Posts in Highly sensitive Kids
How to help your child cry 

When I work with parents I always ask how often their child cries sad tears. And almost always they look off into the distance and admit they don’t recall or admit it’s a rare occurrence. Kids get really difficult to parent when they don’t express their sadness regularly. 

So a natural question I get is, how do I help my child cry?

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The Problem is - you are too good of a parent

I’ll admit, that’s a bit of a clickbait title. And yet, I mean it. Because most of the parents I work with have been in this scenario:

You have curated a pretty-near-perfect day

  • Your child has had a proper night's rest

  • You’ve provided regular balanced meals and snacks

  • You’ve engaged in quality 1:1 time and play

  • You’ve offered age-appropriate choices

  • You’ve ensured your child has had adequate movement and outside time 

And yet…

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Your Parenting Approach is Doing More Harm Than Good

I remember the first time I heard the term ‘conscious parent’

What is that? Is it good or bad?

I knew helicopter parenting was bad, along with snowplow parenting.

Attachment parenting was…very polarizing.

Gentle parenting was the new kid in town, vague but cool.

Fast forward 7 years and I’m well versed in the merits and pitfalls of all the popular parenting approaches. And there are a lot.

Now I’ve become highly skeptical of approaches and wary of anything labelled parenting advice in general. While their books, blogs, podcasts and social media accounts feel like every answer you’ve been waiting for - I’d argue their patented approach often does more harm than good.

If you’re feeling overwhelmed and discouraged in a world where it seems everyone has this parenting thing figured out, have a read

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Kids are like Instant Pots

Several months in, I had hoped my JKer would have been more…settled. Pulling her home in the wagon with a snack had helped - in that it delayed the explosion of feelings until we were off school property and safely within the confines of home. How could I make this challenging time with both my kids more manageable, I pondered. Maybe I could try setting up an activity on the table for when they arrive home? Maybe I should check in with her teachers? Maybe she needs more movement - what physical play could we do?...

My reverie was broken by the beep as I was summoned to perform the final and most dramatic step of the Instant Pot cooking process. I switched the valve from sealing to venting and stood back and marvelled at the loud eruption of steam - not unlike my 4-year-old at 3:30 PM

That’s when it hit me - my child is like an Instant Pot. 

This metaphor is so good it has literally made parenting easier! Let me break it down for you:

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Reality baking shows and accepting my failures as a gentle parent

The other day I found myself crying over and over during a reality baking show. 

The past week my 6-year-old has been quite prickly. She’s picking fights with her sister. She’s been less cooperative and easily combative. Getting ready for bed, getting ready for school or leaving the house anytime, has become quite fraught. I’ve been doing ‘all the things’ reducing separation, quality playtime, welcoming feelings, holding boundaries, controlling the environment etc. But not much has changed.

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Bedtime love notes - How to keep your preschooler in bed

Three years ago, my daughter moved out of our crib and our bedtime routine turned upside down. Suddenly she needed me specifically to lie down with her until she fell asleep. While I was happy to do this, I also had a baby in need of my attention and both my husband and I wanted to more flexibility with our evening.

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The Feel Good Screen Time Strategy

“We watched no TV today!” I’d announce to my husband as if waiting for a gold star. It certainly felt like a massive accomplishment, 12 hours of parenting 2 kids under 4 in the middle of winter. But there was no gold star, just my own sense of achievement or sometimes my own sense of utter exhaustion and simmering resentment as my needs we relegated to the bottom of the list yet again.

Screentime is an excellent illustration of the modern parenting dilemma. It comes down to this equation:

  • Tired parents in need of support

  • A lifetime's worth of highly captivating and addictive children’s entertainment

  • Constant reminders of the dangers of screentime

It’s a lose/lose, you’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t.

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Is it supposed to be this hard? Parenting highly sensitive kids

It had been an epic 45-minute tantrum. At its worst, I thought she might succeed in ripping the baby gate off the wall. Hard to believe as I gazed down at the diminutive two-year-old lying before me, peacefully zoning out to Paw Patrol. Should I make a doctor's appointment? This didn’t seem normal.

This wasn’t always the case, but since her sister was born a few months earlier, since we then moved to a new city and started a new daycare - things had been escalating. The meltdowns left us all drained, frustrated and well, sad. Why was my daughter so angry and how did parenting get so hard? Something didn’t make sense and I was determined to figure it out.

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