Raising Securely Attached Kids : Using Connection-Focused Parenting to Create Confidence, Empathy, and Resilience
Raising Securely Attached Kids : Using Connection-Focused Parenting to Create Confidence, Empathy, and Resilience
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Author(s): Harwood, Eli
ISBN No.: 9781632175847
Pages: 288
Year: 202504
Format: Spiral
Price: $ 41.33
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

INTRODUCTION There are so many good books and guides available to help us all learn how to parent in conscious, smart, and effective ways. While those resources are wonderful and can be a huge help in navigating particularly challenging situations or stages, clients often report that the techniques or approaches in these books "don''t work", and that they have had to fall back on parenting techniques that they don''t want to do, like yelling, shaming, and punishing. When I check out the books they have been consulting, they are usually giving sound parenting advice. But, the advice written in them is advice that works brilliantly IF and ONLY IF, we have already cultivated a secure way of relating to our children. And while it''s great to learn an acronym to help us stick to consistent discipline, it won''t do diddly squat in the long run if our children don''t emotionally trust us. Creating a secure relationship with our children is the foundational step to helping them to live a deeply fulfilling, meaningful, and connected life. When our children feel seen, heard, supported and emotionally soothed by us, all the other parenting tips and tricks start to work much better. A connected relationship is truly the most outstanding ingredient needed to raise a well-regulated, socially capable, all-around secure kid, who grows into a caring, confident and resilient adult.


Secure attachment also benefits us by making for a far more enjoyable child-rearing process. Instead of being at odds with our children in a constant battle for power, we get to be their allies and supporters as they navigate this wild ride we call life. This book will: Help you create a secure attachment relationship with your children across different developmental stages Reflect on what attachment pattern you developed in childhood and why you respond and act in certain ways during emotional moments with your children Guide you in resolving past attachment traumas or insecurities Provide secure scripts that you can use in specific scenarios with your kids Provide practical tools for building trust and repairing conflicts and cultivate a culture of cooperation between you and your children Show you what to do about the tricky or uncomfortable topics that we all face in our parenting journey Encourage you to (securely) release the reins of influence as your children grow in independence I want to clear up two misconceptions about attachment first. Fact #1: Attachment Research and Connection Focused Parenting IS NOT NEW. This is not a trend or something I personally discovered or made up. It is a human adaptation that has been practiced in every indigenous culture since the beginning of human existence. While it may seem new in contrast to parenting trends of the past couple of centuries, those disconnected patterns happened as a result of wars, colonizations, and influential people who did not have a solid understanding of attachment science. For instance in the 1930s, Dr.


John Watson, one of the founders of behaviorism gave this advice to parents in his book, Behaviorism: "Never, never hug and kiss them, never let them sit in your lap. If you must, kiss them once on the forehead when they say goodnight. Shake hands with them in the morning." Disconnected parenting advice like Dr Watson''s went viral in the 1900''s and merged with the unresolved traumas that many people were navigating during that era. These ideas have been around long enough to feel old-school, but in the context of humanity, they are but a blip on the radar. And, even as a behavioristic idea of parenting was making waves in popular thought, simultaneously researchers like Harry Harlow and John Bowlby were questioning the validity of those notions and began important studies on the relationship between children and parents, and the long term impacts that come with different levels of connection in those relationships. As you are reading, some of these ideas may seem new to you, but I want you to remember that secure attachment patterns are as old-school as human survival and adaptation and have been validated by an incredibly rich and valid body of research that has been happening since the 1950s. You''re not hopping onto a new band wagon here, you''re tapping into some of the oldest wisdom around.


The wisdom of human attachment. While attachment science has been around since the 1950s, a wider knowledge of the subject of attachment in the greater culture and community has not. When I first started studying attachment in 2007, the resources available were exclusively intended for nerdy graduate students like myself. Full of big words, lots of scientific data, and very little guidance on how to heal or shift attachment patterns. I loved the big words and the nerdy studies because it helped me to trust this research, and to see its validity. But I also felt uncomfortable with the fact that these incredible truths about the parent-child relationship were inaccessible and obscure for anyone outside of the research and clinical world. While we need the scientific data to ensure that we are not simply hopping on some random internet parenting trend, we also need the data to be accessible and easy to apply so that we can actually improve our lives with its wisdom! This book is my attempt to marry the two. To take the incredible science given to us by some very special smarty-pants over the last 70+ years, and to translate it into words and concepts that we can all understand and apply in our parenting journey.


This book is meant to help you support your child in an optimal developmental process, create a deeply secure bond with them, and help you identify how to use connection to guide them (and you) through those challenging crucible moments that every parent and child encounters along the way. Fact #2: Securely Attached Parenting is NOT THE SAME as "Attachment parenting". The term "attachment parenting" was coined by Dr. Sears, a pediatrician who created a parenting philosophy that is loosely based on attachment ideas, but makes some correlations that are not indicated by the developmental attachment science. His work was very popular in the 2000s and advocated for specific infant care strategies such as breastfeeding, bedsharing, and baby wearing. While none of these recommendations are inherently harmful to an attachment dynamic, they are not the keys to secure attachment. The key is in emotional connection and co-regulation. Don''t worry if that sounds abstract right now, by the end of this book you will know exactly what it takes to create a secure attachment with your child! Glad we got that out of the way.


You''re almost ready to start, but I have a few goodies and guidelines to help you along your merry way! Attachment Nerd Word List In order to best help us all understand what the science says and how to actually apply it, there are a few nerdy terms that come from the land of academia, that I just cannot find a way to de-nerdify. So I made us all a Nerd Word List. Read through these wordy-words real quick before you start reading the chapters to help keep us on the same page about some of these very important ideas. Don''t worry, there won''t be a test later. But if at any point in the book you are noticing a word that you don''t understand, come on back here and check out the glossary for guidance. Regulated : Calm. A "regulated" nervous system means that the brain is not over-firing with intense emotions or underfiring with exhaustion. Think of a car motor, a regulated car motor is not overheating or stalling out.


A regulated child or adult is processing clearly and not blowing an emotional gasket or emotionally shut off. Dysregulated : Not calm. A person who is yelling and throwing things and running around the room name calling is dysregulated. So is someone who is in the middle of a panic attack. Or someone who has emotionally left the room. A body that is unable to be both calm and present is dysregulated. Co-Regulation : How a parent helps a child to return to calm. It can also be used when referring to the process of emotional regulation between two adults, like two sweethearts or a therapist and their client.


One calm(er) person helping a less calm person to feel seen, heard, nurtured, and therefore more regulated. Attunement : The skill required for emotional connection where a person is able to accurately pick up on the emotional cues of another person and receive those cues enough to communicate empathy in an effective way. Misattunement : A moment where someone misreads or fails to receive the emotional state of another person. Phew. You did it. You read through the wordy words. Do you feel fancy now? I hope so! I want all of us to inherit and adapt these attachment words into our personal parenting vocabulary and understanding. While these words originated in the research, I hope they will now belong to the people! Ages and Stages and Diversity Did you know that as of the second I am writing this book there are approximately 8,071,780,714 human beings on planet earth.


That''s a boatload of unique stories, family combinations, identities, and life dynamics. Each and every one of you comes to this text with a different dynamic, perspective and need. <.


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