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Divorce and Children: The Parenting Mistakes That Can Increase Your Child's Anxiety | Featuring Retired Judge Michele Lowrance
As Father's Day approaches, this week's episode of Fostering Change is one of our most personal conversations yet.For years, listeners have heard Rob Scheer share his family's story through the lens of a former foster youth, adoptive father, advocate, and founder of Comfort Cases. This week, he sits down with his youngest son, Tristan, for an honest and heartfelt conversation about family, foster care, belonging, and the journey they've shared together.Tristan joined the Scheer family as an infant, alongside his older brother, Greyson, instantly transforming the family from two children to four. Today, at 17 years old, he's a high school junior, an accomplished football and track athlete, and a young man beginning to think about college, adulthood, and the future ahead.Together, father and son reflect on growing up in a family built through foster care and adoption, what it was like being surrounded by advocacy and public service, and how Tristan defines family, belonging, and home.More than a Father's Day episode, this is a conversation about love, resilience, healing, and the lasting impact of showing up for one another.Conversation HighlightsTristan's perspective on growing up in the Scheer familyWhat it means to be part of a family formed through foster care and adoptionGrowing up around Comfort Cases, advocacy, and public serviceThe values Rob and Reece worked to instill in their childrenHow family is built through commitment, consistency, and loveLessons learned from fatherhood, family, and shared experiencesAthletics, college aspirations, and Tristan's hopes for the futureWhy belonging matters at every stage of lifeWhy This Episode MattersThis conversation reminds us that foster care is not ultimately about systems, policies, or paperwork.It's about people.It's about children finding stability, growing into young adults, building relationships, and creating futures for themselves.As Father's Day arrives, we also recognize that families come in many forms. Some young people have traditional fathers in their lives. Others are guided by foster fathers, adoptive fathers, grandfathers, uncles, brothers, mentors, coaches, teachers, or caregivers who step forward when they're needed most.And many are still searching for that connection.To all those who show up, stay present, and help a young person know they matter: Happy Father's Day.And to every young person experiencing foster care, may this conversation remind you that family is not defined by biology alone. Family is built through love, commitment, and the people who choose to stay.
In this episode of the Empowered Homes Podcast, Bobby and Meg sit down with Retired Marine Corps Major, pastor, author and father Brad Flurry to discuss one of the greatest challenges facing families today: the need for engaged, intentional fathers. Drawing from his own story of growing up without a father and his years of leadership in the Marine Corps, Brad shares how those experiences shaped his passion for helping men lead their families with purpose. Together, they explore the dangers of passivity, the importance of taking action in fatherhood, and why dads have a unique and irreplaceable role in the home.Brad offers practical encouragement for fathers who want to lead well but feel overwhelmed, including simple habits that can make a lasting impact on their marriage, children, and spiritual leadership. He also shares hope for dads who feel like they've fallen short and reminds listeners that it's never too late to begin leading with intention.In this episode, you'll learn:How Brad's personal story shaped his approach to fatherhoodWhy a "bias for action" is essential for dadsPractical ways fathers can lead their families wellWhy loving your spouse is one of the greatest gifts you can give your childrenWhat it means to intentionally bless your childrenHow fathers can overcome regret and move forward with purposeThe legacy every dad has the opportunity to leave.Whether you're a father, grandfather, mentor, or simply care about strengthening families, this conversation offers wisdom, encouragement, and practical next steps for building a lasting legacy.Purchase a copy of Brad's Book here.About Empowered Homes Empowered Homes exists to help families win at home by equipping parents, grandparents, and ministry leaders to live out gospel truths in the everyday rhythms of life. Through free, gospel-centered, and practical resources, along with in-person training, coaching, and equipping experiences, Empowered Homes helps families disciple the next generation with confidence and hope. Explore free resources, training opportunities, and more at empoweredhomes.org. Empowered Homes Podcast Show us some Love! Do you appreciate The Empowered Homes Podcast? Like, subscribe, comment, share. Every bit of your engagement helps us be open-handed in sharing resources to grow strong families, leaders and ministries. Thanks for your help in Empowering Homes for the gospel! FB : https://www.facebook.com/EmpoweredHomesResources Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/empoweredhomesresources/ Youtube: www.youtube.com/@empoweredhomes9809Questions? Ideas for the Podcast? Contact us at podcast@empoweredhomes.org. Bobby@empoweredhomes.org Meghan@empoweredhomes.orgFind Free Resources empoweredhomes.org
In this powerful episode of The Candid Divorce Lawyer Podcast, host Kimberley Davies, divorce lawyer and family mediator, is joined by Hannah Strong – family psychotherapist, divorce mum, and founder of a neuroscience‑led approach to supporting children through family breakdown.Together, they explore what the research actually says about children and divorce, challenging some of the most common myths parents hear, including the idea that “children are resilient.” Hannah explains why resilience isn't innate, but something that is built, and how the right support can make all the difference.This episode is packed with practical, research‑backed insights for parents navigating separation, co‑parenting and child arrangements, including:How divorce impacts a child's developing brainWhy children “act out”, withdraw or become clingy during separationThe hand model of the brain and what “flipping your lid” really meansHow parental stress affects children's emotional regulationWhy children struggle with transitions between two homesUnderstanding anxious and avoidant attachment in childrenHow parents can regulate their own emotions to support their childWhat children need to feel safe, secure and emotionally connectedHow therapeutic (neuroscience‑informed) mediation differs from traditional mediationWhy children only need one regulated, informed parent to thriveHannah also shares her own deeply moving experience of going through divorce as a parent, and how applying neuroscience‑led tools transformed not only her children's wellbeing, but her entire approach to family life.Whether you're at the beginning of a separation, struggling with co‑parenting, navigating handovers between homes, or simply worried about how your child is coping, this episode offers clarity, reassurance and hope – grounded in science, empathy and real‑world experience.
Links to Steven Webb's podcast and how you can support his work.Donate paypal.me/stevenwebb or Coffee stevenwebb.ukSteven's courses, podcasts and links: stevenwebb.ukSometimes the most loving thing we can do is stay close without stepping in too quickly.This week I want to talk about one of the hardest forms of love: giving someone space. Not walking away. Not going cold. Not pretending we do not care. But staying close without taking over.It came up for me while talking with my daughter, noticing how quickly I wanted to jump in with answers, advice, solutions and opinions. And I could see the same thing in myself, in council meetings, in family conversations, and even in the way I meet my own thoughts and feelings. Something arises and I want to fix it before I have really heard it.But space is not neglect. Real space says: I am here. I trust you. Take your time.In this episode, I explore why the instinct to help is not wrong, but why fixing too quickly can sometimes be about easing our own discomfort. We look at the small pause after a feeling appears, the gap between notes in music, the three seconds before we answer, and the strange wisdom that often appears when we stop crowding the moment.Key topics:Why giving space is not the same as walking awayThe urge to fix the people we love, especially our childrenHow a few seconds of pause can let wisdom appearThoughts, feelings and body sensations that do not need an instant storyThe gap between the notes, and why space gives life meaningCouncil meetings, family tables, and the need to prove we know somethingAsking whether we are helping or reducing our own discomfortThe three second rule for conversations, emotions and difficult momentsCompanion meditation: IPM 105, Giving Space. A gentle Zen influenced meditation using the image of a closed shed and an open field to feel the difference between being crowded by what arises and giving it room to be seen clearly.If this episode meant something to you, please share it, leave a review, or treat me to a coffee: stevenwebb.ukWith thanks this week to: Cheryl, Nitya, Yvonne, Eleanor and Ryan, Karen, Lani, Jess and Stuart.And thank you to the kind anonymous souls and everyone who supports the work quietly in the background. You keep this podcast advert-free. Thank you.
In this solo episode, Madelyn explores one of the most powerful mindset shifts she has integrated into her own life: focusing on your desired state rather than the fear of what could go wrong.Drawing on personal stories, parenting moments, manifestation principles, and teachings from Neville Goddard, she shares how consciously choosing your desired outcome can transform the way you move.This is not about ignoring reality or pretending fear does not exist. It is about becoming aware of where your attention is going, choosing the reality you want to create, and maintaining that state long enough for it to become your experience.Follow Magnetic with Madelyn → https://www.instagram.com/magneticwithmadelynIn this episode, we cover:What it means to focus on your desired stateWhy fear and worry often create the outcomes we are trying to avoidThe simple mindset practice Madelyn uses with her childrenHow to shift from overwhelm into trust and certaintyThe airport story that reinforced the power of expectationNeville Goddard's teachings on creating your realityWhy maintaining your desired state is more important than choosing itThe connection between abundance, manifestation, and self trustHow to use this practice in relationships, work, parenting, and everyday lifePractical ways to create more ease and flow in your realityIf this episode resonated with you, hit subscribe, leave a comment, or share it with someone who needs this reminder today.Your support helps grow this beautiful community of women learning to trust themselves, create intentionally, and become the most magnetic versions of themselves.
