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Intuitive Learner – Toddler to Preschool November 11, 2009

Posted by coachingparents in Corrin Howe, Intuition Facts, Intuitive Aha Moments, Intuitive Parenting, Intuitive Partners, Intuitive Resources, Intuitive Stories, Intuitive Tools, Welcome.
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By Corrin Howe

(In the first installment of this series, I introduced Jonathan who, as an infant and toddler, was a puzzle to us. He was intellectually superior to his peers but developmentally behind them. Today’s post follows Jonathan from toddler through his preschool years.)

Our state mandated that all public schools offer all-day Kindergarten by a certain school year. Our county decided to phase in the mandate as school construction opened the necessary space to accommodate the influx of students. Jonathan’s home school received the first construction funds, putting him on track to be enrolled in the first all day kindergarten class.

Even though Jonathan was only three and a half years old at the time, I knew he wouldn’t be ready for all day kindergarten without some help. I tried to enroll him in various half day preschool programs; however, he failed to meet the first requirement – potty trained. We worked on potty training for nearly a year and a half with no discernable end in sight.

My husband was active duty military at the time, so the entire family was under the care of military doctors in the base clinic. If I recall correctly, the pediatric clinic was filled beyond capacity, so Jonathan was moved into the “family clinic” for his care. So, one day when I was seeing the doctor, I mentioned my concern about Jonathan’s development. She asked me a few questions and then administered some basic developmental tests to Jonathan.

She handed me a referral to Walter Reed Army Hospital, which was the closest full service hospital to our military base. She sent us to the Child Development Clinic. We sat on a waiting list for four months. While we waited for an available appointment day, the clinic sent us a package of paperwork to complete and return.

I think I cried with joy and relief as I read through the questions. During the last three and a half years, I would share things about Jonathan with my friends. They would try to comfort and reassure me with the standard phrase, “(Their child’s name) is the same way. I wouldn’t worry about it.” It didn’t matter what behavior I wanted to insert. “Jonathan screams when I cut his nails.” “Jonathan acts like I’m ripping his limbs out when I put him in the bathtub.” “Jonathan always covers his ears and complains when we turn on household appliances.” I was frustrated with my friends because they didn’t seem to give me credit for the other two children I had who didn’t behave the same way.

The surveys addressed all the behaviors which concerned me and more. The day finally came when we saw the child psychologist. She gave us a diagnosis which finally explained the wide disparity between Jonathan’s developmental delays and his intellectual advancements. Asperger’s Syndrome. While not all people diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome have superior intellectual capabilities, Jonathan happens to be one who does.

Two years after this diagnosis, we received the same diagnosis from a private civilian psychologist, who also administered IQ tests as part of his evaluation. Jonathan tests at the low end of the “superior” range in non-verbal areas and average to high average in verbal areas. Since this intellectual testing, his school administered two other IQ and cognitive assessments in which the scores were consistent with earlier findings. Interestingly, Jonathan’s lowest scores and highest scores in these kinds of assessments are consistently two standard deviations apart, indicating a verbal learning disability.

Testing only confirmed what we observed about Jonathan. He didn’t start talking until he was twenty-five months old. He had trouble with figurative language. If I said, “Hold your horses!” He’d be upset with me. “I don’t have any horses!” The original psychologist told us to avoid idioms, but it is really hard. One day Jonathan was telling a whopper of a story. My husband just nodded and said, “Uh huh. I didn’t just fall off a turnip truck you know.” Jonathan exclaimed, “What?” Scott caught himself and regrouped, “I mean, I wasn’t born yesterday.” Again Jonathan demanded, “What?’ Finally, Scott chuckled at himself, “I mean I think you’re making up a story.”

However, Jonathan would sit in the furthest seat in the mini-van and quiz me, “Mama, what’s four plus four take away two?” I learned early in his life to turn the question back on him, “I don’t know. You tell me.” He said, “Six!” He was only four at the time. I told this to his new preschool vice principal. The VP’s eyes popped out of his head, “What TV shows is he watching?”

His older brother thought he was smart because he was in 6th grade algebra. Not to be outshined by his four year old brother, Joshua taunted Jonathan, “But you don’t know what three squared is.” Of course, Jonathan didn’t know the answer, but he wanted to know. He quizzed my husband for the next 20 minutes about squaring all single digit numbers. At the end of the twenty minutes, Jonathan was able to square numbers himself. And from that day on, he understood that two squared was – “two, two times.” And three squared was counting “three three times.” As long has he had enough fingers and toes at his disposal, he could figure out the square of numbers himself.

