The couple of times I’ve ever gotten just a TINY bit suspicious of my husband, I ended up feeling ridiculous. The latest example:

I was scrolling who he follows on TikTok and saw an account called High Impact Club. The profile photo was of a gorgeous woman, and the location was Phoenix, which is where we live. My hackles went up a tiny bit and I clicked into her profile.
...She’s a gentle parenting coach.
🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺
I follow her too now, of course, and I LOVE LOVE LOVE her account.

Marcela Collier on TikTok:

https://t.co/Yn6DmFotoM
At some point I moved from just faving her videos, to keeping a note in my phone of all my favorite pieces of wisdom I’ve found there - easier to reference.
Some of them are small, practical tips (e.g. how to re-word something to a toddler to make it less likely to cause conflict) and some are full on truth bombs that made me cry a little.
Anyway I’m going to thread my notes here, where they might help other parents. I’m sure I’ll add more in the future. And, of course, I highly highly recommend that you follow the account if you’re on TikTok. Link again: https://t.co/Yn6DmFotoM
1a. Your child is not setting you off. It is your emotional memory, the way you felt as a child when similar things happened to you.
1b. The parts of parenting that you feel the hardest are probably linked to the parts of *your* childhood that you found the hardest.
2. “It’s okay to be upset. It’s *not* okay to hit mommy.”
3. Instead of “no” or “don’t”:

“Let’s try...” (“Let’s try lowering our voice” vs. “Don’t yell!”)

“First...then...” (“First we eat lunch, *then* we can play with our toys” vs. “NO; it’s lunchtime, it’s not playtime.”)
4. The number one lie parents tell themselves: “It’s just a phase.” When harmful behaviors are unchecked, children don’t grow out of them; the behavior evolves. Right now you might hear whining, later that same defiance will escalate.
5. Instead of saying what NOT to do, say what TO do. (“Don’t climb on that!” vs. “Feet on the floor, please.”)
6. Try saying “Freeze!” instead of “no” or “stop.”
7. If a child is having a hard time or is on the verge of a tantrum, ask them “How can I help you?” You can help with conflict resolution, but encourage THEM to come up with the solution.
8. (If they’re not listening) “If you can hear me...touch your nose!”
9a. Tantrums are not a phase. They can extend beyond toddlerhood and become more and more abusive. The only way to prevent extended tantrums is to know what causes them. Every behavior communicates a need.
9b. Little children don’t have the skills to communicate their needs appropriately- THAT’S why tantrums happen. Just because your child isn’t a toddler anymore doesn’t mean he understands his needs or knows how to communicate them.
10. Meet your child *where* they are and respect *who* they are.
11. Accountability: Saying “Did you pull all of my shoes off their rack?” sets them up to tell a little lie. Instead, remind them “Mommy’s shoes stay on the rack; help me put them back.” Hold them accountable for the behavior, and give an opportunity for them to fix it.
12a. The main roadblock most gentle parents face is trying to give their children what they didn’t experience growing up. It is like trying to pour an empty cup. The feelings that our children’s behaviors produce in us expose those wounded, empty spaces.
12b. For instance, it is very likely that if we were not allowed to express big emotions safely when we were children, when our children are expressing the same big emotions, we don’t have the ‘compassion cup’ filled to help them.
12c. If you feel you’re running in circles...you really want to raise your children from love and kindness, and you like the idea of gentle parenting, but you find yourself raising your voice or losing it with your kids, it is because you need to fill up those cups.
12d. That’s called re-parenting. It’s the act of giving yourself what you didn’t receive as a child. How does re-parenting look to you? What kind of mercy do you have to extend yourself?
(😭😭😭)
13. Your children may not always remember the things that you tell them. But they will always remember how you made them feel.
14. You can feel anger without transferring it to your parenting responses.
15. Three things to say to a crying child instead of “stop crying” :