Several years ago, Shalene Roberts sat with her two young children under the age of three, wrestling with thoughts about motherhood and wondering why it was so desperately hard. Pulling out her phone, she poured out her thoughts in a blog post entitled “When Mothering Is Hard and No One Sees.” Unexpectedly, those honest musings went viral, and that heartfelt post has had more than 630,000 views.Now a mother of five, Shalene understands that women everywhere struggle with the all-consuming service of motherhood—feeling unseen and underappreciated. Even those whose motherhood ride has been fairly smooth may wonder if what they're doing is making any difference. The words in Shalene's post gave voice to these questions. And it was out of that post that this book was born.You may be a younger mom or an older mom, a mom of toddlers or teens. The children you care for may be biological, adoptive, foster, or grandchildren. In When Mothering Is Hard and No One Sees, you will feel seen for your own motherhood struggles and challenges. This book helps you gain a new sense of how God views you as you move toward the hope He has revealed to Shalene: a bigger picture of being a mom with an impact that ripples throughout eternity. In creation and in redemption, you were made—and remade—to mother.In these pages, you will discover…God's original design for motherhoodYour position as a daughter of the King, elevating your motherhood roleThe assurance of abundant forgiveness for mistakes and failuresHow God has uniquely equipped you for this sacred role—with your specific childrenHow to find true rest amid the never-ending demandsWhen mothering is hard…God sees. And He will take you from the gritty to the glorious in your journey as a mom. When Mothering is Hard and No One Sees Bruce T Davis Shalene Roberts Shalene C. Roberts is a wife, part-time homeschooling mom of five, writer, photographer, and small business owner. As a former magazine editor, she seeks to inspire women to anchor in Christ, nurture grace-filled families, and foster life-giving homes. Her work has appeared in an array of outlets, including Her View From Home, Motherly, the Thrive Moms Exhale Bible study, the MOPS Blog, MICI Magazine, KirkCameron.com, SHINE magazine, TODAY Parents, Stroll Magazine, and a variety of other publications. Her post “When Mothering Is Hard and No One Sees” has had more than 630,000 views and has been shared worldwide. Shalene has also taught at the Declare Conference and is the author of Bruce the Brave, a heartwarming children's book about courage and faith. Additionally, she is the founder of Lily & Loom, a boutique vintage Turkish rug shop. Lily & Loom rugs have been seen on HGTV, the Magnolia Network, and Fixer Upper: Welcome Home.WebsiteLinkedInWhitaker House
Fan Mail: Tell Wendy how you're saying yes to yourself!Join Wendy for her dreamy Summer Solstice White Party on Saturday June 20, 2026 —an al fresco evening of delicious food, intention-setting, and celebration at the Phineas Wright House. Wear white, gather at the long table in the field, and toast to the season ahead. Save you seat here: phineaswrighthouse.com/the-shop/p/summer-solstice-white-partyIn this episode, Wendy sits down with Laurie Maddalena, leadership consultant who started her business nearly two decades ago and has raised three children while building it. Laurie spent years wrestling with the question: Can I be ambitious and a great mom? They explore:Why asking for support isn't weakness—it's healthy modeling for your childrenHow to confront the narrative that "I'm the mom so I should do it all"Why intentionality matters more than perfection when juggling multiple rolesLaurie struggled to write her book for years until her husband said, "Just go away a few nights a month and work on it." She couldn't believe he was offering. Her internal narrative was screaming: I'm the mom, I'm the person who should be doing these things. But she did it anyway, finished the book, and is still doing the work of believing she doesn't have to do it all alone.This is a conversation about leaning into support and remembering that being ambitious doesn't come at the expense of being a great mom.Connect with Laurie:Website: LaurieMaddalena.comGet her book, The Elevated Leader: https://amzn.to/49HTvLSLinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/lauriemaddalenaInstagram: instagram.com/lauriemaddalena________________________________________________________________________________________Connect with Wendy:LinkedinInstagram: @wendy.harropFacebook: Phineas Wright HouseWebsite: Phineas Wright House PWH Farm StaysPWH Curated Experience and TravelInterested in being a guest on the show? Send your pitch to podcast@phineaswrighthouse.comPodcast Production By Shannon Warner of Resonant Collective Want to start your own podcast? Let's chat!If this episode resonated, follow Say YES to Yourself! and leave a 5-star review. It helps more women in midlife discover the tools, stories, and community that make saying YES not only possible, but powerful.
After taking a pause from the podcast, Jamie is back — not because of the algorithm, consistency pressure, or content treadmill… but because she finally had something she genuinely needed to say. This episode starts with a reflection on stepping away from content creation and the overwhelming response from listeners whose lives were impacted by the podcast. But it quickly evolves into something much deeper:A conversation about trauma, therapy, motherhood, somatic healing, lineage, and what happens when women stop shrinking themselves.Jamie explores:Why talk therapy can sometimes keep us stuck in the story of our trauma instead of helping us move through it The difference between pathology and mythologySomatic healing, movement, and releasing emotions through the bodyWhy parenting often activates unresolved childhood woundsThe challenge of healing while actively raising childrenHow women are conditioned to suppress powerful emotions and “stay calm” at all costsCommunity, maternal energy, and the need for real connectionWhat it means to reclaim space, power, and feminine energyJamie also shares a deeply personal experience involving movement, dance, grief release, ancestral reflection, and a moment that shifted something profound inside of her. This isn't an episode about parenting tactics.It's about:The stories we inheritThe stories we tell ourselvesAnd the possibility of rewriting themIf you've been feeling emotionally stuck, disconnected from yourself, overwhelmed by motherhood, or exhausted from overanalyzing your healing journey… this conversation may resonate deeply.
In this powerful episode of Rooted in Christ Podcast, Eric Stephens sits down with author and speaker Debra McNinch for an honest conversation about parenting prodigals, spiritual warfare, and trusting God through family heartbreak.Debra shares her personal journey after receiving the life-changing news that her child identified as transgender, and how that moment shattered her expectations, challenged her faith, and ultimately led her deeper into prayer and dependence on Jesus. Through tears, wisdom, and unwavering faith, she explains how God transformed her pain into purpose through her ministry, Battle Cry Moms, a growing community of parents praying for their children.In this episode, they discuss:Parenting through unexpected detoursSpiritual warfare and praying for your childrenHow to love without compromising biblical truthOvercoming guilt, shame, and fear as parentsWhy community and prayer matter in hard seasonsRaising children with a personal relationship with JesusPractical ways to pray and stand in faith for prodigal childrenDebra also shares encouragement for parents who feel exhausted, defeated, or alone, reminding listeners that “no one fights alone.”Debra McNinch's book: Battle Cry: Love Goes to WarIf this episode encouraged you, please LIKE, SHARE, and SUBSCRIBE to the podcast. Your support helps us continue spreading the Gospel and having real conversations that point people back to Christ.---Want to be a guest on Rooted In Christ? Send Eric Stephens a message on PodMatch, here:https://www.podmatch.com/hostdetailpreview/1759833790503730c0e0ceb0e
What if the biggest threat to your fertility isn't your age, your hormones, or your egg quality — but your thoughts?This week, I sat down with Dr. Elizabeth Wade, a naturopathic fertility and hormone specialist who has built her practice around one radical idea: you cannot biohack your way out of an unhealed inner world.Elizabeth didn't arrive at this from a textbook. She was doing everything right — organic food, filtered water, air purifiers in every room — and still felt something was deeply, quietly wrong. After a separation, a mold crisis, a lost nanny, and a grief she was barely holding, everything collapsed at once. And in that collapse, she found the thread her patients kept pulling on too.Here's what blew my mind: she told me the number one influence on what genes you pass to your children isn't your supplements or your diet. It's your thoughts. Your epigenetic expression — what your kids inherit — is shaped by how you perceive the world right now. She dropped another bomb: the "infertility" label is applied to couples who haven't conceived in a year, but only about 1–2% of people are truly sterile. That word is doing enormous psychological damage. And here's one I wasn't ready for — a study found that when someone in your household takes antibiotics, your gut microbiome diversity drops too. Even if you never took a single pill.She also revealed that sperm quality has collapsed — current averages hover around just 4% normal morphology — and that men are largely left out of the fertility conversation entirely, even though miscarriages can be caused by sperm DNA fragmentation.After this conversation, you'll never look at the preconception window the same way.What we talk about:Why your thoughts are the #1 factor in the genes you pass to your childrenHow the word "infertility" is causing unnecessary harm to couples who will likely conceiveThe collapsing sperm crisis — and why men are still being ignored in fertility careWhy your baby is not starting as a clean slate (300+ chemicals in cord blood at birth)How obsessively tracking your ovulation cycle may actually be working against youThe microbiome you share with your partner — and what their antibiotic use does to yoursHow to start thinking like you're already pregnant, before you ever take a testEpisode Links & Resources:Dr. Elizabeth's Website: https://www.drelizabethwade.com/fertilityreclaimedInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/dr.elizabethwade/Connect with Tracy:Website: https://tracyduhs.com/Hydration Shop: https://sanctuarysd.com/Instagram: @tracyduhsFlow FAM Community: https://tracyduhs.com/join-flow-fam/
In this episode of Undeletable Dad, Tracy Poizner sits down with human design expert and author Nina Cuellar-Barry to break down a powerful—but often overlooked—tool for understanding your children on a deeper level.For divorced and separated dads navigating high-conflict parenting, the traditional tools and approaches are no longer effective. Human Design is a practical framework to understand your child's emotional wiring, decision-making style, and behavioral patterns—so you can stop guessing and start connecting.Nina's upcoming book "Parenting with Human Parenting" reveals how small shifts in awareness can dramatically improve communication, reduce conflict, and help you show up as the grounded, magnetic father your kids naturally turn toward.Why traditional parenting tools often fail dads after divorce/separationHow Human Design reveals your child's emotional and behavioral blueprintThe difference between emotionally driven vs. instinct-driven childrenHow to respond to emotional overwhelm without escalating conflictWhy some kids absorb and amplify other people's emotionsHow to guide decision-making based on your child's natural designThe hidden reason some kids struggle with time, pressure, and transitions[00:00] What “Undeletable Dad” really means in modern fatherhood[03:00] Meet Nina Cuellar-Barry and her journey into Human Design[06:00] Why blended families need different parenting tools[07:30] What Human Design actually is (and why it works)[12:00] How Tracy discovered Human Design—and why it clicked[16:00] Reading a Human Design chart (simple breakdown for parents)[20:00] Emotional vs. non-emotional children explained[32:00] How kids absorb and amplify parental emotions[34:00] The danger of kids becoming emotional caregivers[38:00] Decision-making styles: gut instinct vs. emotional timing[40:00] Nina's book Parenting with Human DesignNina Cuellar-Barry is a certified Quantum Human Design Family Coach, retired special education teacher, and author of Parenting with Human Design. She helps parents understand their children's unique energetic blueprint to create more harmony, connection, and ease in family dynamics.Undeletable Dad, hosted by Tracy Poizner, is built for divorced and separated fathers who refuse to lose their connection with their children. The show delivers practical tools, mindset shifts, and unconventional strategies to help dads step out of survival mode and into confident, intentional fatherhood.Visit undeletabledad.com for courses and to apply for private mentorship with Tracy.