The diagnosing psychologist told us that Jonathan was “one step” below “Rainman” as she tried to explain Asperger’s to us. When he was about four, we noticed Jonathan seemed to “count” or estimate very fast or very accurately. I dumped a bag of M&Ms on the table. We played various math games. At one point we were down to just a pile of red and blue candies on the table. I asked him to count out twenty for me. He looked at the pile and in one swipe of the hand he said, “There.” I counted. It was twenty. He didn’t even count (at least it didn’t seem he had time to county).

In preschool, he went through a second set of IEP evaluations when we asked for speech services. The school psychologist said he completed puzzle tests at four years old that many of the ten year olds she tested couldn’t complete.

Jonathan’s original diagnosis of Asperger’s Syndrome was enough to qualify him for preschool in a mainstream setting in our local public school. However, our push for speech and language services resulted in a loss of his Individualized Education Plan. His high IQ and lack of behavioral problems convinced the school team Jonathan no longer fit the eligibility requirements under the Individuals with Disabilities Educational Act.

We spent the summer between his preschool and kindergarten year fighting with the school board for reconsideration of their position on Jonathan’s need for speech and language services.

Corrie Howe started her professional career as a journalist and freelance writer. She stopped writing for money twenty years ago and became a stay-at-home mother of three children ranging from 7 to 17. The middle son has Asperger’s Syndrome which she blogs about at Just Because My Pickle Talks Doesn’t Make Me An Idiot.

Intuitive Learner – Infant to Toddler November 10, 2009

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By Corrin Howe

One of the primary logos associated with autism is a puzzle with a piece missing. I love the idea of a puzzle because it defines many moments of our nine-year journey with autism. Three weeks after birth Jonathan started crying everyday like clockwork from 4:00 p.m. to between 8 to 10:00 p.m. My husband and I fell into our bed only two or three days into this ten-month period of daily crying.

“You had a baby before. What do you think is wrong?” my husband asked.

“Josh was an easy baby. He didn’t do this. But I looked it up in a baby book today. I think it might be colic,” I answered.

We tried everything. We read everything. We asked for advice. We talked to the doctor. Nothing seemed to console the inconsolable infant. We began to realize that noise, activity and large numbers of people were the triggers for hours of crying to follow.

Then our son turned a year old. Instead of crying all night long, he stopped communicating. We only knew he was awake if we checked on him. I often wondered how long he’d sit in the dark in his crib waiting for someone to come get him.

At that age my other two children were crawling out of the crib, crawling out of the stroller and climbing over baby safety gates, Jonathan sat basically where I put him. For a while I really enjoyed how easy he was. I didn’t have to worry about leaving him alone. I didn’t go nuts having to put all my pots and pans back into the cabinets after he pulled them all out. I could put him in a stroller and walk for miles and he’d sit content with a box of raisins and his bottle.

Then came the days when I started to worry about the fact he wasn’t trying to crawl. He wasn’t trying to investigate all the “not for Jonathan” items in the house. When he was ten months old he said “ball” and “Bob” appropriately. Then he stopped saying these two words. He was 17 months old and he wasn’t saying anything, not even “Mama” or “Dada.”

However, when he did start to crawl, he crawled immediately. I’d lived in this house for almost two years and had never seen any of my friend’s crawling infants attempt the step between my kitchen and living room. One day I left Jonathan in the living room to check on food in the kitchen. Jonathan didn’t like being left along and let me know about it. When I didn’t come back to get him, he crawled to me. On his first time he attempted to crawl, he crawled from the living room into the kitchen including climbing the step up into the kitchen.

There were other things like this over the years. He couldn’t or didn’t do something. He didn’t even attempt to do it. Then one day he decided he would do it. And he did. Perfectly. It was this way with crawling. It was this way with walking. It was this way with opening doors in the house.

At his 24-month check up, he still wasn’t talking. The doctor suggested we start the protocol evaluation for autism. The first evaluation was for hearing. Since my older son had severe ear infections, two sets of tubes and was in the process of hearing tests, I knew Jonathan’s issue wasn’t hearing. However, the doctor insisted we follow the protocol.

We went to the test. Jonathan was placed in a sound proof booth with huge earphones placed on his head. Remember, he’s not verbal, so I wasn’t sure how they were going to test his hearing. The lady sat outside a two-way glass and pushed hundreds of buttons. At the end of the test, Jonathan was declared to have a thirty percent hearing loss. I asked the basis of the opinion. The doctor explained she was looking for Jonathan’s eyes to look to the side of his head where the noise was played. I knew Jonathan was more fascinated with what she was doing outside the booth than he was about the noises. The doctor recommended immediate tubes in the ears. I picked up my toddler and left. I never went back. I told the referring physician I wasn’t going through her protocol any longer.

