Rafe Esquith on Raising
Extraordinary Kids Parents must be the people they want their children to be.
Not exact matches
Summer is the perfect time to simplify family life, says Kim John Payne, author of the book, Simplicity
Parenting: Using the
Extraordinary Power of Less to Raise Calmer, Happier, and More Secure
Kids.
Simplicity
Parenting: Using the
Extraordinary Power of Less to Raise Calmer, Happier, More Secure
Kids.
Payne's latest book, Simplicity
Parenting: Using the
Extraordinary Power of Less to Raise Calmer, Happier, and More Secure
Kids (Ballantine Books / Random House, 2009), pulls together his central ideas into one tight, smart, and compassionate argument: Just slow down.
From one of my favorite books, Simplicity
Parenting: Using the
Extraordinary Power of Less to Raise Calmer, Happier, and More Secure
Kids by Kim John Payne:
Simplicity
Parenting: Using the
Extraordinary Power of Less to Raise Calmer, Happier, and More Secure
Kids Kim John Payne, Lisa M. Ross
Beginning last October, two groups of
parents from Hartsbrook and beyond have been gathering monthly at our school to explore the themes of Kim John Payne's book Simplicity
Parenting: Using the
Extraordinary Power of Less to Raise Calmer, Happier, and More Secure
Kids.
Wendy Flynn, One Tough Mother Runner [«The Hobby That Changed My Life»] Wendy Bradford, Mama One to Three [«Less Whine and More Wine»] Hallie Lord, Moxie Wife [«The Gift of Imperfection»] Leslie Marinelli, The Bearded Iris [«I Suddenly Have a Mom Mullet»] Michelle Lehnardt, Scenes from the Wild [«Big
Kids Need Tucking In, Too»] Nina Badzin, NinaBadzin.com [«Shine and Let Others Shine»] Debbie Koenig, Words to Eat By [«We're All Just Faking It»] Rachel Balducci, Testosterhome [«Words You Shouldn't Be Scared Of»] Kimberley Clayton Blaine, TheGoToMom.TV [«Moms, Don't Be Camera Shy»] Kristen Levithan, Motherese [«It's Not Always All On Me»] Amber Strocel, Strocel.com [«Know What You Need»] Stacie Billis, One Hungry Mama [«I'm Not Above Asking for Help»] Kathryn Whitaker, Team Whitaker [«Learn to Love the Unplanned»] Jill Herzig, Editor - in - Chief of Redbook [«Sometimes It's Best to Do Nothing»] Alicia Ybarbo, producer at NBC's TODAY [«The Secret To «Me» Time»] Dana Points, Editor - in - Chief of
Parents [«The Dishes Can Wait»] Rachel Hollis, My Chic Life [«Permission To Be Awesome»] Erin, Home with the Boys [«Our
Kids Are Capable»] Rachel Turiel, 6512 and Growing [«The Romance of Gratitude»] Shawn Ledington Fink, Awesomely Awake [«Being Together is Enough»] Danielle Smith,
Extraordinary Mommy [«It's Okay to Drop Some Balls»] Ronnie Tyler, Black and Married with
Kids [«It's Hard to Forgive Yourself»] Christine Koh, Boston Mamas [«Done is Better Than Perfect»] Ilana Wiles, Mommy Shorts [«Sleep When Baby Sleeps?
While it is an important blog for any
parent with a special needs child, it is also an important central resource that allows everyone to learn more about some
extraordinary kids and families.
Simplicity
Parenting: Using the
Extraordinary Power of Less to Raise Calmer, Happier, and More Secure
Kids
Several years ago, I read a book by educator Ron Clark called The End of Molasses Classes: Getting Our
Kids Unstuck — 101
Extraordinary Solutions for
Parents and Teachers, in which he describes an event that involves having students practicing social skills in a competition called The Amazing Shake.
«For
parents who are so committed to the private school system and have three or four
kids, the financial burden, unless you're really well off, is
extraordinary,» observes York University's Paul Axelrod.