The superintendent isn't a budget manager, they're the chief advocate for all children. Dr. Michael J. Barnes rebuilt Mayfield City Schools around this principle, and the results speak for themselves.The superintendent is the chief advocate for all children in their community. Nobody else can say that, not the mayor, not the school board, not the superintendent of the next district over. But somewhere along the way, superintendents drifted from the instructional chair into operations and politics. Dr. Michael J. Barnes reversed that drift entirely.At Mayfield City Schools (Ohio), Barnes built a four-track personalized learning model that blew up the time/learning equation. Traditional, Cross-Curricular, Self-Paced, and The Option. When students got agency over their learning design, attendance skyrocketed, not because of better discipline policies, but because students were actually designing their own learning. Time stopped being the constant. Learning became it.In this conversation with Dr. Conner, Barnes walks the AC-Stage reframe: what does instructional leadership look like when the industrial model is obsolete? What's the role of the superintendent in an Innovation Core? Why do design thinking, engineering, and entrepreneurship matter as much as math? How do you navigate the VUCA landscape of state politics without abandoning your moral imperative?What You'll LearnThe superintendent's real job: chief advocate for all childrenHow to flip the time/learning variable, when learning is constant, time becomes flexibleThe four-track personalized learning model and why student agency drives attendanceWhy instructional leadership means staying in the learning chair, not the politics chairThe Creative Staircase framework for systemic innovationHow to navigate the VUCA landscape in state politics without compromising your visionThis conversation is essential for any superintendent or central office leader in the AC-Stage of education. Dr. Conner and Dr. Barnes dig into the frameworks that move the dial from excellence as an aspiration to excellence as a system.And on that note, onward and upward.
What happens when your identity as an athlete evolves, but your passion for movement, innovation, and challenge stays the same?In episode 134 of The Eat for Endurance Podcast, I'm joined by Jennifer Maxwell, co-founder of PowerBar and creator of JAMBAR, to talk about running, entrepreneurship, fueling a large, active family, and finding new passions later in life.Jennifer helped launch the global bar category back in 1985 with her husband, long before fueling strategies became a core part of endurance performance. But this conversation goes far beyond the history of energy bars.Jennifer and I discuss:How she ran her first marathon at the age of 13Her early interest in cooking and food scienceWhat it was like building PowerBar out of her apartment while still in collegeHow she balanced running a business, training, and raising 6 childrenHow her relationship with running changed after having kids, and especially after her husband's sudden death in 2004Why learning the drums later in life became such an important outletWhat inspired her return to the bar business decades later with JAMBARJennifer's story is a powerful reminder that your identity is never fixed. How you move and fuel your body as well as how you spend your time is meant to evolve across different seasons of life.
In this episode of Life = Choices; Choices = Life, Kim Olver explores the hidden tension many parents experience—but rarely talk about: the moment when responsibility turns into resentment.If you've ever felt like you're carrying everything, nagging, or becoming more impatient and critical than you want to be, you're not alone. This episode unpacks how over-responsibility can quietly lead to frustration, disconnection, and burnout.Through the lens of Mental Freedom®, Kim shares how to recognize what is truly yours to carry—and what isn't.You'll learn:Why parenting can start to feel overwhelming—even when you love your childrenHow over-functioning leads to resentment and disconnectionThe difference between responsibility and controlHow to step back without stepping awayWhy allowing natural consequences can support growthFeaturing a powerful real-life story about setting boundaries with her son, Kim illustrates how small shifts can create meaningful change for both you and your child.This episode is for parents who care deeply, carry a lot, and are ready to find a more sustainable way forward.
In this powerful and deeply insightful episode of From Foster to Forever, I sit down with child therapist and author Stacy Schaffer to explore what foster and adoptive parents really need to understand about childhood trauma, attachment, and healing.Stacy specializes in play therapy, a transformative approach that helps children express emotions they don't yet have the words for. Through tools like sand tray therapy, somatic release, and creative expression, she offers a window into how children process grief, loss, and complex family dynamics.Together, we dive into the realities that many foster and adoptive families face—but don't always talk about openly.This conversation is both validating and eye-opening, offering practical tools and emotional reassurance for parents navigating the beautiful and challenging journey of raising children from hard places.
This was recorded as part of the Burning Woman Conversations – join us FREE – April 21 – May 5th.SIGN UP NOW…Pre- order the 10th anniversary edition of Burning Woman now to claim your place on my online class – BURNING THE RULEBOOKAttend the Burning Woman author Q& A - $6/month www.patreon.com/lucyhpearceGrab the Extended Episode of this conversation from $3/month www.patreon.com/lucyhpearceAuthor Uma Dinsmore-Tuli PhD is an advocate for intuition and rematriation. She met yoga in 1969, at the age of four, and fell in love. She's been practicing ever since, sharing cyclical, therapeutic yoga since 1994. Co-Founder of the Yoga Nidra Network, she also trains specialist teachers in Total Yoga Nidra and Yoni Shakti Yoga Therapy for menstrual and menopausal health, pregnancy, birth, and postnatal recovery. Uma has written six books, including Nidra Shakti: the Power of Rest - An Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Yoga Nidra and Yoni Shakti: A Woman's Guide to Power and Freedom through Yoga and Tantra. Recovering intuitive embodied and cyclical wisdom is at the heart of her writing and her approach to yoga therapy.Uma's passion as a writer and as a teacher is to transmit clarity of awareness, creativity and profound vitality. She identifies these teachings as radical acts of rematriation, rooted in intuitive arts and in yoga tantra, drawing on a variety of yogic traditions to share deeply nourishing and enlivening practices appropriate for contemporary life.We talked about:Life force energy and the death cult of patriarchyUnlearning being a good girlThe impact of the witch burnings.The connection between the colonisation of land and our bodiesReclaiming our intuitionHow and why she developed yoga practices that centred female bodiesThe importance of understanding that the System isn't personalThe transformative experience of home birthing her childrenHow she's navigating current times creativelyIn the Extended Episode from $3/month www.patreon.com/lucyhpearce- Her baptism of fire: revealing abuse in the yoga community and the repercussions of this.- Kundalini and its relationship to the Burning Woman archeypeResourcesBad Guru podcastYoni Shakti: A Woman's Guide to Power and Freedom through Yoga and Tantra. www.yoganidranetwork.org/www.patreon.com/umadinsmoretuli Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The internet loves fast success stories—photographers hitting six figures in their first year, booking out their calendars overnight, or going viral from one random post. But what if building a photography business slowly is actually the better path?Alyssa talks honestly about the pressure photographers feel to grow quickly on social media, the unrealistic expectations often promoted in the photography industry, and how chasing rapid success can lead to burnout—especially for moms raising young children or homeschooling.You'll hear practical encouragement for photographers and creative entrepreneurs who want to build a sustainable business without sacrificing their families. Alyssa explains how redefining success, setting boundaries around sessions and work hours, and building a business that fits your season of life can create long-term stability and peace.If you're a photographer, creative business owner, or mom entrepreneur feeling pressure to keep up with the internet's definition of success, this episode will remind you that slow growth is not failure—it's often the foundation for a meaningful and lasting business.Topics discussed in this episode:Slow growth in a photography businessWork-life balance for photographersBuilding a sustainable creative business as a momAvoiding burnout in the photography industryRedefining success while raising childrenHow motherhood changes entrepreneurshipSometimes the goal isn't building the fastest growing business.Sometimes the goal is building a life that actually matters.Follow along on Instagram HERE
Text Sue what you think!What can unschooling families learn from the neurodivergent community?In this episode, Sue Patterson looks at how our understanding of “quirky” kids has changed over the years—and why many unschooling parents are learning from approaches developed within the neurodivergent community.Even families without a diagnosis can benefit from these ideas when kids struggle with expectations, pressure, or social dynamics.In this episode:Reassurance for parents of neurodivergent childrenHow the conversation around neurodivergence has evolvedWhy many families turn to unschooling when school isn't working What parents can learn from neurodivergent-informed parenting approachesResources for neurodivergent familiesSue also shares details about the Unschooling Summit, where many speakers will be discussing neurodivergence in unschooling families.
