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Intuitive Learner – Elementary School November 12, 2009

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By Corrin Howe

(In the first two 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. The last article explained this disparity through the diagnosis of Apserger’s Syndrome. Today’s post follows Jonathan through his elementary school years.)

The learning specialist at Jonathan’s school frustrates me to no end. She works with Jonathan in kindergarten. Jonathan’s general education teacher sent Jonathan to the specialist because he was not a “fluent reader.” Fluency is a measure the school uses to help children to ultimately comprehend what they read. The school also measures “automaticity” which is basically “fluency” for math, how fast a child can recall math facts.

I really appreciate the specialist’s willingness to work with us. She makes herself available to meet with me. She also gives us plenty of resources to help Jonathan at home. However, she cannot or will not answer my on-going question.

“I understand the school uses fluency and automaticity as benchmarks for a child’s ability to obtain the higher skill. Is it possible that these are not good measures for Jonathan?” I not only ask this question of the learning specialist, but every team member for his Individualized Educational Plan.

Every time I asks her, she responds “I work with children who have automaticity in math, but don’t understand the higher concept. For example, I can put out 24 manipulatives (little physical objects used in math) and arrange them into two equal groups and ask the child to count. They will tell me “Twelve plus twelve equals 24.” Then I’ll break the same 24 cubes into four equal groups. The child will still have to count each and every cube.”

I explain I believe Jonathan understand the concept; however, he is slow to process. In the end I think the learning specialist and I fail to communicate. After the third meeting with her, and receiving the same answer, I went on line and purchased the exact manipuliatives she uses in her example.

I dump them on the kitchen table. I pull out 24 and arranged them into two equal groups. I ask Jonathan how many there are. He doesn’t even count. He says, “You have two groups of 12 which makes 24.” I arrange them again into four groups. Jonathan says, “You have four groups of six which is 24.” I rearrange them again into three groups. Jonathan sighs, “Unless you add or take away from the pile, you will always have 24 no matter how you arrange them.” He was in first grade.

In second grade he come home and asks me, “Mom what’s negative eight minus eight?” I turn the question around. “I don’t know, Jonathan. You tell me.” He says, “Negative 16!”

I keep up with the “standards” or the curriculum taught at each grade level in our state. Furthermore, I have a son who is seven years older than Jonathan. So I know Jonathan didn’t learn this in school. I reply, “Very good Jonathan. Where did you learn that?”

“I taught myself,” he answers. (Apparently this is a familiar phrase at school as several of the IEP team members repeat his declaration.)

He has an acute ability to pick up pieces of information and file them away in his brain. Then he’ll pick up another piece of information which he’ll put with the filed piece of information and make a “leap.”

Knowing Jonathan didn’t learn negative math in second grade I request a conference with his teacher. It turns out Jonathan learned about negative temperatures in science during a study of thermometers and weather. During the same week, in math, the class learned how to use number lines to help them solve math equations. When I describe Jonathan’s leap into negative math, his teacher’s head snaps back in disbelief.

My dad visits Jonathan’s classroom during “Grandparent’s Day” at school. The teacher gives the student and their grandparents a problem to resolve. It is a trick since there was no solution to the problem. However, Jonathan comes up with a reasonable solution. The teacher brags to my dad how Jonathan often “thinks outside the box” to resolve problems. The teacher also explains how Jonathan is usually the first to answer challenge math questions and often the only one to answer it correctly. Many of his peers still can’t answer the question even after the teacher walks them through the steps to resolve the problem.

Now in fourth grade, Jonathan’s teacher teaches Jonathan sixth grade level math skills. Jonathan completes simple algebra equations, which in our school district is an “honors math” skill even for sixth grade.

For the first time since Kindergarten, a teacher answers my question. The answer is “no.” Fluency and automaticity are not good measures for Jonathan. The fourth grade math teach observes that Jonathan knows the answer, he just needs extra time to work it out. In fact, probably a more accurate statement is, Jonathan often knows the answer immediately, he needs the extra time to translate the answer from his own “language” into one the rest of us can understand.