By the end of the month Jonathan was saying “Mama” and “Dada.” Two months later (when he was twenty-seven months old) out of nowhere he said, “Josh pushed and I bumped my head.” We were in a hotel lobby with my in-laws. We all almost fell off our chairs. He went from no words to seven word sentences in three months.

And so it went for the first three and a half years of Jonathan’s life. On the one hand he was behind his peers when it came to meeting developmental milestones like smiling, crawling, talking, potty training, etc. Yet, on the other hand, he was, in many ways, so far ahead of his peers.

Even without the ability to talk, he was fascinated with the alphabet. He’d indicate his desire for me to write out the alphabet over and over and over again. He liked seeing me draw the letters. He could point out the letters if I asked him to point them out.

He was putting together jig-saw-puzzles.

He was playing practical jokes. Who expects a three year old to purposely hide a puzzle piece until everyone gives up looking for it? Then he calmly pulls it out from under his leg. Who expects a three year old to hide his favorite blanket in a hotel nightstand and sit there calmly while two adults and two teenagers search and back-track the entire hotel for an hour? And when everyone falls onto the double beds panicked about what the night holds without the treasured blanket, he walks over to the bottom drawer and triumphantly pulls out the blanket and announces with a huge smile, “Here it is!”

How could a little guy be so smart while being so far behind? Look for future posts to find out.

Corrie Howe started her professional career as a journalist and freelance writer. She stopped writing for money twenty years ago and became a stay-at-home mother of three children ranging from 7 to 17. The middle son has Asperger’s Syndrome which she blogs about at Just Because My Pickle Talks Doesn’t Make Me An Idiot.

PARENTING IN AWARENESS by Doreen Fisher November 4, 2009

Posted by coachingparents in Angels Among Us, Intuition Facts, Intuitive Aha Moments, Intuitive Parenting, Intuitive Partners, Intuitive Resources, Intuitive Stories, Psychic Kids, Seeing Ghosts, intuitive children.
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Using awareness to deviate from learned parenting behaviors.

I remember the very moment that my daughter was born barely 9 years ago. It’s not a moment most mothers would ever forget, but I remember my exact thought…”It’s time to grow up – today.” It’s not that I felt overly immature at the moment just before that, but the immediate knowing that this tiny being was wholly dependent on me and would grow to learn from my every move was cathartic and intimidating at the same time.

A rush of emotions and thoughts came in despite the fact that I had just given birth — a beautiful, natural, gentle birth, but exhausting nonetheless. I knew at that very moment that it was up to me to break a long history of common parenting styles which I did not intend to follow. I had no idea just how difficult that would prove to be.

Generations of habits, repeat behaviors and semi-conscious parenting were deeper in my psyche than I knew or cared to admit. As my daughter grew and my son was born, the daily stress of parenting brought out the very reactions that I swore would never escape my lips; they fell out or were just barely caught in the nick of time. I quickly learned two important things: 1) I was parenting by design; and 2) it was going to require 24/7 awareness if I was going to succeed in gentle, respectful and non-violent parenting.

I recall one story that my daughter always asks me to repeat. I’m not sure why she likes this story, but it’s almost as if she is reminding me that I’m doing okay and making right choices. My husband was on the road touring with a band and complete exhaustion was becoming a normal existence for me. My newborn son had just been released from NICU with a heart defect, and he and I were both decompressing from a bit of ICU psychosis. Needless to say, sleep was a rare treat. I was making dinner and took out some tater tots and put them on the cookie sheet on the stove. My daughter got angry at me because she wanted to eat them out of the bag (she was 3), so she reached up and yanked the cookie sheet off of the stove and the tater tots went flying. I had an immediate reaction and reached my up hand preparing to spank her with about as much force as I could muster when (as if in slow motion) I had a last minute awareness of what I was about to do and instead scooped her up and gave her a big hug. I was shaking and crying. And she was laughing. She gave me a big hug and never knew how close she came to becoming yet another child victim of corporal punishment.