When children are exposed to confronting sexualised online content, parents can be left reeling—worried about the impact, unsure what to do next, and tempted to jump into control mode. While Australia has now rolled out age restrictions for children and social media, much of the damage has already been done, leaving many families trying to work out how to respond. Yet children recover best when the adults around them restore their own steadiness first. When parents can respond calmly and with clarity, they create the secure space children need to make sense of what happened and re-establish healthy attitudes to sex and intimacy.In this episode, we speak with Dr Marshall Ballantine-Jones, a leading specialist in online sexualisation education with more than 25 years of experience supporting children, youth, and families. As CEO of DigiHelp Publishing, Marshall designs school-based programs that address the realities of online behaviour with honesty, compassion, and practical strategies.Together, we explore:Why children's online exposure can unsettle parents just as much as childrenGetting real about the damaging impacts of porn exposure for childrenHow parents can restore steadiness before guiding their child forwardPractical ways to support children as they recover and rebuild healthy understandings of sex and intimacyWhat effective “repair” looks like at home—without shame, panic, or overcontrolHow strengthening the parent-child connection remains the most protective factorThis conversation offers reassurance for parents who feel overwhelmed, replacing fear-driven reactions with grounded confidence. Instead of trying to control every risk, parents can learn to steady themselves—so their children can recover well and continue developing with hope and resilience.Linkshttps://digihelp.io/https://www.linkedin.com/in/marshall-ballantine-jones-2096a933a/6 Principles for Parenting in a Porn Culture: https://resistministries.org/parents/Newsletter-https://parenthopeproject.com.au/#newsletter Youtube-http://www.youtube.com/@ParentHopeProject Facebook-https://www.facebook.com/coachingparents Instagram-https://www.instagram.com/parenthopeproject/ LinkedIn-https://www.linkedin.com/company/79093727/admin/feed/posts/ Website-https://parenthopeproject.com.au/ Contact us: Contact@parentproject.com.au (02) 9904 5600
In this episode of The Everything ECE Podcast, Carla sits down with children's author and former teacher Christine Devane to explore how storytelling can support introverted learners, build self-advocacy skills, and help children process grief.Christine shares the inspiration behind her book Elephant Beach, a story about stepping outside your comfort zone while honouring personality differences in the classroom. Together, Carla and Christine unpack the balance between supporting extroverted children without silencing them and intentionally creating space for quieter voices.In this episode, you'll learn:The difference between introversion and shyness in childrenHow to support quiet children without calling them outWhy partner selection in classrooms mattersPractical ways to encourage self-advocacyHow books help children internalize social-emotional skillsWhy storytelling is one of the most powerful SEL tools in early childhood educationIf you're an educator looking for meaningful ways to support social development through stories, this episode will leave you inspired and equipped.Christine Devane Christine Devane was a second-grade teacher for thirteen years and enjoyed reading with her students. She currently lives in Massachusetts with her husband John; three children Joey, Nick, and Adeline; and their dog Sophie. Christine loves going to the beach, spending time with family and friends, traveling, and collecting lucky elephants.LinksWebsite: www.christine-devane.comInstagram: www.instagram.com/stined13SUBSCRIBE & REVIEWIf you loved this episode, please take a moment to subscribe and leave a review. Your support helps us reach more ECEs who are in the thick of it!. Thanks for tuning in to The Everything ECE. See you next week! shape their early years.CONNECT WITH CARLAThe ECE Latte LoungeEmail Newsletter: Click HereWebsite: carlatheece.comInstagram: @carlatheece
Meisha Marshall is the founder of Renew Mindset Coaching, where she helps parents who grew up with divorce create more closeness, steadiness, and emotional safety in their relationships. Her work focuses on the everyday moments, miscommunications, shut-downs, and small disconnects that leave couples feeling tired and alone, even when they care deeply. Meisha offers practical, realistic tools that help relationships feel lighter, more connected, and easier to stay in. On this episode of Smart Parents Successful Students, you will hear:How parents' relationship dynamics impact kids' emotional safety, confidence, and behaviorCommon communication patterns couples unintentionally pass down to childrenHow to model healthy conflict, repair, and connection in front of kidsPractical tools for building calmer, more emotionally safe relationships at homeYou can reach Meisha at Meisha@renewmindset.com. You can also find her on her website at Renewmindset.com. Her social media handles are https://www.instagram.com/renewmindsetcoaching and https://www.facebook.com/renewmindsetcoaching. You can also find out more by subscribing to her newsletter at www.renewmindset.com. You can find Dynamis Learning on all the social media platforms: Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Helen can be reached at info@dynamislearningacademy.com. To schedule a free consultation to discuss your child's needs, including advocacy resources, academic planning, and/or obtain a tutor for your child, contact Helen Panos at 770-282-9931 or email her at the email address above.
In Part 1 of this conversation, Ian sits down with Jonathan Corone, creator of Healthy Sports Parents, to unpack the emotional, cultural, and behavioral challenges parents face in youth sports.Jonathan shares how his own daughter's experience — and a moment on the sidelines watching a parent lose control — sparked a platform focused on helping parents do better without shame or blame. Together, they explore why parents react the way they do, how outcome obsession sneaks in early, and why most kids don't need more pressure — they need perspective.This episode is for parents, coaches, and anyone trying to protect joy, growth, and long-term development in youth sports.
Asian motherhood abroad comes with unique pressures — cultural expectations, career demands, identity shifts, and the quiet work of belonging.In this episode of the DAM Parenting Podcast, we're joined by the founder of Second Steep, a community created for Asian working mothers navigating the intersections of career, culture, and care — often without a map and without enough support.Together, we explore:What makes Asian immigrant motherhood distinctLetting go of cultural expectations while staying rootedInterracial marriages and identity negotiationRaising multilingual, culturally grounded childrenHow to introduce culture ethically in diverse cities like AmsterdamThe power of community spaces that don't require explanationWe also talk about Lunar New Year, upcoming community dinners in Amsterdam and Eindhoven, and resources for raising children with cultural pride and emotional safety.A gentle, affirming conversation for Asian mums, immigrant parents, and anyone raising children abroad.