He is just now articulating he “thinks” and “sees” in terms of numbers and not words. I do believe he thinks in ways other than words. I can see how he would articulate he sees in numbers, but I believe he actually sees pictures or entire objects. He then has to “search the file cabinet” for the words which go with his picture.

I believe this because he went five years not being able to “access” the word “dinner.” Upon some research, I asked Jonathan to find the word “dinner” in his brain. His eyes rolled to the top of his head for a discernable but brief period. When he had the word, I suggested he “file” it in a place he’d be able to access it. For nearly a year he had immediate access to the word “dinner.” Then he lost the word again. We went through the same exercise. He’s not lost the word sense.

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 – Toddler to Preschool November 11, 2009

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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.

PSYCHOLOGICAL BENEFITS OF A SPIRITUAL LIFE November 6, 2009

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By Lloyd J. Thomas, Ph.D.

The mental health profession is beginning to recognize the need for
people to include their spiritual life in any treatment or therapy
they might seek.  Until recently, the term “spirit” conjured up
concepts such as ghosts, mental aberrations, religious beliefs or
cults.  Now, however, science is beginning to acknowledge the
importance of body energy, its energy fields and what psychological
factors modify such fields.  Some of these factors have previously
been exclusively the domain of “spiritual” people.  Not so anymore!

The value of a healthy spiritual life is being recognized by almost
everyone who has had any experience addressing the psychological, or
mental and emotional problems of others.  Clinical psychologist and
Buddhist monk, Jack Kornfield, in his book, “A Path With Heart”
writes: “When I began working at a state mental hospital while
studying for my Ph.D., I naively thought I might teach meditation to
some of the patients.  It quickly became obvious that meditation was
not what they needed.

“But then I discovered a whole large population at this hospital who
desperately needed meditation: the psychiatrists, psychologists,
social workers, psychiatric nurses, mental health aides, and others. 
…Not many among these caregivers seemed to know firsthand in their
own psyches the powerful forces that the patients were encountering,
yet this is a very basic lesson in meditation: facing our own greed,
unworthiness, rage, paranoia, and grandiosity, and the opening of
wisdom and fearlessness beyond these forces.  The staff could all have
greatly benefited from meditation as a way of facing within themselves
the psychic forces that were unleashed in their patients.  From this
they would have brought a new understanding and compassion to their
work and their patients.”

All traditional spiritual paths, some practiced for thousands of
years, seek to transform and liberate consciousness.  There are
generally two very different approaches on how to accomplish this. 
One traditional view teaches that we need to attain profoundly altered
states of consciousness in order to discover a “transcendent” vision
of what life is all about.  The stereotype of this spiritual seeker is
one who goes to the cave or mountaintop, withdraws from the world,
meditates for hours on end, and finally becomes “enlightened.” This
view is referred to as the “transcendent path of spirituality.” And
certainly, the value of this way is the great inspiration and forceful
vision it can bring to our lives.

The second great spiritual view is called the “path of spiritual
immanence.  This school teaches that one needs to bring the value of
spiritual awakening down from the mountain and inject it in every
moment of our daily lives.  It believes that we need to infuse our
whole life with a sense of the sacred and truly live from moment to
moment fully involved in the daily activities we each encounter.

Both of these spiritual traditions, have certain psychologically
beneficial and healthy aspects.  Almost any spiritual tradition
contains certain “truths” and methods for realizing them.

Regardless of which religious or mystical path one chooses, the
benefits one derives from pursuit of a spiritual practice can include:

—-The development of compassion for self and others.  Such
compassion is based not on seeking some ideal of perfection.  Rather
it is simply based on the capacity to “Let go and to love, to open the
heart to all that Is.”

——The strengthening of the human virtues of kindness, patience,
flexibility, self–awareness and self–acceptance, understanding,
wisdom and knowledge.

——Probably the best psychological benefit of spiritual pursuits
is the loss of fear.  As one’s spiritual life evolves, his fear
diminishes.  Almost all common psychological problems are
fundamentally based on fear.  Lose your fear, and you become
spiritually well.  Become spiritually mature and you lose your fear.