I knew at that moment that it was possible to change the course of history and make new decisions in how we parent our children. I know that the abused grow to become the abuser, but I also know that this is a choice. But, it requires awareness – awareness and intention. We must first set the intention to parent in a gentle, loving manner. Every day I wake up and tell myself that I’m going to parent with love and patience and listen with an open heart. Every night I go to bed and forgive myself for anything that slipped through. And every day, I take responsibility for my actions, make amends for any actions or words that fall outside the scope of what I consider loving and gentle (holding myself to a high standard on that definition) and acknowledge to my children when it was me, not them, who brought out any transgression.

Doreen Fisher is a musician, home educator, business owner and philanthropist. She lives in Dallas with her husband, their 2 incredibly intuitive children, Sammy the cat and Tibblett the bunny. dfisher@parentinginawareness.com;  www.parentinginawareness.com; www.rainbowoutsourcing.com; www.pientre.com

The Glow of an Intuitive Heart Telepathy between newborn and intuitive mom by Deb Snyder November 4, 2009

Posted by coachingparents in Deb Snyder, Intuition Facts, Intuitive Parenting, Intuitive Resources, Psychic Kids.
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Sleep wasn’t coming easy tonight. Getting appropriate rest on a firm bench in a hospital room was always a challenge. The room was sterile and cool with bright light and noise filtering in from the nurse’s station just outside our door. My young daughter, Raegan Aria, lay motionless a few feet away, connected to numerous monitors and machines. We had been there for weeks, recovering from surgery to place a stomach tube.  It seemed that everything that could go wrong, did go wrong. Raegan wasn’t doing well. Her brilliant smile and joyful laugh had been absent for days now. The doctors just kept repeating that special needs children are at greater risk for complications when undergoing medical procedures and she would take longer to recover. You see…Raegan had been born with a rare brain malformation three years earlier leaving her without the ability to walk, talk or develop normally. Although her initial prognosis and life expectancy were quite grim, this beautiful, angelic child had been thriving, despite her many physical and developmental limitations.

Things just didn’t seem right to me. I understood what I was being told by the medical team, yet I just kept feeling as if something was being missed. My pleas for more tests were met with condescending remarks about over-reactive parents and I was advised not to question the wisdom and experience of a gifted surgeon. As I sat there in the dark, physically and emotionally exhausted, the phrase “It’s growing” popped into my mind. “What’s growing?” I asked out loud. “In my throat, Mommy”. I leaped from my position on the bench to my daughter’s side and said to her in a teary voice, “Are you trying to tell me something, AngelBaby?” A resounding, “Yes”, was the reply that flooded my body. She remained sleeping with no physical indication that she was communicating with me. I knew it was Raegan, as we had similar moments at other points earlier in her young life. I didn’t know how she was doing it, however I decided at that moment and believed with all my heart it was the Truth she was conveying. I would press for immediate medical intervention.

Raegan was correct. A surgical stitch had been misplaced during her procedure and caused scar tissue to grow, blocking her esophagus and leaving her unable to swallow. This fact was confirmed by a simple test we insisted on being performed.  She was required to have additional surgery to correct the problem. In fact, she had numerous procedures to try to reverse the harm done. Throughout the many months she was hospitalized, Raegan continued to teach me how to use our hearts to talk. This unusual form of communication seemed especially acute during times of crisis and when we were both sleeping. At that point, I decided I would no longer make any decision regarding her care without checking in via our heart connection. It seemed to me, Raegan was operating from a higher place.

Where exactly was that place? Telepathy, channeling and heart communication are not typical topics when discussing care modalities for special needs children.  Yet, as it was in our case, this “out of this world” information may be invaluable to a parent facing their child’s medical crisis. I was fortunate Raegan chose to share words, symbols and pictures in my mind’s eye to provide clues for fast action. Now I knew the phenomenon existed, still I was left with many questions. How is it done? Could it be expanded and implemented further? What was the science behind it? Is this something that could be taught? If I could utilize this heightened “mother’s intuition”, surely others must also be able to do the same.

My questioning mind and unique experience with my own child, led me to dive head first into an unknown sea. I sought out other intuitive families and furthered my education, exploring scientific research and case studies on metaphysics, theology, psychic ability and energy medicine. Although I had known from a young age I was highly intuitive, here was an ideal opportunity to use the ability for something truly remarkable…enhancing communication for non-verbal children. It was my belief this was a chance for children to greater express themselves and improve their quality of life in countless ways.  Like Raegan, a child reaching out would be heard by those listening with their heart. Training and education of this ability would empower parents to unlock their own potential in the healing energies, yielding growth and understanding of the miraculous power inherent in all of us.

