Harvard-trained psychologist and Psychology Today parenting expert Carl Pickhardt gives parents an eye-opening look at what to expect on rocky road of middle school and high school, revealing the Four Freedoms that every child must master to become a healthy adult--and how parents can adapt, encourage, and grow themselves during these tumultuous times. Parenting a teenager is not for the faint of heart. It is during these roller-coaster years that frustrated parents find themselves at their wits' end, barely even recognizing their offspring as they move through the teen years. Carl Pickhardt, Harvard-trained psychologist and the voice of reason behind Psychology Today's advice column, "Surviving (Your Child's) Adolescence," shares critical insights and practical tools that parents need to know as their children move through the teen years toward independence and adulthood. There's a reason the road is rocky--it's supposed to be. Children must pass through "four unfolding freedoms" in order to become competent, independent, and confident adults. How easily parents can navigate these twists and turns with less hand-holding, angst, and hitting the brakes directly correlates to how successful their children will be. The four unfolding freedoms are these: 1) freedom from rejection of childhood, around the late elementary school years, when they want to stop acting and being treated as children anymore. 2) freedom of association with peers, around the middle school years, when they want to form a second family of friends. 3) freedom for older experimentation, around the high school years, when they want to try more grown-up activities. 4) freedom to claim emancipation, around the college age years, when they decide to become their own ruling authority. With each successive push for freedom, both parents and teens need to learn how to do less holding on to each other while doing more letting go. Dr. Carl Pickhardt will show them the way with compassion, experience, and time-tested guidance.
Two years after her little brother's death, sixteen-year-old Emerson Caulfield returns to a home that she spent the last two years missing.
By raising ethical questions about how a death can be good in the age of modern medicine, Holding Silvan becomes a paean to what makes life itself good. Whether you have faced great loss or not, this book will change your life.
This book explores the social practice of holding each other in our identities, beginning with pregnancy and on through the life span.
Are you holding on . . . but not sure how much longer you can? In times of not knowing, Sheila Walsh offers a lifeline of hope.
With practical suggestions and updated versions of spiritual classics such as lectio divina, plus questions for study and reflection, this book is a rich resource for personal spiritual growth as well as for group study. “Every major ...
... author explains why some people confidently confront changes in their lives while others seem to be less able to experience transition. Richly illustrated with excerpts from interviews, Holding On or Letting Go links the tasks and ...
(Mark 9:24) When everything in our lives seems out of control, and we recognize that solutions are beyond our human capacities, the struggle ... trust Trust in the Lord with allyour heart and 43 How to Hold On When You FeelLike Letting Go.
Lamsa , G. ( trans . ) , Holy Bible from Ancient Eastern Manuscripts . Philadelphia : A.J. Holmes Co. 1957 . Liebeskind , J. , Shavit , Y. , article on endorphins and cancer experiment at UCLA , in Science ( 223 : 188–190 ) .
We can only hold our children close so long.
You cling on for dear life just at the moment you need to take the leap. In The Power of Letting Go, John Purkiss explains why we should let go and how we can do it, using proven techniques to make things happen.