Parenting & the Power of Showing Up with Dr. Tina Bryson #WellnessWednesdays
Dr. Tina Bryson is the author of The Bottom Line For Baby and the co-author, with Dan Siegel, of The Yes Brain, The Power of Showing Up, as well as two New York Times bestsellers, the Whole Brain Child and No Drama Discipline. Her body of work has had an immense impact on my parenting journey, which is only part of the reason I’m so excited she’s sharing her time with us today. We touch on many of Dr. Bryson’s core concepts of well-adjusted parenting, most tied to the fact that our little ones are actually brilliant – that their brains create automatic associations, just like ours. Still, we need to be mindful of our explicit and implicit messaging; just because they can make associations doesn’t mean they’re right (or logical), after all. She also gives some amazing and actionable advice on a couple specific behavioral challenges we’re seeing with Bash at home, and blesses us with some other quick tools on empowering kids to be brave, name their feelings, and build resilience. . If you are a new parent or even thinking about having children, I would start reading her books and practicing on your partner. Dr. Bryson’s techniques are revolutionary and she is spearheading an important change in parenting that we are now seeing all over the internet – and she has been for a decade. Thank you, Dr. Tina Payne Bryson, for being on the show.You will learn about...Living out her principles in her own life The brain is an association machineDr. Bryson on brain developmentThe four-to-five year cognitive jumpRepetition and practice to build skillsCalming their nervous system with connectionSebastian’s screen time tantrums – help!Comforting is still skill buildingTop-down vs. bottom-up processing strategiesSaying ‘yes’ to your child while saying ‘no’ to their behaviorFour year olds are brilliant! (and hard)How posture, movement and breathing impact moodEmpowering your child to come up with the solutionImplicit messages vs. explicit messagesIdentifying fear-based parentingMinimizing and criticizing vs empathizing Giving our kid boundaries Adversity + support leads to resilience Embracing and understanding negative feelings Sebastian’s tough time with drop-offs – help! Am I being a snowplow parent?Center yourself, kids are savvy detectives Ask them what’s wrong (sometimes it is that simple)Dr. Bryson shares a great idea to empower kidsHard boundaries: sleep/bedtime and respectPraise: how much is too much?What your kids need most is youRead: The Bottom Line for Baby Resources:Website: tinabryson.comRead: tinabryson.com/booksInstagram: @tinapaynebrysonTwitter: @tinabrysonLinkedin: Tina Payne Bryson PhD Connect with Kelly:kellyleveque.comInstagram: @bewellbykellyFacebook: <a...
From "Be Well by Kelly Leveque"
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