As a mental health professional, I can attest to the value of these
traditional spiritual endeavors.  Hopefully, we will continue to seek
out their benefits to us as living beings.  Perhaps we are actually
spiritual beings creating a physical experience, rather than a
physical being seeking a spiritual experience.  Wouldn’t that shift in
perception transform your life?! Such a transformation in everyone’s
self-concept might just save the human species from extinction.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Dr. Thomas is a licensed psychologist, author, speaker, and life
coach.  He serves on the faculty of the International University of
Professional Studies. He recently co-authored (with Patrick Williams)
the book: “Total Life Coaching: 50+ Life Lessons, Skills and
Techniques for Enhancing Your Practice…and Your Life!” (W.W. Norton
2005) It is available at your local bookstore or on Amazon.com.

Lloyd J. Thomas, Ph.D. has 30+ years experience as a Life Coach and
Licensed Psychologist.  He is available for coaching in any area
presented in “Practical Life Coaching” (formerly “Practical
Psychology”). E-mail: DrLloyd@CreatingLeaders.com or LJTDAT@aol.com.

PARENTING IN AWARENESS by Doreen Fisher November 4, 2009

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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

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

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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.

 

Staying Out of Fear by Hillary Raimo November 2, 2009

Posted by coachingparents in Intuitive Aha Moments, Intuitive Parenting, Intuitive Partners, Intuitive Resources, Intuitive Stories, Intuitive Tools, Psychic Kids, intuitive children.
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Angel Ad High DPIEverywhere I go, I hear people talking about one thing or another that they are afraid of. It seems to be at the forefront of everyone’s mind lately. I am afraid of this, or that, the flu, other people, change, leaving a job they hate, or partner they no longer relate too. The list goes on and on. In fact, they are so afraid, they simply do not move at all. They sit still and freeze, and this affects us on all levels. Fear has this way of paralyzing you to the point where you will not do anything. Simply put, if you are afraid, you will stay the same. We won’t live, we won’t change, we won’t question what we are told, and we will do whatever anyone else tells us because we are sacred.

We walk around with this eternal question of “OH NO, What should I do?” and we hand over our personal sense of power to anyone willing to offer us guidance. We throw away our intuition, our common sense, and look to what everyone else is doing instead.

This is the true danger of the fear mindset. It causes us to step out of our power center, where we have a strong sense of who we are, and where our balance lives, into a state of unbalanced living where power is put outside of us. In response as energy bodies, our vibration lowers, our light dims, and all kinds of things can then come in, including the flu and other dis-eases.

When we do get sick, use it as an opportunity to take a look at where your life is unbalanced, and why. Then make the necessary changes to regain balance, and nurture yourself, until your health and stronger vibration/light has returned.

It always surprises me how many people who live in fear forget to laugh, and take themselves too seriously. However, if you think about it, it would make perfect sense, because when you are in fear, you do take life and yourself too seriously because it is a threat to your very existence. Laughter and lightheartedness are hard to come by when you are in fear. Two of your natural born qualities that keep you happy, balanced and healthy.

We all fall prey to Fear; it is a great teacher. A very hard taskmaster. It will ask things of you and push you through boundaries you never even realized you had. It is when you get stuck in fear that depression develops, ill health and a variety of other physical manifestations. All asking you to stop, look and learn.

We may not be conscious of being afraid. Fear manifests in a plethora of ways in our lives. How we judge others, how we criticize ourselves, why we stay in abusive or unsatisfying relationships, or unfulfilled jobs. It is why we find any excuse not to move forward with our dreams and yearnings. It is why we look at ourselves in the mirror with any other emotion except pure unconditional love. It is why we cringe in the corner afraid to move on any level in our lives.

Facing your fears head on, and conquering them like a good enemy is a wonderful way to move through the heart of your fears, so you can find the gold treasure that awaits in the lessons it has to teach you. The energy hold it has on you and your life then vaporizes leaving you clear, balanced and for the better because of it.

When we find others in a state of fear, we have to seek the mirror for ourselves. Instead of trying to solve it for them, or run away because we fear being close to people who are afraid, look at the why for yourself.

Having compassion for others in fear means you have compassion for yourself when you are afraid. But remember compassion does not mean you have to take on their situation, simply witnessing it and loving them unconditionally is enough.

