Hand in Hand Parenting: The Podcast

Hand in Hand Parenting with Elle Kwan and Abigail Wald

When children's behavior is difficult, parents need support, good information, and practical tools to reduce stress, understand their child's emotions, and build cooperation and warm connection in the family. Join Elle Kwan and Abigail Wald as they share the Hand in Hand Parenting approach with useful examples and stories from real parents like you.

  1. 18/07/2023

    Am I Doing This Right?

    What to do if you feel stuck, freeze in the moment or second guess how you use the Hand in Hand Tools. Am I doing this right? How do I know what to do? Why do I freeze when I want to use the tools? We hear these questions more often than you might imagine from parents who are using the Hand in Hand approach.  So for this last episode of the season,  Emily and Kathy delve into how second guessing and doubt about connected parenting stems from our own childhoods, as well as what to do so you know for sure you doing a great job.  This episode is for you if you are new to the tools and want some guidance, if you dream of being a connected and gentle parent but doubt you can, or if you find yourself stuck on what tool to use and how when your child's behavior gets tough to handle.  Come listen as Emily and Kathy share support and wisdom for your journey into connected parenting.  Tune In To Hear: Love the idea of gentle parenting but get stuck as soon as behavior gets tricky? Learn why.  A refresher on why connection works to gain cooperation and flipping the script on "getting a child to do something," thinking… More about why these tools work best when you can use them in tandem, so that you can dance from one to another as the moment calls  Why it can help to think of this parenting approach as a practice where you and your children both learn to read each other's emotional cues and partner together  Celebrating the loud messy moments as progress as well as the breakthroughs The one guiding belief you should adopt: Lead with connection and you WILL NEVER "get it wrong."

    17 min
  2. 11/07/2023

    What to Do When Your Child is Hitting

    Understand the unseen fears that drive a child's aggression and stop it using nurturing supportive strategies. Emily and Kathy address a parent question from the surprised parent of a child who has started hitting out at other kids.  This child, like many others who lash out, has not grown up around hitting or seen it modelled elsewhere, so the parent is confused about where the behavior is coming from and how to address it.  Listen in as Emily and Kathy share how a current situation can activate a child's past fears or scary experiences and propel them into a "fight" mode that feels protective.  Learn how to reach under those hurts and heal them so that the behavior stops, without any harsh words or punishments.  If you have a child who is hitting or lashing out, discover how to address hitting, kicking or other aggressive behaviors with the support and lightness it takes to make it stop.  Tune In To Hear: Why a child's aggression does not mean that they are bad kids, but is purely a symptom of their emotional system flipping into a protective state.   Looking at changes in your circumstances or routines to figure out what's causing the emotional system to signal "danger." How to set limits with a child who lashes out using words and actions in-tune with their emotional state.  Why it pays to focus on your child's feelings in the moment rather than reasoning with them or giving advice.  Ways you can access the calm and reassurance you need to guide your child through this stage and shift the behavior.

    17 min
  3. 26/06/2023

    Helping Tweens and Teens Feel Heard: How to Respond Well When Your Older Child Needs to Let Off Steam

    Using the Hand in Hand Staylistening Tool with older kids. It's fairly easy to tell when a toddler's emotional system has taken over. Tantrums. A toddler will yell when they don't get the blue cup or can't take another cookie, and then scream, throw themselves on the floor, or send something crashing.  Not so with tweens and teens.  In fact, the way they signal their upset can feel very much more like a criticism or a complaint that invites us to offer some advice or reflection – which can lead to disaster.  "I hate you." "You never listen." "You just don't get it." Followed by cold, hard silence.  Which is why this week Emily and Kathy are talking about how to help tweens and teens feel heard so that they can offload the many pressures they feel safely and get back to clear thinking.  Emily calls it the "zip lips, bite tongue and sit on hands technique," that gives older kids the support they need to build confidence and resilience.  If you are already familiar with Staylistening to your younger child, and want to know how this changes as they grow older, or you are new here, and looking for responsive strategies for supporting your tween or teen, listen in.  Tune In To Hear: How to know when to listen and when to offer reassurance.  The signals you can look out for that show a tween or teen is not thinking well, and just needs you to listen.  Why hot words aren't meant to be taken personally, and one thing you can do if you find your tween or teen's offloading triggering.  How tears diffuse the feelings behind hot words, and how to make the transition How parents can listen without agreeing with a child's complaints

    12 min
  4. 31/05/2023

    Rebuilding Connections: How to Repair With Your Kids After Losing Your Cool

    There's an idea out there that a good parent is serene, caring, all-knowing-never-cross creature… It's such a fairytale fantasy. The reality really is so much more human. It's messy. It's awesome. It's draining, delightful, sometimes dreadful and so on: Parenting demands the full spectrum of human emotion for many, many, years. And we're sorry to break the news but it turns out a human can't alway be perfect for that much time! Sometimes the stress and heaviness of a phase of development or certain behaviours just bring us to our knees because we're triggered or because we don't have the support or skills in place to respond to them with intention the way we to it just happens. The way to weather these difficult moments is to get really good at repairs and apologies. In today's podcast, we invite you to hear about the many ways you can reconnect with your child and make repairs after you lose your cool. These ideas are heartening and restorative – and every parent deserves to know them. If you have more then we'd love to hear from you. Tune In To Hear: How to shift away from frustration and anger before you get overwhelmed Two strategies you can use to blast away stress in the moment when things get heated -and you can't get to a listening partner. Why involving your other senses can be so helpful when you need to cool down. Soothing mantras and reframes you can use to recenter.

    11 min

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About

When children's behavior is difficult, parents need support, good information, and practical tools to reduce stress, understand their child's emotions, and build cooperation and warm connection in the family. Join Elle Kwan and Abigail Wald as they share the Hand in Hand Parenting approach with useful examples and stories from real parents like you.

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