in the next one. If she had to go to the bathroom, she wanted you to come with her. If she needed a toy from upstairs, she would insist she could not possibly get it without adult company. I was sorry she was scared, but I wanted to find a way to encourage her back into living her life without her Mommy-as-security-blanket.
So one Sunday my husband and I spent the whole day with my daughter. We took her out for the day with some of her friends and then the three of us had a quiet dinner together at home. When we were cleaning up the kitchen after our dinner, I asked my daughter to run upstairs and get the breakfast tray she had left at the foot of my bed that morning. She refused, saying she was too frightened.
I took a deep breath. It had been a really good day. I thought maybe it was time for us both to face this fear head on. Setting limits isn't my favorite part of parenting. I'm not always certain about when to nurture and when to foster independence, what is an appropriate challenge and what is asking too much of my child.
I bent down and looked at my daughter. Then, softly but with certainty, I told her that I knew she could do it and that I would stand downstairs, where I could see her go down the hall because there's a balcony. I reminded her that she was safe. She began to cry and rant that she couldn't get the breakfast tray and she would not get the tray.
I was in a good place after a nice day together with my daughter and her stepdad, so I decided to hold the limit and let the feelings come. I touched her shoulder and softly told her I could see that she was afraid but that I knew she could do it and I would watch from downstairs. She insisted she would die of fright. I told her that I could see she was so scared it felt like she might die, but that she could do it. We went back and forth like that for 45 minutes which built into shaking and crying and at one point she even screamed for "Help!" over and over. I don't know where it came from but there was certainly a big pile of terror packed into that little girl.
But she eventually did it! When she finally made it down the hall and got the breakfast tray, she threw the tray as hard as she could down the stairs, still crying heartily. I gave it back to her. She threw it two or three more times before carrying it down into the kitchen. Downstairs she let me hold her while she cried the rest of the available fears out. "You did it," I reminded her.
Then she sat up, got herself a glass of milk and said, "I'm going to watch a show before bed." Her stepdad and I stared at one another a bit shaken from all the emotion. But she just walked off, into another room, all by herself, without a backwards glance!
I felt so glad she could trust me with that big chunk of terror. If I had rushed in to rescue her, comforted her, told her I would go with her to get the tray, she wouldn't have been able to let the feelings out and all that nasty stuff would still be stuck inside her festering. This way is loud, shaky and messy, and I know I'm not helping her perfectly, but at least I know that we can both survive whatever it is she may need to feel and still be able to move forward with both our lives.
--Juli Idleman |
| PARENT SUCCESS STORY |
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The Princess Drawings
My daughter asked me to draw a princess for her. She had been drawing herself and recently she had stopped, asking me or my husband to do it every time. I knew there was judgment of herself and wanted to see if she could work through it.
I heard her request and told her "No, honey. I know you can do this." She whined and cried, "No, all I do is scribble-scrabble!" I asked her if someone had told her that and she said it came from school. I just stayed with her letting her know I love her and that I believe in her and I know she can draw a princess. She cried and wailed and screamed "scribble-scrabble" for 30 minutes. I kept loving her and reaffirming my belief in her. Finally, she picked up a crayon and started drawing. She was happy, willing and confident the rest of night.
It was a really comfortable way for me to set a limit without feeling like I was walking away or giving myself away. I knew I could really help her through this. It was great to see her release that hurt - I didn't want to jump in and save her. I had confidence in both of us.
And afterward she was happy and confident. She has been drawing princesses and more ever since and giving them to me as presents. She hasn't described her work as "scribble-scrabble" since. I even heard her sticking up for her little brother when another kid told him he was coloring scribble-scrabble.
A mother in San Francisco
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| MAKE SURE CONNECTION HAPPENS |
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Membership 2008
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| REVIEW OF MARTIAN CHILD |
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By Tom Idleman
From the opening frame, "Martian Child" is a movie about how important, desired, cherished, frightening, and fantastic the parent-child connection can be. You will meet David, a wildly successful, widowed science fiction writer who decided to adopt a badly abused boy. And Dennis, a boy who has been driven to live in a fantasy world in which he is sure he's from Mars.
The movie is about choosing to parent and choosing to do whatever is necessary to parent well. The adoption agency, of course, wants David to give Dennis a healthy dose of reality therapy. They want him to get rid of this whole Mars nonsense. But David crawls right into that world, lives and breathes it, struggling with Dennis' need for that world, without distancing himself from it.
This is the closest portrayal of Hand in Hand tools I've seen on the screen. There are numerous examples of David really thinking about which limits he sets for Dennis' benefit and which limits he sets for his own sanity. You see him Playlistening and empathizing with a child's perspective of the world. When you see the shopping cart full of Lucky Charms and the kitchen floor full of broken dishes, you understand that nurturing the emotional connection with Dennis is David's sole focus and passion.
This is a movie about clearing your head, walking on the high wire without a net, and going with what you know in your gut is the right thing to do. It's about putting your faith in the emotional bond parents and children have with each other. David sums it up best: "Sometimes we forget that children have just arrived on the earth. They are a little like aliens,...here on some exploratory mission and they are just trying to learn what it means to be human. For some reason Dennis and I reached out into the universe and found each other. Never really knew how or why. And discovered that I can love an alien and he can love a creature. And that's weird enough for both of us." | |
| OUT AND ABOUT |
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Facebook, Whole Mother and More on Play
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The Whole Mother show on Houston radio station KPFT will interview our own Patty Wipfler on current issues in parenting Monday, April 21st.
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The Early Childhood Funders commissioned an important short report on the importance of play in young children's learning which has been turned into two brochures: one ("Play in the Early Years: Key to School Success") aimed at policy makers and communities and one ("Play: It's the Way Young Children Learn") aimed at parents and also available in Spanish and Chinese. All are available to print out at http://www.4children.org/ecf.htm and you might also be interested in this biologically based view of the importance of play.
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Patty will be appearing on Fix Your Conflicts! on May 12, 2008. Hosted by lawyer turned peacemaker Doug Noll, Fix Your Conflicts! gives a voice to the extraordinary work of ordinary people as peacemakers and peace builders. Fix Your Conflicts! is broadcast Mondays at 11:00 am Pacific over the Internet on World Talk Radio and Wednesdays at 1:00 pm on the Voice America Business Network. For more about Doug and his work as a lawyer turned peacemaker, go to www.lawyertopeacemaker.com. Would you like to include our materials in your blog, website, or wiki? Contact us today. |
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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.
Juli
Julianne Idleman Hand in Hand |
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