So instead of avoiding fear, when they surface, or you see fear mirrored back to you by the situations in your life, stop, look and learn.

Recipe for Fear Relief:

1 Cup of Laughter

3 Ounces of Silliness

4 boxes of Creative Expression

1 stick of Nature

Bake until you learn something new about yourself

Hillary Raimo teaches, lectures, and has written on a variety of empowerment issues related to multi-dimentional healing and spirituality. As host The Hillary Raimo Show: Matters for Mind, Body & Spirit now heard in over 29 countries worldwide, she speaks on a variety of topics related to higher consciousness. Hillary teaches at a variety of venues nationwide, and leads tours to sacred sites worldwide. www.hillaryraimo.com for details

Staying out of Fear by Hillary Raimo November 2, 2009

Posted by coachingparents in Hillary Raimo, Intuitive Aha Moments, Intuitive Tools.
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Everywhere I go, I hear people talking about one thing or another that they are afraid of. It seems to be at the forefront of everyone’s mind lately. I am afraid of this, or that, the flu, other people, change, leaving a job they hate, or partner they no longer relate too. The list goes on and on. In fact, they are so afraid, they simply do not move at all. They sit still and freeze, and this affects us on all levels. Fear has this way of paralyzing you to the point where you will not do anything. Simply put, if you are afraid, you will stay the same. We won’t live, we won’t change, we won’t question what we are told, and we will do whatever anyone else tells us because we are sacred.

We walk around with this eternal question of “OH NO, What should I do?” and we hand over our personal sense of power to anyone willing to offer us guidance. We throw away our intuition, our common sense, and look to what everyone else is doing instead.

This is the true danger of the fear mindset. It causes us to step out of our power center, where we have a strong sense of who we are, and where our balance lives, into a state of unbalanced living where power is put outside of us. In response as energy bodies, our vibration lowers, our light dims, and all kinds of things can then come in, including the flu and other dis-eases.

When we do get sick, use it as an opportunity to take a look at where your life is unbalanced, and why. Then make the necessary changes to regain balance, and nurture yourself, until your health and stronger vibration/light has returned.

It always surprises me how many people who live in fear forget to laugh, and take themselves too seriously. However, if you think about it, it would make perfect sense, because when you are in fear, you do take life and yourself too seriously because it is a threat to your very existence. Laughter and lightheartedness are hard to come by when you are in fear. Two of your natural born qualities that keep you happy, balanced and healthy.

We all fall prey to Fear; it is a great teacher. A very hard taskmaster. It will ask things of you and push you through boundaries you never even realized you had. It is when you get stuck in fear that depression develops, ill health and a variety of other physical manifestations. All asking you to stop, look and learn.

We may not be conscious of being afraid. Fear manifests in a plethora of ways in our lives. How we judge others, how we criticize ourselves, why we stay in abusive or unsatisfying relationships, or unfulfilled jobs. It is why we find any excuse not to move forward with our dreams, and yearnings. It is why we look at ourselves in the mirror with any other emotion except pure unconditional love. It is why we cringe in the corner afraid to move on any level in our lives.

Facing your fears head on, and conquering them like a good enemy is a wonderful way to move through the heart of your fears, so you can find the gold treasure that awaits in the lessons it has to teach you. The energy hold it has on you and your life then vaporizes leaving you clear, balanced and for the better because of it.

But remember compassion does not mean you have to take on their situation, simply witnessing it and loving them unconditionally is enough.

So instead of avoiding fear, when they surface, or you see fear mirrored back to you by the situations in your life, stop, look and learn.

Recipe for Fear Relief:

1 Cup of Laughter

3 Ounces of Silliness

4 boxes of Creative Expression

1 stick of Nature

Bake until you learn something new about yourself

 

Hillary Raimo teaches, lectures, and has written on a variety of empowerment issues related to multi-dimentional healing and spirituality. As host The Hillary Raimo Show: Matters for Mind, Body & Spirit now heard in over 29 countries worldwide, she speaks on a variety of topics related to higher consciousness. Hillary teaches at a variety of venues nationwide, and leads tours to sacred sites worldwide. www.hillaryraimo.com for details

 

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

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