Why You Should Roughhouse with Your Kids (and How to Get Started)

It’s hard for us—just like it was for our parents—to know how to allow rough-and-tumble play. For one thing, many of us never did it—either because it was stopped by our parents or, in some cases, because we were raised as girls, and “girls don’t roughhouse.”

This post will help you learn why roughhousing —when we do it WITH our kids—can be such a great thing to try. And it will help you get started (and keep going!) in a way that is safe and helpful for everyone.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

Thoughts on a Decade of Parenting

My sweet, physical, fierce, tender kid turned 10 two weeks ago. 

One decade of him.

Ten years of: 

Late nights—oh no, he’s up too late; why won’t he sleep?; reading books x 1 zillion; “come on kid, let’s get those teeth brushed!” 

Middle-of-the-nights—feedings; diaper changes; bad dreams; rocking rocking rocking; “I don’t know why I’m awake mama I just am;” phone scrolling; wondering if we’re doing it right/doing enough

Early mornings—sweet baby smell; bright eyes; new words that weren’t there the night before; quiet playtime; exhaustion; Special Time x 1 zillion; rushing rushing rushing to daycare/preschool/school/bus

… and so much time in between full of H, the way he is, the way he has always been.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

What Celebrating Queerness Can Teach Us About Parenting

Here in San Francisco, this coming weekend is Pride weekend. I love this month and the ways I get to see queerness on full display throughout my city.

As a hetero-passing queer person (yes, JIC you didn’t know, I’m partnered with a man but I’ve known I was queer since I was 11), celebrating queerness is important to me. 

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

How the Light Gets in: A Practice for the Hardest Parenting Days

I taught a class—online, of course—on Sunday and as soon as I saw the lovely faces popping up on my screen, I was hit by a wave of longing for the beforetimes when I got to see and talk to and work with parents in person.

That’s the funny thing about this extended time, isn’t it? How it keeps unfolding and showing us where we have sore spots, even after almost a year at it.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

How Laughter Might Be the Thing That Gets Us Through This

We can find joy again in a thing that has felt so much like a “have-to” this year, especially in recent months.

So, here’s my suggestion. Let’s find a way to play in our parenting again, and see if we can do more than just “make it through” the holidays and the end of this very strange, very trying year.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

5 Tips for Raising a Healthy Eater

Eating—and what, how, and when our kids do (or don’t do) it—is one of the things that many of the parents I support also spend considerable time observing and thinking about.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

On Becoming an Anti-Racist + Resources for Your Kids

Because supporting families is so important to me, I want to share a few thoughts with you about where my heart is now as white people wake up more and more to the fact of entrenched racism—and how deeply destructive it is to families and communities of color and to our society. I want you to know where I stand, and to ask for your help.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

3 Tools for Managing Your Anger as a Parent

Most of us have the experience of feeling very angry at our kids at least occasionally. And, more than any other feeling we experience—in parenting or in other aspects of our lives—anger seems to evoke the most shame in us.

Here are a few thoughts about this particularly intense feeling, and how you might begin (or continue) to work with it, especially now.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

Let's Talk About Parenting, Not (Just) the Pandemic

There’s nothing like a pandemic and a complete shutdown of life as we know it to test our mettle as people and as parents. This may be the truest, most direct experience of “parenting as path” that we will ever encounter.

Is it possible to continue to be the parents we want to be right now? Ask me again in a few months, but right now, I feel that it is.

Here’s what I’m practicing and finding useful right now when it comes to my parenting.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

How to Bring More Ease and Joy to Your Parenting

Since I started working with families, I have felt committed to helping parents access two primary things: more ease, and more joy. I’m not sure why these became my words. Heaven knows there’s a list of things as long as my arm that we need more of when we’re parenting. But it felt to me like these were the two things that were hardest for me to come by once my son came along, even if it sounded a bit different when I talked about it.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF
In Tags

When Old Hurts Get in the Way of Our Parenting

I often think about something a very thoughtful dad of two said to me during a coaching session last year. We were talking about his transition home after long days at work, and how hard he tried to come into the house with an open heart and mind.

Things had been very challenging with his 5-year-old son, and he worried about what he might encounter when he opened the door. He worried too about how triggering his son’s behavior often felt.

He tried to shed his day on the commute home, and plug back into family life with energy. But, he said, as soon as he stepped through the door, he felt as if he were “back in the lion’s den again, ready for war.”