In this episode of Perfect Prey, I'm joined by Laura Richards, a criminal behavioral analyst, former New Scotland Yard specialist, and one of the leading global voices on coercive control. Laura has been instrumental in changing laws on stalking and coercive control in the UK and internationally, and her work has helped shape policy, legislation, and professional practice worldwide.We explore why coercive control is not about isolated incidents, but a patterned strategy of domination, entrapment, and power imbalance. Laura explains why coercive control is best understood as a war of attrition, how patriarchy and misogyny shape institutional responses, and why women and children are so often disbelieved—even when the evidence is present.This conversation examines how legal systems, family courts, and law enforcement frequently fail victims and survivors, particularly at the point of separation, when risk escalates most dramatically. We also discuss why coercive control must be criminalized, why gender matters in risk assessment, and how language itself can either obscure or reveal abuse.What we coverWhat coercive control really is and why it's a patterned form of abuseWhy victims and survivors are often disbelieved by systems meant to protect themCoercive control as “murders and suicides in slow motion”The role of patriarchy, entitlement, and power imbalance in abuseWhy separation is the most dangerous time for women and childrenHow family courts can become a tool of post-separation abuseWhy protecting children requires protecting the non-abusive parentThe urgent need to criminalize coercive control globallyWhy listen If you are a survivor, protective parent, clinician, attorney, advocate, or policymaker, this episode offers critical insight into how coercive control operates beneath the surface of relationships and systems. Laura Richards brings clarity to why abuse is so often minimized, misunderstood, or reframed—and what must change to prevent further harm.Guest bio (short)Laura Richards is a criminal behavioral analyst, former New Scotland Yard specialist, and a leading international expert on coercive control, stalking, and violence against women. She helped create the DASH risk assessment model, founded the National Stalking Advocacy Service (Paladin), and played a central role in criminalizing coercive control in England and Wales. Laura is the author of Policing Domestic Violence and host of the Crime Analyst and Real Crime Profile podcasts.Connect with Dr. ChristineOfficial site: https://www.thelaurarichards.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/crimeanalyst?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igsh=ZDNlZDc0MzIxNw==X (twitter): https://x.com/thecrimeanalystTiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@crimeanalystpodYoutube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCksfRSwfwFqUCjcxKYju6_QBooks: https://www.thelaurarichards.com/resources/booksConnect with Dr. ChristineProtective Parenting Program: https://www.coercivecontrolconsulting.com/services/for-parents/Official site: https://www.coercivecontrolconsulting.com/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@DrCocchiola-coercivecontrol/videosTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@dr.c_coercivecontrolInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/dr.cocchiola_coercivecontrol/TEDx Talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gp2qByKOue4&t=24sBooks:https://url-shortener.me/c/FramedBookhttps://url-shortener.me/c/EveryMomentOfEveryDayIf this episode resonated, please share it with someone who needs this information, subscribe to Perfect Prey, and consider leaving a review to help other survivors find validation and clarity.— Dr. Christine Cocchiola & guest Laura Richards
Send us a textDid you know that your body holds onto stress in ways you might not even realize?In this episode, we sit down with the incredible Dr. Hannah Strom, founder of Awake Pelvic Health, to explore the powerful connection between our nervous system and pelvic floor. Hannah takes us on a journey beyond the physical symptoms, revealing how deep-rooted stress, trauma, and anxiety can manifest in our bodies.We dive into topics that are often left unspoken but are vital for true healing. From the surprising link between the vagus nerve and chronic pain to the importance of men's pelvic health and how these issues can even affect children, Dr. Hannah sheds light on the path to finding freedom in your own skin. Whether you are navigating postpartum recovery, chronic pain, or simply want to understand your body better, this conversation offers a holistic roadmap to feeling safe and at home in your body again.Tune in to discover how peeling back the layers of your nervous system can lead to profound, lasting relief. Healing is possible, and it starts with understanding the beautiful complexity of your whole self.Connect with Dr. Hannah here: www.awakepelvichealth.comIn this episode, we cover:The vital connection between the pelvic floor and the vagus nerveWhy pelvic health matters for men, women, and childrenHow stress and trauma manifest in the bodyWhat to look for in a holistic physical therapistHow's My Nervous System Quiz
Soul Custody: Sparing Children from the Hidden Toll of Divorce with Pamela Henry, author of Soul Custody. Guest Website: https://soul-custody.comEpisode Summary:Divorce doesn't just end a marriage—it reshapes the emotional world of everyone involved, especially children. In this powerful and deeply personal episode of Linda's Corner, host Linda Bjork welcomes Pamela Henry, an expert in early childhood education, family systems, and shared custody parenting. She's also the author of Soul Custody: Sparing Children from Divorce, a transformative guide for families navigating the emotional terrain of separation.Pamela shares her own story: a desperate desire to escape her marriage that eventually led to a profound revelation—she wasn't really trying to escape her husband, but the pain of her own unresolved childhood trauma. As a survivor of sexual abuse by her father, Pamela unconsciously projected her confusion, hurt, and rejection onto her relationships—ultimately impacting her marriage and her children.Now, Pamela helps others understand the deeper emotional roots that can influence the decision to divorce. She invites listeners to pause, reflect, and heal before making choices that carry lifelong consequences.In this episode, we explore:The often unseen emotional cost of divorce on childrenHow childhood trauma can shape adult relationshipsWhy healing yourself is key before trying to fix or escape a relationshipThe importance of self-compassion, transparency, and owning our mistakes as parentsHow to create a healthier future by confronting the pastThis episode is a compassionate, thought-provoking invitation to approach relationships with deeper awareness and responsibility. If you're navigating a difficult relationship or healing from your past, this conversation is for you.Resources & Links:
Care to Change Counseling - Practical Solutions for Positive Change
Parenting young adults is one of the most tender and complex seasons of family life. In this episode, April Bordeau is joined by returning guest Jean Crane to explore how parents can navigate the tension between letting go and staying connected as children move into adulthood.Jean brings both professional insight and lived experience, parenting children who are actively launching into college, marriage, and independent life. Together, April and Jean discuss the emotional push-pull parents often feel—grief and pride, closeness and distance—and how to stay relationally connected without overstepping into control.This conversation offers practical guidance, reassurance, and hope for parents who want to maintain influence through relationship rather than authority.In this episode, you'll learn:Why parenting young adults is fundamentally different from parenting teens or childrenThe shift from positional influence to relational influenceHow brain development impacts decision-making well into the mid-20sWhat helps young adults want to stay connected with their parentsHow curiosity and listening build trust and opennessHealthy ways to set boundaries with adult childrenHow to respond when you're deeply concerned about your child's choicesWhen to speak up, when to step back, and when to pray and waitA simple practice parents can use this week to strengthen connectionKey takeaway: The goal isn't control—it's connection. When communication stays open, curiosity replaces judgment, and encouragement is spoken consistently, young adults are far more likely to invite their parents into their lives.Resources mentioned: Parenting Through the Stages (Orange Series) The Power of a Praying Parent The Power of a Praying Parent for Adult Children The Anxious Generation Stolen FocusApril also references a previous Care to Change podcast episode on parenting adult children, which will be linked in the show notes.If you're navigating this season and feeling overwhelmed, uncertain, or disconnected, Care to Change offers experienced therapists who can walk alongside you through counseling, marriage intensives, or leadership coaching.Learn more or reach out at caretochange.org.
Before Disney sanitized them, Grimm's Fairy Tales were brutal, dirty folklore written for adults — violent cautionary stories about desire, punishment, and death.Before they became bedtime stories, fairy tales were warnings.In this episode of Late Night Legends, Ashley takes the lead and delivers a hella strong, deeply researched presentation on the original Grimm's Fairy Tales — and she absolutely nails it. We dive into the early versions of infamous stories like Sleeping Beauty and Snow White and the Seven Dwarves, exposing how these tales were intentionally gruesome, sexual, and morally unforgiving.The Brothers Grimm collected folklore rooted in medieval Europe, a world where life was harsh and storytelling wasn't meant to comfort. These stories used violence, taboo, jealousy, and bodily punishment to enforce social rules and reflect the darker realities of adult life. The filth wasn't accidental — it was the point.In this episode, we break down:Why Grimm's Fairy Tales were originally intended for adults, not childrenHow stories like Sleeping Beauty and Snow White were far more disturbing in their earliest formsWhat Disney removed — and why that mattersHow folklore relied on shock, cruelty, and fear to teach lessonsThese stories weren't magical.They were dangerous, filthy, and deeply human.If you enjoyed Ashley's presentation and want more of her work, follow and support her here:https://linktr.ee/ashvsevilbreadHere at the Late Night Legends, we think spooky season should last all year long! Join our spooky community to ask the Legends questions, and keep the conversation going!https://discord.gg/kESdgRH47U
Christmas is almost here — and while everyone else is planning outfits and presents, you're worrying about something else entirely: how your child is going to cope.The noise.The travel.The broken routines.The big family expectations.In this episode of DAM Parenting, host Eva is joined by child psychologist Faye to talk about what's actually happening inside a child's brain and body when Christmas becomes overwhelming — and how parents can support regulation without trying to control every moment.Together, we explore:Why routine changes and overstimulation can feel so big for childrenHow parental anxiety and guilt can quietly affect our kidsWhat travel, sleep disruption, and long days do to emotional regulationHow to handle family pressure when your child needs spaceSimple, realistic tools to help children stay calm and supported during the holidaysThis conversation isn't about creating a perfect Christmas.It's about understanding overwhelm, protecting emotional safety, and creating small pockets of calm — whether you're travelling, hosting, or just trying to get through the season.If Christmas feels like a lot this year, this episode is for you.
Send us a textIn this episode of the Crisis in Education podcast, Dr. Paul “Paulie” Gavoni sits down with Michael Waller, an attorney and Executive Director of Georgia Appleseed, to talk about the real work of keeping students safe, supported, and out of the criminal justice system. Drawing from legal, educational, and behavioral science perspectives, they unpack how poverty, exclusionary discipline, and lack of proactive support funnel students — especially kids in poverty and kids of color — from classrooms into courts. The conversation shines a light on what actually works: strengthening schools as prevention hubs, building predictable environments, and giving educators the tools to respond to behavior before it escalates.