Scientific research on energy medicine and intuition is expanding and gaining greater credibility in conventional circles.  Compelling evidence suggests the brain and heart operate in conjunction receiving, processing and decoding intuitive information. It is thought to be a complete body process in which many human systems are involved and it further indicates how knowledge about future events emanate from an energy field. This was the scientific evidence I was looking for explaining how my daughter and I communicate. It wasn’t fantasy. Our real, concrete experience had an energetic explanation. In basic terms, our energy fields were able to exchange information in an accurate, appropriate and timely manner because of our loving connection to one another. Raegan saved her own life by telling me what was wrong and she did it by using her subtle energy system. My own sensitivity allowed me to hear her. Scientific data is now beginning to substantiate experiences known to humankind for centuries. The discussion of telepathy can leave the genre of the supernatural and become an accepted method of communication.  Imagine a future in which this natural ability is nurtured, developed and celebrated for the enrichment of all.

Through vibrant demonstration, Raegan has shown me how children intuitively draw upon their innate energy source and bring forth awareness to those willing to listen with a loving heart. This same source emanates through us as well, and can be firmly established into our consciousness by our thoughts, decisions and actions. Guidance comes to us openly and freely; it is we who must use energy expertise to decipher the message being delivered through our hearts.  Raegan is now nine years old and flourishing. Although her chronic medical condition poses many challenges, it also gives us great opportunities for learning and growth. Our journey together has led me to develop an intuitive parenting program. Its mission is to empower parents to be an instrument of healing for their families by employing their intuitive hearts as a powerful tool. By opening their hearts to love, their minds to energy and being more receptive to the subtle clues of inner knowing, a caretaker can perceive, interpret, and act on information not accessible by other means.  Life takes on a new dimension when feeling the glow of an intuitive heart.

Deb Snyder, PhD is the author of Intuitive Parenting (Beyond Words 2010) and the creator of the HeartGlow method. She is an inspirational speaker and teacher to groups large and small and offers instruction on intuitive parenting in private sessions, classes and seminars throughout the country. FMI visit www.heartglowparenting.com

Discipline & Spirit, excerpt from Spiritual Parenting by Susan Gale November 3, 2009

Posted by coachingparents in Intuition Facts, Intuitive Aha Moments, Intuitive Parenting, Intuitive Partners, Intuitive Resources, Intuitive Stories, Intuitive Tools, Psychic Kids, Seeing Ghosts, intuitive children.
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Discipline, only after love, is the most important thing a parent can give a child. However, discipline is not to be confused with punishment. Punishment is probably the least effective thing a parent can offer a child. Punishment only teaches children to lie, make excuses, learn ways to avoid being caught, and resent authority as well as create innumerable emotional problems. It is generally arbitrarily administered and designed to create suffering, which is not our natural state of being.

Discipline is the ability to control oneself and one’s actions. Discipline is based on a partnership with the child in a movement towards being able to express the best that is within oneself. Discipline is allowing natural consequences to occur, providing help to the child when needed to get past those natural consequences. Most deeply spiritual people have had to exercise supreme discipline in regards to their physical and mental endurance during their preparations, which causes them to draw upon their spiritual strength to bear up under their ordeals. Edgar Cayce himself was told that he developed the ability to go outside his body in order to heal his wounds.

Parents can best teach discipline when they do not fake reality. In remembering the Law of Self, we are to know the truth of our beings. We do not pretend that things are otherwise than what they are. Maslow heralded this ability in his eight characteristics of the self-actualized person:  the ability to shed defense mechanisms.

Conflict Resolution: Conflict is inevitable. It helps us to face our shortcomings, develops strength of character, and helps us define our values. What is important is that we are able to resolve conflict without verbal or emotional violence. The first step to resolving a conflict that occurs within the family is to decide just whose problem the conflict is. Too often the parents take ownership of all conflicts, attempting to settle them for their children. If the conflict is between two of the children in the family, then the problem is theirs to resolve. While the skill of resolving conflict requires initial guidance, the children will eventually be able to resolve conflicts, if indeed the situations escalate to that level, independently. Based on the Creative Conflict Resolution program and the teaching of Joseph Bruchac of the Abenaki tribe, here are the three questions that need to be asked:

1. What happened?

Each child needs to state their version of what happened. The other child cannot interrupt (a talking stick is often helpful during this as only the person who holds the stick can talk… parents cannot even interrupt!). Children soon learn that each person has a slightly, if not drastically, different version of the event!