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

3 Simple Self-Care Tips for Busy Parents

Last month I went on a weeklong silent meditation retreat. I’m fortunate to be able to do this once or twice a year, and to have a partner who supports me in doing it.

I noticed how much lighter I feel after a week connecting with my deeper self. How much more like Me. Not the little “me” that runs around trying to be perfect and please everyone at work and at home, but the Me that can really connect authentically with people, not feel worthless if I fuck up, and offer something meaningful to the people I am trying to help.

But, since I can’t live continuously on retreat—nor would I want to—it begs the question: how can I (re)discover this authentic Me when I’m walking around in my daily life?

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

How I Almost Let Shame Get in the Way of Supporting My Son

We were traveling last weekend, visiting my parents in Florida to celebrate my dad’s 90th birthday. It was lovely, but possibly slightly boring for a 5-year-old. So, the day after the party we hit the mall to find some play spaces for him to move his body a bit. (That’s how they do it in Florida!)

The mall had a High Jump—one of those contraptions where they hook you up to a harness and some bungee cords and you can jump super high on a trampoline. Naturally, our kid was like a moth to a flame.

My son had to wait for a couple of other kids before it was his turn, sitting in a little chair inside the ring containing the High Jump. At one point, excited by all the jumping, he stood up. The ride operator immediately barked, “sit down!” He did, chastened.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

The Surprising Benefits of Doing Less as a Parent

How would it feel to do a little less in your parenting today?

I’m asking myself this question a lot lately, because I find I’ve gotten wrapped up in old patterns of doing MORE these last few weeks, and it doesn’t feel great.

I mean a specific kind of “doing more” here, one that looks like:

  • Picking out my son’s clothes and putting them on him, piece by piece

  • Reminding him to take his plate over to the sink when he’s done eating

  • Talking over him in the middle of a big feeling.

I know why I’m doing all of this, despite my belief (and tangible evidence) that most of it isn’t helpful.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

Parenting When You're in Pain

Every family has its own heartbreaks, sooner or later.

But how to meet and manage the pain and sadness of these times without shutting down is a whole other story. And having kids complicates how (or if) we are able to work with it. It also raises questions about how much (or whether) to share it with our children.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

Get Ready for Your Baby the Respectful Parenting Way

There are so many opinions out there about what you need to do to get ready for your new baby. As useful as these tips can be, they overshadow some of the most important kinds of preparation. We need to be prepared for how to be with our babies, not just for what we’ll swaddle or stroll them in.

Luckily, the Educaring Approach® (commonly known as RIE® parenting or respectful parenting) is the perfect support system for the intense early days of parenting. Here’s how you can practice some of the Approach’s most effective—yet quite simple—tools before your baby even arrives.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

What True Quality Time With Your Child Feels Like

Recent studies have shown that parents are spending more time with their kids now than they did half a century ago—a lot more.

This is cause for celebration in my book, but I must admit that it leaves me with a bit of a nagging question.

What is that time really like? 

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

The Best Gifts You Can Give to Your Child This Holiday Season

It’s upon us: the holiday season! Thanksgiving is around the corner for those of us in the U.S., followed by the winter holidays, which usually means one thing for many of us: time with family.

Before we have kids, this time of year can feel like a lot, even if we have healthy and uncomplicated relationships with our family (ha!).

But when we add kids to the mix, the things we weather during this time of year—travel, delays, long meals, family dynamics, big feelings of all kinds, and increased stress due to all of this—can make us want to put a pillow over our heads until January 2nd.

While we can’t necessarily change our complicated family dynamics or remove all the stress from the holidays, there are a few things we can do as parents to make this time of year easier on all of us, especially our littlest members.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

How to Weather Big Transitions

My son starts at a brand-new school tomorrow. At 4.5, he’s starting preschool later than a bunch of his peers, but it was the right decision for our family to keep him in his sweet, small daycare for an extra year.

These kinds of transitions are part of parenting for all of us, whether it’s a move to a new school, a new home, or to becoming a sibling instead of an only child. Here are a few tips for weathering these kinds transitions with respect for your child’s process and your own.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF

The Most Important Repairs

Her are some simple, respectful parenting tools that I recommend when you find yourself behaving like the parent you don’t want to be—either by accident or because you can’t seem to stop yourself.

Read more
Print Friendly and PDF