Food allergies can feel overwhelming for parents—especially during those first introductions to new foods. In this episode of The New Mom Talk Podcast, I'm joined by Dr. Akansha Ganju, a board-certified allergist and immunologist and the leader of Latitude's first Los Angeles clinic. Dr. Ganju shares her expertise on how parents can recognize the signs of food allergies, know when to seek help, and feel more confident when introducing new foods.We cover:The earliest signs of a food allergy in childrenHow to tell the difference between a food allergy, sensitivity, or normal digestive discomfortRed flag reactions that require immediate medical attentionWhat steps to take if you suspect your child has an allergyHow to feel confident introducing allergens—even with a family historyTreatment options for children with diagnosed food allergiesWhether you're about to start solids, in the middle of introducing allergens, or navigating a new diagnosis, this conversation will leave you feeling informed, supported, and empowered.Connect with Dr. Akansha Ganju:Official Website: https://latitudefoodallergycare.com/IG: https://www.instagram.com/latitudefoodallergycare/how to identify food allergies in children, signs of food allergies in babies, food allergy vs sensitivity in kids, introducing allergens to babies safely, red flag reactions food allergy, when to see an allergist for child food allergy, food allergy treatment options for kids, Dr. Akansha Ganju allergistwww.NewMomTalk.comBuy Me A CoffeeIG: @NewMomTalk.PodcastYouTube: @NewMomTalkMariela@NewMomTalk.comInterested in being a guest? Shoot us an email!- best parenting podcast- best new mom podcast- best podcasts for new moms- best pregnancy podcast- best podcast for expecting moms- best podcast for moms- best podcast for postpartum- best prenatal podcast- best postnatal podcast- best podcast for postnatal moms- best podcast for pregnancy moms- new mom - expecting mom- first time mom
How to Stop Nagging Your Kids (And Get Better Results)The Problem: You're repeating yourself constantly, and it's exhausting everyone. Nagging doesn't work, damages relationships, and prevents kids from developing independence.What You'll Learn:Why nagging fails and what it teaches your childrenHow to use natural consequences effectivelyThe power of saying things once (and meaning it)Creating routines that eliminate daily battlesTransferring ownership so kids manage their own responsibilitiesThe Goal: Raise responsible, independent kids while building a stronger relationship—without being the household taskmaster.Perfect for: Parents tired of the nagging cycle and ready to try strategies that actually work.Email me at info@parentingdecoded.com or go to my website at www.parentingdecoded.com. Have a blessed rest of your day!
In this week's episode of The ADHD Women's Wellbeing Podcast, we're exploring the complexities of parenting as a neurodivergent individual and how our own lived experiences can shape the way we support our neurodivergent children, helping to foster more resilience, compassion, and understanding.I'm joined by Holly Blanc Moses, a therapist and parent coach with over 23 years of experience supporting neurodivergent families. Holly shares her personal and professional insights into emotional regulation, reparenting, and how self-advocacy can transform both our parenting and our wellbeing. Together, we unpack how breaking generational patterns and modelling self-compassion can foster resilience in both parents and children.My new book, The ADHD Women's Wellbeing Toolkit, is now available. Grab your copy here!What You'll Learn:How understanding our own ADHD helps our children The challenges neurodivergent parents face when raising neurodivergent childrenHow emotional regulation helps both parents and children navigate stressWhat reparenting involves and how it can break harmful generational cyclesHow to release the “shoulds” of parenthood and define parenting on your termsWays to nurture grit, resilience, and self-advocacy in your childrenThe importance of modelling self-advocacy and asking for supportTimestamps:02:33 – Holly's lived experience of having neurodivergent children05:16 – Challenges and insights to parenting neurodivergent children08:55 – Recovering from generational trauma and undiagnosed neurodivergence10:34 – Parental pressure and emotional regulation16:14 – Reparenting and developing self-compassion24:10 – Modelling resilience and fostering independence25:00 – Encouraging self-advocacy in children as a parentThis episode is about giving yourself permission to slow down and parent in a way that honours both your needs and your child's. If anything, let it be a reminder that if what you are doing works for your family, that is enough, no matter what anyone else says.Join the More Yourself Community - the doors are now open!More Yourself is a compassionate space for late-diagnosed ADHD women to connect, reflect, and come home to who they really are. Sign up here!Inside the More Yourself Membership, you'll be able to:Connect with like-minded women who understand you Learn from guest experts and practical toolsReceive compassionate prompts & gentle remindersEnjoy voice-note encouragement from KateJoin flexible meet-ups and mentoring sessionsAccess on-demand workshops and quarterly guest expert sessionsTo join for £26 a month,
In this episode of The Money Mondays, Dan Fleyshman sits down with real estate developer, investor, and author Jarek Tadla to explore the deeper side of wealth.Jarek shares his remarkable journey from earning $4 an hour as an immigrant dishwasher to building a billion-dollar real estate portfolio. But his story isn't just about money—it's about the mental, emotional, and spiritual battles that come with success.Together, Dan and Jarek dive into:Why fear and comfort zones hold people backThe difference between inheritance and legacy when raising childrenHow chasing external validation nearly cost Jarek his lifeThe importance of inner wealth, emotional intelligence, and self-worthWhy giving your time and energy matters more than writing checksThis is an unfiltered conversation about money, mental health, family, and fulfillment—and why true wealth begins within.
Welcome back to the Feng Shui Flow PodcastToday I'm joined by a very special guest, Francesca Amber, host of the Law of Attraction Changed My Life podcast and author of the brand-new book Manifest Like a Mother.Francesca has built an incredible community by keeping manifestation real, relatable, and hilariously honest. In this conversation she shares her journey with the Law of Attraction, the lessons she's learned along the way, and why she felt called to write a book specifically for mothers who want to manifest without adding to their overwhelm.Inside this episode we exploreHow Francesca first discovered the Law of Attraction and why it changed everythingThe challenges of manifesting during motherhood and why so many practices can feel unrealisticWhy Manifest Like a Mother is designed to transform what you already do, without adding more to your listThe delicate balance between taking action and doing the energetic workEFT tapping – what it is, how it works, and why it can create such powerful shiftsSimple ways to weave manifestation into daily routines with childrenHow gratitude, routine, and perspective can help shift challenges into opportunitiesThe importance of creating an environment that supports your goals and why your home is such a powerful ally in manifestationConnect with Francesca:Buy Francesca's bookWebsite: Francescaamber.comInstagram: @francescaamberJoin the community at somuchlove.com and follow along @somuchlovekimberleySo much love, Kimberley xxA bespoke analysis of your home to unlock the exact remedies your living space needs to support you in a life of more abundance and prosperity: https://www.thefengshuiflow.com/home-analysis-serviceWork with me 1 to 1 here!A huge thank you to everyone who has pre-ordered my book too! Your support means the world! If you've ever wanted to understand the deeper connection between your home and your well-being, this the book is for you.Preorder The Calm and Happy Home now:Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Books-A-Million | Indigo | Watkins Publishing If you loved this episode don't forget to subscribe, leave a 5* review on Apple Podcasts and tag me in your stories on Instagram @thefengshuiflow! xx
SEND in the experts with Georgina Durrant (Special Educational Needs Podcast)
SEND in the Experts with Georgina Durrant: Understanding Sensory Processing with OT Beth SmithsonIn this episode of SEND in the Experts podcast, host Georgina Durrant, former teacher and SENDCO, welcomes Beth Smithson, a highly experienced Occupational Therapist and Advanced Sensory Integration Practitioner. Together, they explore how sensory processing differences affect children and young people with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND), and how educators, parents, and therapists can better support them.Beth shares insights from over 20 years of clinical practice across health, education, and social care, including her current role at Sensory Integration Education. Topics covered include:What is sensory integration and why does it matter?Recognising signs of sensory processing differences in childrenHow sensory challenges impact learning, behaviour, and social interactionEffective strategies and interventions for supporting sensory needsThe role of Occupational Therapists in SEND supportCreating sensory-friendly environments at home and in schoolCommon myths and misconceptions about sensory processingAdvice for parents, carers, and educatorsThe future of sensory integration research and inclusive educationWhether you're a teacher, parent, SENDCO, or therapist, this episode offers practical guidance and expert knowledge to help you create more inclusive, sensory-aware spaces for all learners.Brought to you by Twinkl. Listen now to empower your practice and deepen your understanding of sensory integration. Visit the Twinkl Inclusion Hub here: https://www.twinkl.co.uk/l/wwwfx for SEND, OT, SaLT resources and more!Useful resources: Identifying Sensory Needs: Understanding, Recognising and Managing Alertness Levels : https://www.twinkl.co.uk/l/ku1zvSensory circuit flashcards https://www.twinkl.co.uk/l/wn7a0 Links mentioned in the episode:www.sensoryintegrationeducation.com www.sensoryhelpnow.orgwww.sensoryinclusiveschools.org
Today on Emily the Medium: Parenting New Earth children and supporting their unique journeysNavigating life as a parent of autistic and non-verbal childrenUnderstanding soul contracts between parents and childrenHow some children arrive to support collective spiritual evolutionMoving through grief and surrender in parentingThe spiritual connection between parent and child that transcends wordsTelepathy tapes and exploring telepathic communication with childrenIntegrating astrology and human design into conscious parentingThe deep lessons and wisdom that neurodivergent children bringEmbracing fear, intuition, and shadow work on the parenting pathConnect with Guest: IG: Connect with DevynWebsite: Connect with Devyn Connect with Emily: IG: @emilythemediumWebsite: emilythemedium.com Read A Cosmic Bond: Communicating with your Spirit Babies from Preconception to Birth: bit.ly/42lUP24Other Resources:Use code EMILY10 to shop MILKMOON Fertility and Postpartum tonics https://bit.ly/3uoNYsn
Children deserve the safest possible healthcare, yet they remain one of the most vulnerable patient populations when it comes to medicines safety. Ahead of World Patient Safety Day on 17 September, we discuss challenges and solutions in paediatric pharmacovigilance with ISoP president Angela Caro-Rojas.Tune in to find out:Why we need a Patient Safety DayHow to prevent common medication errors in childrenHow to build child-friendly healthcare environmentsWant to know more?Visit the World Health Organization's campaign website to learn more about World Patient Safety Day and download campaign materials.You can also show support for the campaign by joining ISoP's free virtual event on September 18 and 19, or visit ISoP's YouTube channel to access recordings from previous Patient Safety Day events.For more on paediatric pharmacovigilance and ISoP's activities, check out these episodes from the Drug Safety Matters archive:The KIDs ListWhat's trending in pharmacovigilance? Join the conversation on social mediaFollow us on Facebook, LinkedIn, X, or Bluesky and share your thoughts about the show with the hashtag #DrugSafetyMatters.Got a story to share?We're always looking for new content and interesting people to interview. If you have a great idea for a show, get in touch!About UMCRead more about Uppsala Monitoring Centre and how we promote safer use of medicines and vaccines for everyone everywhere.