2. What did I do to contribute to the problem?

This is probably the most difficult part for the child. Names cannot be mentioned during this part. Thus the child cannot say “He knocked down my building so I hit him.”  She hit him because she became lost in her emotions, and she needs to say it this way so that she takes responsibility for her actions. Sometimes the child needs to say simply, “I acted like a victim and let her wreck everything.”  Sometimes the child needs to say, “I teased him until he could not take it any more. I went too far.”

Being able to state honestly how she contributed to the problem goes a long ways towards shedding defense mechanisms. Defense mechanisms are a great deterrent to solving conflicts as so much time and much energy is wasted trying to get past them.

3. What I need from you to get along from this point on.

This is when the parent must relinquish all control. The children will come to terms as to how they will get along. After all, getting along is the goal… not punishment!  Sometimes a simple “sorry” suffices. Sometimes doing the other child’s chore is enough.

When the conflict is between the parent and child, the parent at this step most often wants to know how s/he will know that this will not happen again. This is a time to talk about trust and how important it is to a family being strong. This is a time to talk about how important it is that the parent can depend upon the child to keep the family strong and walking in peace. This is the time to talk about how very important it is that no one pushes another beyond what they can endure as that is not the way of love, but rather the way of being destructive.

 

Susan Gale, co-author of Psychic Children and Soulful Parenting, is the manager of A Place of Light in Cherry Valley, MA.  With 30+ years of professional experience working with families as a teacher, camp director and owner of a children’s center that included a pre-K through grade accredited school, she currently helps people of all ages understand, develop and control their intuitive gifts.  For more info, please visit www.placeoflight.net.

 

Experiencing Good Vibrations by Deb Snyder October 31, 2009

Posted by coachingparents in Intuition Facts, Intuitive Aha Moments, Intuitive Parenting, Intuitive Partners, Intuitive Resources, Intuitive Stories, Intuitive Tools, Psychic Kids, Seeing Ghosts, intuitive children.
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thumbnail coverThe world is beginning to comprehend the healing vibration of the Universe, which resonates within all people, places, and things. Incorporating vibration techniques can be done in a myriad of ways; simply follow your intuition as to what might work for your family.

Several of my clients whose children are considered by doctors to be on the “Autism Spectrum” report their kids as having a sensitivity and fondness for vibration in appliances, stones, and specific places on their property.  I have found it is best to let children take the lead and support what they are naturally drawn to. One child in particular collected rocks and felt comforted by them. It wasn’t until the mother took a closer look did she realize each rock had bits of quartz embedded somewhere in them. It was then easy to acknowledge her child naturally gravitated toward these healing stones. I have seen similar traits in other children with regard to shells, leaves, shapes, and colors.

My client, Don, not only uses his intuitive energy skills with his children, but also with his father, who has Alzheimer’s disease. Slowly watching his dad deteriorate in awareness and communication abilities at a nursing facility has been painful for Don. Constantly striving to remain connected, he brings in items from home, realizing the energy of certain favorite things stir a reaction from his father and even stimulate conversation about their past. A beloved religious medallion seems to provide the most comfort and healing for them both. Their shared energetic connection, called the Field of Intuitive Harmony, is there for all to explore, regardless to whether you are the parent…or the child. Don demonstrates this beautifully by tapping into the vibrations and honoring the energetic connections with items from he and his father’s life.

Remember, everything has a vibration. Your resonance with an object, person, or thing may offer you a unique opportunity to tap into Divine energy. Here are some suggestions on how you can experience good vibrations:

  • Decorate yourself and your home with natural stones and crystals for their beauty and healing properties.
    • Use a quartz crystal, tuning fork, or vibrating massager to activate your own or your family’s energy centers.
    • Play with rocks! As a family, collect and track your sensitivity to certain stones. Why do you like them? How do they make you feel? Head out on a field trip to a rock museum or a local quarry.
    • Go for a walk in the woods to tap into the Earth’s energies. Dowse for water, minerals, or even caves. Make it a fun outing for the whole family.
    • When you feel resonance within your body, ask your higher self for more details and expect the answer to come to you. Resonance is often experienced as the lift in our heart, the bounce in our step or even a subtle all over vibration. It is a feeling of deep connectedness.

