31 min.

Parenting Self-Care: Looking Out for Number One Neurodiversity Podcast

    • Geestelijke gezondheid

Jen Merrill, creator of Laughing at Chaos and author of If This is a Gift, Can I Send It Back?, shares her experience as a parent of a twice-exceptional child and discusses the challenges and benefits of homeschooling. She emphasizes the importance of self-care for parents of gifted and twice exceptional children.
Takeaways
Parents of gifted and twice exceptional children need to prioritize self-care to better advocate for their children and maintain their own well-being.
Twice exceptional children can be both intellectually gifted and face other challenges that make life difficult for them and their families.
Homeschooling can provide personalized education and allow children to pursue their passions at their own pace.
Homeschooling can have financial and career implications for parents, and it requires careful management of family dynamics.
Join the Neurodiversity Podcast Advocacy & Support Group on Facebook!
Jen Torbeck Merrill is an Illinois-based writer, musician, marketing project manager, and gifted family advocate.The mom of two boys, she homeschooled her twice-exceptional teen through high school while happily sending his younger brother off to his high school every morning. Those days now in the past, she is settling into the somewhat quieter life of an empty-nester. She is a music educator by trade, with degrees in music education and flute performance.
Long before she picked up a flute as a child, however, Jen wanted to be a writer, something that didn’t happen until she opened a Blogger account in 2006 and never looked back. Since that time, her writing has focused more on gifted families and advocacy. Her book, If This is a Gift, Can I Send It Back?: Surviving in the Land of the Gifted and Twice-Exceptional, struck a nerve with families who suspected Jen was living in their closet. Her second book, on the needs of gifted parents and self-care, is in progress; it is taking significantly longer than anticipated because the author herself struggles mightily with self-care and has been spending a lot of time banging her head on the keyboard and hyperventilating in writerly frustration. In the meantime she continues to blog at Laughing at Chaos.
BACKGROUND READING
Twitter
Facebook
If This Is a Gift, Can I Send It Back?

Jen Merrill, creator of Laughing at Chaos and author of If This is a Gift, Can I Send It Back?, shares her experience as a parent of a twice-exceptional child and discusses the challenges and benefits of homeschooling. She emphasizes the importance of self-care for parents of gifted and twice exceptional children.
Takeaways
Parents of gifted and twice exceptional children need to prioritize self-care to better advocate for their children and maintain their own well-being.
Twice exceptional children can be both intellectually gifted and face other challenges that make life difficult for them and their families.
Homeschooling can provide personalized education and allow children to pursue their passions at their own pace.
Homeschooling can have financial and career implications for parents, and it requires careful management of family dynamics.
Join the Neurodiversity Podcast Advocacy & Support Group on Facebook!
Jen Torbeck Merrill is an Illinois-based writer, musician, marketing project manager, and gifted family advocate.The mom of two boys, she homeschooled her twice-exceptional teen through high school while happily sending his younger brother off to his high school every morning. Those days now in the past, she is settling into the somewhat quieter life of an empty-nester. She is a music educator by trade, with degrees in music education and flute performance.
Long before she picked up a flute as a child, however, Jen wanted to be a writer, something that didn’t happen until she opened a Blogger account in 2006 and never looked back. Since that time, her writing has focused more on gifted families and advocacy. Her book, If This is a Gift, Can I Send It Back?: Surviving in the Land of the Gifted and Twice-Exceptional, struck a nerve with families who suspected Jen was living in their closet. Her second book, on the needs of gifted parents and self-care, is in progress; it is taking significantly longer than anticipated because the author herself struggles mightily with self-care and has been spending a lot of time banging her head on the keyboard and hyperventilating in writerly frustration. In the meantime she continues to blog at Laughing at Chaos.
BACKGROUND READING
Twitter
Facebook
If This Is a Gift, Can I Send It Back?

31 min.