Have you ever caught yourself in a self-doubt spiral, wondering if you're overreacting, if you're missing something, or if everyone else just knows better than you? The experience of self-doubt is so familiar for women, especially because of the patriarchal system we live in. But you deserve to feel confident in your emotions and your assessments. In this episode, I dive into why it feels so automatic to doubt ourselves and how you can begin to change that inner monologue. Here's what I cover:What internal self-doubt actually sounds likeExamples of behaviors that stem from self-doubtHow Dr. Becky Kennedy explains the development of self-doubt in childrenHow patriarchy gives boys and girls very different messages about the validity of their self-doubtThe two voices inside us as women—the voice of care and the voice of self–and how to balance themAn exercise to help you work with both voices so you can feel more confidentFind Sara here:https://sarafisk.coachhttps://pages.sarafisk.coach/difficultconversationshttps://www.instagram.com/sarafiskcoach/https://www.facebook.com/SaraFiskCoaching/https://www.tiktok.com/@sarafiskcoachhttps://www.youtube.com/@sarafiskcoaching1333What happens inside the free Stop People Pleasing Facebook Community? Our goal is to provide help and guidance on your journey to eliminate people pleasing and perfectionism from your life. We heal best in a safe community where we can grow and learn together and celebrate and encourage each other. This group is for posting questions about or experiences with material learned in The Ex-Good Girl podcast, Sara Fisk Coaching social media posts or the free webinars and trainings provided by Sara Fisk Coaching. See you inside!Book a Free Consult
Are you an overwhelmed parent who's tired of yelling at your kids? Do you find yourself losing it with your children, then feeling guilty about your parenting afterward? If you're a high-achieving mom or dad struggling with parenting anxiety, constant overwhelm, and the exhausting cycle of trying to control everything, this episode is for you.In today's deeply personal episode, I share the real story of how doing my own healing work completely transformed how I show up as a parent, and how it's breaking generational trauma for my children.What You'll Learn:Why "good parents" still lose it with their kids (and what's really happening beneath the surface)The hidden cost of perfectionist parenting and how it damages both you and your childrenHow emotional safety actually works in parenting (it's not what most parents think)Why your kids' anxiety isn't really about anxiety - and what it's actually telling youThe one investment that changes everything for your family's emotional healthHow breaking generational patterns happens through YOUR healing, not your children's behaviorPerfect for Parents Who:Feel like they're always yelling despite wanting to be calmStruggle with mom guilt or dad guilt about their parentingAre overwhelmed by daily parenting challengesWant to stop repeating their parents' mistakes but don't know howAre high-achievers who can't seem to "achieve" at parentingFeel anxious about their children's emotional well-beingAre tired of walking on eggshells around their kids' big emotionsFeatured Story:I share the raw, real moment when my 14-year-old son Jake dropped his brand-new phone in the river, and how our response became a powerful example of generational healing in action. You'll hear exactly what we did differently (and what we used to do wrong) that's creating emotional safety for our kids.The Investment Truth:Why parents will spend thousands on tutoring, sports, and schools but resist investing in the inner work that actually gives their children emotional security, self-compassion, and healthy relationships with themselves.If you're ready to stop the cycle of overwhelm and create the emotionally safe family environment your children actually need, this episode will show you exactly where to start, and why the work begins with you.
Luke shares practical strategies for peaceful parenting, a method built on respect, collaboration, and understanding. Whether you're a new parent or looking to improve your relationship with your child, Luke provides actionable tips to foster healthy communication and emotional growth in your family.He discusses why traditional punishment methods often backfire, how to manage your own emotions as a parent, and practical steps to resolve conflicts through collaborative problem-solving.You'll learn:How to shift from punitive methods to peaceful approachesTechniques to manage your emotions and avoid raising your voiceThe powerful impact of empathy and listening in parentingSteps to collaboratively solve problems with your childrenHow peaceful parenting positively shapes your child's developmentMemorable Quotes from Luke:"Ask yourself, 'Is this decision best for shaping my children into the kind of people I want them to be?'""Lessons for kids are much better caught than they are taught.""Connection over correction. It's not primarily about punishing badness; it's about connecting and understanding.""Kids aren't giving you a hard time—they're having a hard time."Click To JOIN! Just Keep Learning Newsletter I WILL HELP YOU GET CLARITY, BUILD YOUR GROWTH MINDSET AND OWN YOUR BIG DREAMSFOLLOW JustinInstagram – @JustKeepLearning.CaYouTube –@justkeeplearningpodcastTwitter – @JustinNolan_JKLTiktok – @justkeeplearning.caPinterest – JustKeepLearningcaFacebook – JustKeepLearningLinkedIn – Justin I'm so happy you found this podcast. I am here to serve you, the creative solopreneur & aspiring content creator to get clarity on how to create content, teaching, build a business and design the life of your dreams without burning out in the online learning, creator economy.Want to get every single secret, tip, or idea I learn about channelling our emotions into success in this new creator economy, be sure to subscribe to the newsletter: https://newsletter.justkeeplearning.ca/main
In this episode, Kim Olver welcomes back author and Agile coach Bia Demofsky in a powerful continuation of last week's conversation to explore how she applies professional Agile principles to parenting in an intentional, iterative way. In Agile Parenting, Bia shares how her decade-long struggle with infertility shaped her reverence for parenting—and how that perspective led her to reject mainstream trends in favor of meaningful connection, structure, and flexibility with her daughter.Together, Kim and Bia unpack:Why Agile methodology isn't just for software teams—it can be a powerful framework for raising childrenHow to parent "against the grain" with confidence, even when it goes against public opinionThe critical role of parent-to-parent communities in supporting intentional parentingPractical ways to limit technology use early—and why it mattersThe importance of modeling emotional intelligence, accountability, and collaboration for kidsThis episode is a must-listen for parents craving deeper relationships with their children and the courage to raise them with purpose in today's chaotic world.To listen to part 1 of this interview, click here. Grab Bia's book Agile Parenting on Amazon and explore her parenting workbook and framework. You can also connect with Bia at https://agileparenting.org.Next week, Kim continues the parenting conversation with Ashley Patrick to discuss raising neurodivergent children. Subscribe so you don't miss it!