Deb Snyder, PhD is the author of Intuitive Parenting (Beyond Words 2010) and the creator of the HeartGlow method. She is an inspirational speaker and teacher to groups large and small and offers instruction on intuitive parenting in private sessions, classes and seminars throughout the country. FMI visit www.heartglowparenting.com

Raising Intuitive Children wins USA Book News Award October 24, 2009

Posted by coachingparents in Dr. Caron Goode, Intuition Facts, Intuitive Parenting, Intuitive Resources, Intuitive Tools, Psychic Kids, Tara Paterson, intuitive children.
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Raising Intuitive ChidlrenUSA BOOK NEWS ANNOUNCES WINNERS AND FINALISTS OF THE NATIONAL “BEST BOOKS 2009” AWARDS

Independent Titles Score Top Honors in the 6th Annual National “Best Books” Awards

LOS ANGELES – USABookNews.com, the premiere online magazine and review website for mainstream and independent publishing houses, announced the winners and finalists of THE NATIONAL “BEST BOOKS” 2009 AWARDS (NBBA) on October 20, 2009. Over 500 winners and finalists were announced in over 140 categories covering print and audio books. Awards were presented for titles published in 2009 and late 2008.

Jeff Keen, President and CEO of USABookNews.com, said this year’s contest yielded an unprecedented number of entries, which were then narrowed down to over 500 winners and finalists.

Award highlights include the following:

Raising Intuitive Children: Guide Your Children to Know and Trust Their Gifts by Caron B. Goode, Ed.D. and Tara Paterson (New Page Books) won first place in the General Parenting/Family category

•Living Like You Mean It: Use the Wisdom and Power of Your Emotions to Get the Life You Really Want by Ronald J. Frederick, Ph.D. (Jossey-Bass, an Imprint of Wiley) snagged Best Self-Help Book

•Forgiving Troy: A True Story of Murder, Mental Illness and Recovery by Thom Bierdz (Thom Bierdz Inc.) was honored in the Autobiography/Memoirs category
•Bad Bosses, Crazy Coworkers & Other Office Idiots by Vicky Oliver (Sourcebooks) won the Best Business Career Book

•The Art of Apology: How to Apologize Effectively to Practically Anyone by Lauren M. Bloom, J.D., LL.M. (Green Angel Media ) topped the General Business category

•Eat What You Love, Love What You Eat: How to Break Your Eat-Repent-Repeat Cycle by Michelle May, M.D. (Greenleaf Book Group) placed number one in the General Health category

•A Circle of Souls by Preetham Grandhi (Cedar Fort, Inc.) won the General Fiction category

•Wyatt’s Revenge by H. Terrell Griffin (Oceanview Publishing) took home the Best Mystery/Suspense prize

•Dead Air: A Sammy Greene Thriller by Deborah Shlian and Linda Reid (Oceanview Publishing) was awarded hottest new Thriller/Adventure

•Journey Through Ten Thousand Veils by Maryam Kabeer Faye (Tughra Books) was honored as the Best Spirituality Book of 2009

•The Best New Fiction Award went to Digger, Dogface, Brownjob, Grunt by Gary Prisk (Cougar Creek Press)

•Body Intelligence: How to “Think” Outside Your Brain and Connect to Your Multi-Dimensional Self by John Mayfield, D.C. (Nubalance Publishing Company) was awarded Best New Non-Fiction

•Darryl and the Mountain by Lynne Emily Ozgur, illustrated by Ismail Abay (Tughra Books) was given the top spot in the Children’s Picture Book category

Keen says of the awards, now in their seventh year, “The 2009 results represent a phenomenal mix of books from a wide array of publishers throughout the United States. With a full publicity and marketing campaign promoting the results of NBBA, this year’s winners and finalists will gain additional media coverage for the upcoming holiday retail season.”

Winners and finalists traversed the publishing landscape: Simon & Schuster, Penguin, W.W. Norton, Revell, McGraw-Hill, John Wiley & Sons, Thomas Nelson, American Cancer Society, Greenleaf Book Group, Sourcebooks & hundreds of independent houses contributed to this year’s outstanding NBBA competition. Keen adds, “NBBA’s success begins with the enthusiastic participation of authors and publishers and continues with our distinguished panel of industry judges who bring to the table their extensive editorial, PR, marketing, and design expertise.”

USABookNews.com is an online publication providing coverage for books from mainstream and independent publishers to the world online community. USABN Magazine Online is the monthly electronic magazine e-mailed free to a large cross-section of the book buying public. JPX Media, in Los Angeles, California, is the parent company of USABookNews.com.

Get a free chapter or purchase a copy of Raising Intuitve Children today!

