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Meta
Tag Archives: aggression in children
Helping my daughter become whom she is meant to be
http://www.handinhandparenting.org/2012/06/helping-my-daughter-become-who-she-is-meant-to-be/ Click on the above link to visit http://www.handinhandparenting.org for this gorgeous and profound account of a mother supporting her 3 year old daughter through manifestations of distress, and thereby in dropping down into re-experiencing/processing and releasing birth trauma – with … Continue reading →
Posted in actualizing tendency, anger, birth trauma, child development, communication, core conditions, embodiment, emotions, empathy, empowerment, encounter, family systems, fear, growing up, guilt, Hand in Hand Parenting, healing, interconnection & belonging, parenting, physical being, presence, relationship, sadness & pain, tears, transformation, trauma
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Tagged ADHD, affordable counselling exeter, aggression in children, aggressive behaviour, allowing children to cry, allowing crying, allowing your child to cry, birth trauma, biting in children, bouts of aggression, catharsis, cathartic crying, cathartic response, childhood aggression, conscious parenting, core pain, core upset, core wound, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, creating safe space, distress in children, effect of birth trauma, embodied pain, embodiment, emotional release, energy body, energy release, expressing fear, facilitating crying, facilitating tears, faddy eating, feeling trapped, guilt and remorse, Hand in Hand Parenting, healing through tears, helping your child with aggression, hitting in children, holding space, hyperactivity, hyperactivity and distress, listening to children, listening to your child, low cost counselling exeter, my child bites, my child hits, need to cry, needing to cry, offering closeness, pain body, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, parenting, person centred counselling exeter, picky eating, reactivity, releasing fear, Ritalin for children, safe space, staylistening, supporting behaviour change, transformative change, trapped energy, trust in the process, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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Charles Eisenstein ‘Kind is the new cool’
Interesting, hopeful post from Charles, which sits well with the post a couple of days ago showing Xiuhtezcatl Martinez of Earth Guardians speaking to the United Nations:- https://palacegatecounsellingservice.wordpress.com/2016/01/21/xiuhtezcatl-martinez-of-earth-guardians-speaking-to-the-u-n-in-paris/ Here’s the text of Charles’ post, as we have at least one regular reader … Continue reading →
Posted in abuse, acceptance, bullying, Charles Eisenstein, compassion, conditions of worth, cultural questions, diversity, education, empathy, ethics, friendship, growing up, interconnection & belonging, kindness & compassion, objectification, paradigm shift, parenting, power and powerlessness, relationship, sadness & pain, scapegoating, self concept, self esteem, shame, shaming, vulnerability
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Tagged acceptance, affordable counselling exeter, aggression in children, authenticity, awareness, being a loser, belittling, belonging, Breakfast Club, bullying, bullying behaviour, challenge, Charles Eisenstein, cliques, collective field, compassion, competition, competitive, conditions of worth, cool, coolness, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, cruelty, cultural values, cyber-bullying, degrading, demeaning, disrespect, dominating, dominating behaviour, dominator culture, Doug Edmunds, emotional courage, empathy, Eric Heiser, ethics, excluding behaviour, exclusion, forging a new normal, friendship, generosity, gentleness, high school experience, homophobia, inner conflict, inner world, insecurity, insults, intolerance, Jenny Gibson, kind, kindness, labelling, LGBT, low cost counselling exeter, meanness, misogyny, nonviolence, normative ethics, objectification, objectifying, objectifying culture, one upsmanship, oppressing, optimism, othering, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, paradigm shift, parenting, person centred counselling exeter, politics, popularity, power, powerlessness, prevailing social conditions, put downs, racial comity, racism, relationship, Riane Eisler, scapegoating, schooling, self concept, self esteem, self worth, self-structure, sexual discourse, shame, shaming, social banter, social conditions, social confidence, social currency, social exclusion, social institutions, social media bullying, social reality, social status, social values, social worth, strong picking on the weak, subculture, talking behind someone’s back, teen suicide, tolerance, tolerating, unkindness, victimisation, victimising, victimization, victimizing, victims, vulnerability, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk, youth culture
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Aggression and the Vigorous Snuggle: Rachel Schofield, Hand in Hand Parenting
http://www.handinhandparenting.org/article/handling-a-childs-aggression-setting-limits-with-vigorous-snuggle/ Click on the link for this ‘conscious parenting’ site, and an excellent article by Rachel Schofield on the meanings of aggression in children, and how to meet this as a parent in a way that will support you and … Continue reading →
Posted in acceptance, anger, Carl Rogers, child development, client as 'expert', clients' perspective, conflict, congruence, core conditions, cultural questions, Disconnection, empathy, growing up, Hand in Hand Parenting, healing, interconnection & belonging, love, parenting, person centred, person centred theory, physical being, relationship, therapeutic relationship, violence, working with clients
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Tagged according to means counselling exeter, acting out, aggression, aggression in children, Asaf Rolef Ben-Shahar, bullying, Carl Rogers, child development, client's perspective, congruence, conscious living, conscious parenting, core conditions, counselling exeter, empathy, fear of relationship, fear of touch, Hand in Hand Parenting, love in therapy, low cost counselling exeter, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person-centred, professional relationship, psychotherapy exeter, Rachel Schofield, real relationship, talking therapy, therapeutic relationship, touch in therapy, unconditional positive regard, violence, working with clients
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