HeartWise Parenting
 
HeartWise Coaching
 

 

Sign up for Our Email Newsletter

Email:   

 

Explore and Learn

Parenting Promise

Tools and Gifts

Inspired Parenting Book

Recommended Partners

HeartWise eZine

 

About HeartWise Parenting

Articles Library

Resources

Press Room

About Us

Contact Us

 

Four New Tools Every Parent Absolutely Needs

WHY? - Your children model your self confidence, your values, and sometimes your style of communication. Find out how these tools can improve your family life, communication, and create more effective interactions. Learn More!

 

Moms of Toddlers

Download a free course from Inspired Parenting, entitled NURTURE YOUR CHILD'S GIFT - WITH MUSIC!

 

Praise

Dear Caron,
I am an RN and just started a new job in a mental health facility. The focus is on children and adolescence. We do a daily "group" with them. We may pick the topic the only criteria being "education" of some sort. I wanted to offer some valuable coping skills kids could use. So, I went to the computer and spent over an hour clicking on lists of Internet items looking for help. I was getting very tired and needed to go to bed. When bingo" I found your article on kids, trauma, and coping skills! I just wanted to say a great big thank-you for your helpful article!
Sincerely ,
Charlotte Rogers

 


Suggested Parenting Resources

Nurture Your Child's Gift, Inspired Parenting - $14.95

Help Kids Cope with Stress & Trauma - $25.00

The Art & Science of Coaching Parents Successfully - $19.95

Breathe and Grow Rich - $19.95

The Holistic Guide to Weight Loss, Anti-Aging & Fat Prevention : $18.50

 

 

Is Your Child Blossoming or Simply Growing Older?

We all want to be good parents. We want to nurture our children, recognize their needs, and help them reach their full potential. The problem is, there seems to be a set of unwritten rules that successful parents know and others don't.

Now these mysterious rules are revealed. Inspired Parenting is here to help you plant the seeds of success that will truly help your child to blossom today and thrive for a lifetime.

The key .... understanding how to parent the whole child and taking consistent, loving steps to support your child's physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual development. Think of the farmer caring for his fields. From planting the seeds, until the final harvest, a consistent, caring approach is critical for achieving positive results.

Inspired Parenting combines cutting-edge information and research with real world experience to offer an extensive collection of tips, tools and articles on whole child parenting. Learn to support your child's gifts and dreams, to build their self esteem, and empower them for personal success. Don’t be intimidated if you aren't sure how to get started. All of our tools can be customized to fit your unique taste and preferences. Start today ... and plant the seeds for success in your child!

Coaching Parents of Argumentative Children

As parents, you want your child to grow up safe and healthy. No simple task, even under the best of circumstances. An argumentative child can make parenting seem even more challenging than it already is. He questions your every move and refuses even the simplest request. While this intense brand of scrutiny may serve him well as an adult, it can extremely frustrating in a child.

 Parenting an argumentative child is an art. You want him to thrive and develop habits for successful living. In order to do this, however, he must first learn that not everything is negotiable. More than likely, he already knows this, but continues to argue anyway. It is up to you to figure out why. There are several possible reasons your child chooses the path of most resistance. He may feel the need for control. He may be vying for negative attention. Or he may just be a natural born fighter. Whatever the case may be, it is important you learn how to parent your child without putting out all his fire.

Read more > Article by Caron Goode

 

What Your Preschooler Learns by Playing

Children learn by playing. Whether it be blocks, puzzles, or the creation of an imaginary world. Fun and games teach. Child development experts have targeted six specific areas that benefit from play. They are—

•Language development
•Small muscle development
•Large muscle development
•Emotional development
•Social development
•Mathematical thinking

As your child’s first teacher, it is important you understand what he is learning when he plays. To do this observe him. Try to determine what skill he is practicing. Then take it a step farther by creating other opportunities for him to apply what he is learning.

Read more > Article by Caron Goode

 

Pledge to be a Better Parent

While having breakfast with friends at a restaurant one Saturday morning, I noticed a thirty-something father sharing a meal with his son, about three years old. As he waited for his food, the boy became restless and moved around on his side of the booth. Then he slid under the table and sat on the floor. This action seemed to embarrass his father who kept demanding, "Get up. Don't do that. Get up now." When the boy didn't respond to these orders, the father started kicking him to urge him to come out from under the table. The father's large foot struck his son squarely at the base of the spine with considerable force.

Read more > Article by Caron Goode

 

Teaching With the Masters

Two-year-old Junie sticks both fingers in her ears and closes her eyes. Then she makes noises with her tongue. Devon, a three-year-old, steps into a puddle and watches mud ooze over his white tennis shoes. Then he jumps. Mud splashes onto his clothes and face. Immature? Yes. However, as these children explore their world they soak up information at an unbelievable rate. Did you know that a child's brain has two times the neural circuits of an adult's brain? Junie discovers new sounds with her experiment, and Devon learns how mud feels, moves, and changes the color of surfaces. This is exploration. This is creative learning.

 

PARENTING SUPPORT FOR WORKING MOMS

Glancing at your day planner, you realize that this is going to be one busy day-again. As a working mom, you have adjusted your schedule many times to squeeze in your ten-year-olds’ dental appointment or your eight-year-olds’ soccer practice. You can remember a few times when you had to leave a meeting early to answer an “urgent” call from one of your children. Your “sick” days are used more for your children then for you. Dinner is often a quick stop at your favorite take out.

Read more > Article by Brenda Bonin

 

Homeopathic Remedies

Q: Is there a home remedy for coughs so I can avoid the chemicals and alcohol found in over-the-counter cough syrups?

A: Here are two of my favorites (excerpted from my book, Gentle Healing for Baby and Child...A Parent's Guide (Simon & Schuster). The first is prepared and consumed right away, while the second may be prepared and stored in your refrigerator all winter long!

Read more > Article by Andrea Candee

 

Bedtime Resistance Remedy

If you haven't been frazzled by a preschooler who resists going to bed, you're probably not a parent. My younger daughter, Laura, was the Queen of Stall. I defined bedtime as being in bed - with both legs - and lights out. Laura defined it as time to begin getting ready for going to bed. And while getting ready she'd suddenly get an attack of janitoritis and clean her room, neatly fold clothes that had lain under the bed for days, or organize her stuffed animals. Once in bed, she'd jump up with, "I want a drink," or "I forgot to brush my teeth," or the most famous, "I got a kingernail," (fingernail) which one of us would have to clip before she could relax into slumber. My husband or I would holler, "Go to bed!" a dozen times every night.

Read more > Review by Brenda Nixon

 

When Breastfeeding Babies Go on Strike

He lay on my belly, wet and squirming. My just-born baby snorted and lay quietly. Then he started to scoot up my belly. His mouth was open and his head bobbed back and forth. He was not thinking, he was doing. My baby was looking for my breast. For the first time in his life, he was hungry.

I had never nursed before and neither had he. It is a natural process but most of us need a little help the first time. With a healthy, alert baby and a motivated mom, breastfeeding is usually very successful. But what do you do if your baby decides to stop nursing? What if your baby goes on strike?

 

Coaching Families Through New Year’s Loneliness

In the New Year, many celebrate new beginnings or a new resolve for self-improvement. For others, it is a time of loneliness, sadness, and grief.  The overwhelming feeling of loneliness is not just about adults, children experience it also.

A friend of mine who has adopted four children told me how difficult this time of the year is for her four adopted children.  Their minds wander to their biological parents, and why they gave them up for adoption.

 

   
©2007 HeartWise Parenting