When We Know Better, We Do Better, Right? September 24, 2009

Posted by coachingparents in Intuition Facts, Intuitive Aha Moments, Intuitive Parenting, Intuitive Resources, Intuitive Tools, Welcome, intuitive children.
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by Danielle Koprowski
 
When we come into a different level of consciousness about our parenting many of us see all the ways in which we would like to be different as parents. Often times we know better. We know we do not want to yell, to be snippy, controlling or punitive yet we find ourselves doing these things anyway.

Many parents wonder why it is that now that they know better, they don’t always do better.

What if one day you learned that it was far superior to brush your teeth with your non-dominate hand. You decide to brush your teeth with your non-dominate hand for the rest of your life. How do you think you would do? Would it feel awkward? How long would it take you to be as good at brushing as you are with your other hand? How many times would you go into the bathroom, grab the brush with your dominate hand and start brushing? After the first month would you forget and go back to the dominate hand?

What we learned about parenting we learned from our parents 20, 30 years ago and it is the hard wired in our brain much like brushing our teeth with our dominate hand. I am sure with time, practice and commitment you could learn to brush your teeth with your other hand. In the process, would you question yourself about why it is so challenging? Would you judge yourself when you used the “wrong” hand?

Being the parents we aspire to be is no different. It takes time, practice and commitment. Have compassion for yourself, understand that even when we know better we are still just learning and practicing a new way.

This week, ask yourself, “Why do I have compassion for myself as a parent?”
 

Danielle Koprowski
Free To Be Parenting Support
ACPI Certified Coach for Parents and Families
www.freetobeparenting.com

Parenting and Re-parenting September 3, 2009

Posted by coachingparents in Dr. Caron Goode, Intuition Facts, Intuitive Aha Moments, Intuitive Parenting, Intuitive Podcasts, Intuitive Resources, Intuitive Stories, Intuitive Tools, Psychic Kids, Welcome, intuitive children.
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When we were kids, we envisioned ourselves becoming great parents, living wonderful lives and having a career that we could be satisfied with when we got old. Want to know if you’re all grown up? Hear what Gary Robertson will share about the big topic concerns on what kids really want—and need—from parents. Dr. Caron Goode is gifted Coach with a heart for assisting others to effect lasting transformation through spiritual coaching, books, classes and seminars. Caron’s continuous education, experience in psychology and professional writing makes her a great resource for parents wishing to create and maintain a nurturing relationship with their children. During her career, Jean Tracy developed character building concepts that continue to benefit parents and children through her line of parent/child discussion books, practical parenting tools, and marriage eBook.

Time:  11 am pst

Date:  Thursday, Sept 3

Place:  Listen Live at http://www.modavox.com/voiceamerica/vepisode.aspx?aid=40801

Connecting……… Forgiveness and Friendship August 15, 2009

Posted by coachingparents in Dr. Caron Goode, Intuition Facts, Intuitive Aha Moments, Intuitive Parenting, Intuitive Resources, Intuitive Stories, Intuitive Tools, Welcome.
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By Caron Goode

It was 1960. Jessica was nine years old and Rusty was ten. His family was Baptist and hers was Catholic. When his family moved into the neighborhood, Rusty became the youngest member of the thirteen boys in the neighborhood gang. One Saturday afternoon, the two girls of the neighborhood were walking home from the movie theater. Jessica said goodbye to her friend and headed home to help her mother.

Some of the neighborhood boys grabbed Jessica by the arms, held her, and threw a coarse rope around her neck. It happened so fast, she offered no resistance, and she pushed her hands between the rope and her neck to keep from choking.

The boys pulled her down the alley behind the houses. Jessica was tripping over her own feet, and fell several times, bruising her knees. She dared not cry for fear of what they would do to her. She couldn’t speak; she could barely breathe.

Finally they shoved her into her back yard. They pulled the rope taught until she turned red and tears streamed down her face. Mortified, embarrassed, hurt, and dying to run away, she wondered where her mother was. May be she was looking out a window and would come and rescue her any moment. Mom?  Her mother never came. Jessica knew the utter feeling of helplessness at the hands of these young bullies.

Finally they all ran away. Jessica lay on the grass and looked up at passing clouds until she could quit sobbing and breathe again and her trembling would stop. She felt a hand touch her hand. She looked over and Rusty was sitting cross-legged beside her. He was crying too.

“I am so sorry. I didn’t want to do it. I couldn’t stop it. They are bigger than me, and so mean today. I want to be your friend, and I never want you to hurt again. I’m so sorry. I didn’t mean it……..” The rest of Rusty’s words were unintelligible through his tears.

Jessica squeezed his hand. She couldn’t say anything yet. And they understood each other. She forgave him, grateful for the offer of friendship.