For many children, understanding and expressing emotions can be a challenge. They may struggle with recognizing their own feelings, reading emotions in others, or knowing how to respond appropriately in different situations. The good news is that emotional awareness is a skill that can be taught, modeled, and practiced with the right strategies. In this conversation, we discuss the best ways to teach emotions to kids. We dive into how to assess a learner's baseline and where to start teaching. We also discuss how to reduce rigidity in our teaching, teaching across operants, and generalization techniques. What's Inside:How to best teach emotions to childrenHow to assess a learner's baseline and where to start teachingHelpful generalization techniquesMentioned In This Episode:HowToABA.com/joinHow to ABA on YouTubeFind us on FacebookFollow us on Instagram
Dr. Tony Ebel interviews Dr. David Jockers, a renowned expert in functional nutrition. Dr. Jockers shares in-depth insights about the critical connection between blood sugar stability and nervous system health, particularly in children. Drawing from his personal experiences and extensive clinical work, he explains how proper nutrition can transform brain function, behavior, and overall wellbeing. The conversation covers practical strategies for parents to implement, from protein prioritization to hydration tips, and explores how modeling healthy behaviors creates lasting change for children. This episode provides actionable nutrition advice that can truly move the needle for families dealing with chronic health challenges.[00:06:00] Blood Sugar StabilityDr. Jockers identifies blood sugar stability as a major "needle mover" for healthPersonal story of growing up with blood sugar crashesWhy seed oils are problematic for cellular health[00:12:00] Protein Priorities for ChildrenGuidance on protein intake and why protein should be consumed first in a mealHow protein intake stabilizes blood sugar and prevents crashes[00:16:00] The Neuroscience of Blood SugarConnection between nervous system stability and blood sugar stabilityThe difference between hyperglycemia and reactive hypoglycemia in childrenHow hypoglycemic episodes damage neurons and increase risk of neurodegeneration[00:21:00] POTS Syndrome and Blood Sugar ConnectionDiscussion of how blood sugar instability contributes to POTS syndromeThe cascade effect: blood sugar instability → nervous system instability → hormonal instabilityDr. Ebel's clinical observations with teenage and young adult patients[00:25:00] Optimizing Brain Function Through NutritionHow stable blood sugar increases BDNF (Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor)Benefits of BDNF: creativity, innovation, better connections between neuronsPractical meal structure and "eating the rainbow" for phytonutrients[00:30:00] Hydration and Supplementation StrategiesThe importance of hydration timing (away from meals)Electrolytes and minerals: benefits for kids, especially active onesSupplements vs. food: "90% of health results come from lifestyle"Key supplements that make a difference: Magnesium, Vitamin D, K2[00:36:00] Modeling Health for ChildrenThe importance of parents demonstrating healthy behaviorsTeaching children nutritional concepts through benefit-focused languageConnect with Dr. Jockers: Website: www.drjockers.comInstagram: @drjockersYoutube: @drdavidjockers-- DETAILS & REGISTRATION FOR THE FREE MAY AUTISM SUMMIT Follow us on Socials: Instagram: @pxdocs Facebook: Dr. Tony Ebel & The PX Docs Network Youtube: The PX Docs For more information, visit PXDocs.com to read informative articles about the power of Neurologically-Focused Chiropractic Care. Find a PX Doc Office near me: PX DOCS DirectoryTo watch Dr. Tony's 30 min Perfect Storm Webinar: Click HereSubscribe, share, and stay tuned for more incredible episodes unpacking the power of Nervous System focused care for children!
About my Guest Rob Wolf:Robert Wolf M.D., grew up as the only child of Ervin and Judit Wolf. Their stories of their escape from communist Hungary, and his father's tragic history of escaping the Nazis twice but having his own parents deported to Auschwitz, inspired Robert to document his parents' tales and share those stories with Jewish groups and others throughout the United States. In "Not a Real Enemy," Robert shares his family saga-and the forgotten history of the nearly half million Hungarian Jews who were deported and killed during the Holocaust-through an epic and inspiring tale of daring escapes, terrifying oppression, tragedy, and triumph. #holocaust #hangry #Auschwitz================All Episodes can be found at https://www.podpage.com/speaking-podcast/ All about Roy / Brain Gym & Virtual Assistants at https://roycoughlan.com/ ------------------ What we Discussed: 00:15 Who is Rob Wolf01:15 Does he Experience Censorship04:40 Polish got a Raw deal in WW207:15 Liberland09:35 Auschwitz in Poland12:50 October 7th In Israel14:30 The Olympics is where the Whole World becomes Unified15:35 Did Hitler go to Argentina?17:30 The Falkans & Antartica19:20 THe History of the Book25:45 Did they talk about the woar during his upbringing28:20 How does his family react to his book and mission30:40 His Dads Escape37:00 Hatred for the Germans was a Mistake38:30 His Book has achieved a lot of Awards39:55 Despite the Trauma they did not share stories with the ChildrenHow to Contact Rob Wolf: https://robertjwolfmd.com/https://www.facebook.com/notarealenemyhttps://x.com/RobertJWolfMDhttps://www.youtube.com/robertjwolfmdhttps://www.instagram.com/RobertJWolfMDhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/robert-j-wolf-md/------------------All about Roy / Brain Gym & Virtual Assistants at https://roycoughlan.com/ ___________________
Send us a textIn this insightful episode, Melissa Mawai shares her inspiring journey from corporate project management to becoming a published children's author and illustrator. After the passing of her father and the global pandemic, Melissa found herself at a crossroads—one that led her to pursue her true passion for storytelling. Now, with five published books under her belt with major publishers like National Geographic Kids and DK, Melissa reflects on the challenges, lessons, and triumphs of her creative career pivot.One of the biggest hurdles she faced? Self-promotion. If you've ever struggled with marketing yourself, you'll appreciate Melissa's honest take on overcoming the “ick” factor and finding an authentic way to share your work. As a neurodiverse professional, she has also dedicated her work to helping neurodiverse children navigate the world through engaging stories.From navigating the entrepreneurial path to embracing creativity in every professional interaction, Melissa offers invaluable wisdom for anyone looking to align their career with their passions. Plus, she gives us a sneak peek into her upcoming podcast, Kid Lit Deconstruction Zone!What You'll Learn in This Episode:How Melissa used the COVID-19 pandemic as a turning point in her careerThe impact of personal loss on career clarity and purposeOvercoming the discomfort of self-promotion and marketing yourself authenticallyThe importance of creating stories that support neurodiverse childrenHow coaching helped her refine her career path and build confidenceThe journey to launching her new podcast, Kid Lit Deconstruction ZoneHow to infuse creativity into networking and professional relationshipsMelissa's future goals, including more school visits and speaking engagementsResources & Links: Connect with Melissa and explore her work:Website: melissamawai.comFollow her on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/mmwai/ – she promises to say hello back!If you're looking for inspiration to bring more creativity and authenticity into your career and learn how coaching can help you, like it helped Melissa, tune in now.Support the showThank you for listening to The Mid-Career GPS Podcast. Please leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts here. Want me to review your LinkedIn profile? Learn more here. Visit https://johnneral.com to join The Mid-Career GPS Newsletter, a free, twice-weekly career and leadership resource for mid-career professionals. Connect with John on LinkedIn here.Check Out John's New Mid-Career Journal on Amazon here. Follow John on Instagram @johnneralcoaching. Subscribe to John's YouTube Channel here.
In this episode, Calley Means, founder of TrueMed and co-author of Good Energy, discusses the growing health challenges facing children and parents today. From the rise of chronic disease to the overwhelming influence of the food and pharma industries, Calley shares insights on how our current systems are failing families. We dive deep into the struggles of American parents, the importance of teaching kids about processed foods, and how policy changes can support healthier lifestyles. Tune in for a powerful conversation on the urgent need to protect future generations' health and reclaim trust in our medical system.Topics Discussed:The impact of Big Food and Big Pharma on public health, especially in childrenHow parents are navigating a broken system that prioritizes profit over wellnessThe urgent need for policy changes to combat chronic disease and support healthier lifestyles for familiesSponsored By: Be Well By Kelly Protein Powder & Essentials | Get $10 off your order with PODCAST10 at bewellbykelly.com.OneSkin | Get 15% off OneSkin with the code BEWELL at oneskin.coTimestamps: 00:00:00 - Introduction 00:01:44 - The MAHA Movement 00:04:11 - Health is political 00:11:40 - Incentives and policy change 00:16:57 - The American medical association 00:21:36 - Weakening trust in the medical system 00:27:01 - The struggles of the American parent 00:29:45 - Teaching kids about processed foods 00:32:02 - Government and parental intervention00:38:18 - Issues with the FDA 00:44:31 - Truemed 00:50:24 - FSA & HSA Check Out Calley:TruemedInstagramTwitterBuy Good Energy by Calley & Casey MeansCheck Out Kelly:InstagramYouTubeFacebookMentioned in this episode:Be Well By Kelly Protein Powder & Essentials | Get $10 off your order with PODCAST10 at bewellbykelly.com.
Episode Highlights With BarbaraThe power of listening, especially with our childrenHow understanding human design can drastically change how we parentThe way a child's design can affect how they learn and the school environment they needHow our kid's type can affect how they eat and why we might call it picky eatingThe only thing that heals is love Importance of viewing our children as an asset, not an inconvenienceWhy psychological resilience is so importantHow anything can be a cult if you give your own inner authority away to something or someone elseImportant things she learned from helping with cult intervention and how to give ourselves a solid foundationSpecial vs unique and why to be careful about that wordResources We MentionHuman Design ConsultationsKids Cook Real Food CourseHuman Design: The Definitive Book of Human Design, The Science of Differentiation by Ra Uru Hu by Lynda Bunnell