“I can see that you’re upset.”
“How can I help you?”
“It’s okay to cry.”
16. Make the conscious effort to say “yes” more than you say “no.” Often, it’s easy to change a “no” to a yes: “Yes, you can play after dinner.”
17. Every behavior is the communication of a need. You are your child’s ‘need detector.’
18. “My passion about what I do comes from seeing what compassion and unconditional love do to the broken hearts of the children who have come into my foster care and who think that their behaviors are who they are, and that love needs to be earned.”
19a. Society antagonizes children’s dependence. The message we get everywhere is “push independence on your children.” If he’s crying, “Oh no no no no, your attention is going to feed his tantrum.”
19b. If he wakes up crying for you, “Oh no no no no he’s not going to learn how to self-soothe.” If your child constantly follows you around, society tells you “oh no no no you’re creating a clingy child, you held him too much.”
19c. There is no such thing as too much connection with our children. Restricting connection doesn’t create independence. It creates separation anxiety.
20. ”Why do I parent without punishment? Because if they have a problem I want them to run TO me, not away from me.”
@threadreaderapp unroll

More from For later read

Every single public defender. Every single day.


Bail arguments, motions, oral arguments, hearings. Judges don’t know, follow, or care about the law. Prosecutors are willing to take advantage of it. And mandatory minimums, withheld evidence, & pretrial detention coerces people to plead before trial. When theres a jury. A shot.

But defenders still fight. And still win. Most times wins aren’t “Justice.” It’s power of repetition of argument in front of same judges. Introducing those in power to the people they oppress. Not just a RAP sheet or words on a page. Defenders make it harder to be brutal & cruel.

I worked as a public defender at an office as well resourced as any in the country. Social workers, team of investigators, a reentry team, support staff, specialist attorneys in immigration, housing, education, family. Relatively low caseloads (80-100). And yet still injustice.

Most think that balancing the scales of justice means more funding for defenders. Thats part of it. Enough a attorneys to actually be at bail hearings. Wrap around services to be able to help people trapped in the system end up better off in their communities. Lower caseloads.

You May Also Like

1

From today, we will memorize the names of 27 Nakshatras in Vedic Jyotish to never forget in life.

I will write 4 names. Repeat them in SAME sequence twice in morning, noon, evening. Each day, revise new names + recall all previously learnt names.

Pls RT if you are in.

2

Today's Nakshatras are:-

1. Ashwini - अश्विनी

2. Bharani - भरणी

3. Krittika - कृत्तिका

4. Rohini - रोहिणी

Ashwini - अश्विनी is the FIRST Nakshatra.

Repeat these names TWICE now, tomorrow morning, noon and evening. Like this tweet if you have revised 8 times as told.

3

Today's Nakshatras are:-

5. Mrigashira - मृगशिरा

6. Ardra - आर्द्रा

7. Punarvasu - पुनर्वसु

8. Pushya - पुष्य

First recall previously learnt Nakshatras twice. Then recite these TWICE now, tomorrow morning, noon & evening in SAME order. Like this tweet only after doing so.

4

Today's Nakshatras are:-

9. Ashlesha - अश्लेषा

10. Magha - मघा

11. Purvaphalguni - पूर्वाफाल्गुनी

12. Uttaraphalguni - उत्तराफाल्गुनी

Purva means that comes before (P se Purva, P se pehele), and Uttara comes later.

Read next tweet too.

5

Purva, Uttara prefixes come in other Nakshatras too. Purva= pehele wala. Remember.

First recall previously learnt 8 Nakshatras twice. Then recite those in Tweet #4 TWICE now, tomorrow morning, noon & evening in SAME order. Like this tweet if you have read Tweets #4 & 5, both.
THREAD: 12 Things Everyone Should Know About IQ

1. IQ is one of the most heritable psychological traits – that is, individual differences in IQ are strongly associated with individual differences in genes (at least in fairly typical modern environments). https://t.co/3XxzW9bxLE


2. The heritability of IQ *increases* from childhood to adulthood. Meanwhile, the effect of the shared environment largely fades away. In other words, when it comes to IQ, nature becomes more important as we get older, nurture less.
https://t.co/UqtS1lpw3n


3. IQ scores have been increasing for the last century or so, a phenomenon known as the Flynn effect. https://t.co/sCZvCst3hw (N ≈ 4 million)

(Note that the Flynn effect shows that IQ isn't 100% genetic; it doesn't show that it's 100% environmental.)


4. IQ predicts many important real world outcomes.

For example, though far from perfect, IQ is the single-best predictor of job performance we have – much better than Emotional Intelligence, the Big Five, Grit, etc. https://t.co/rKUgKDAAVx https://t.co/DWbVI8QSU3


5. Higher IQ is associated with a lower risk of death from most causes, including cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease, most forms of cancer, homicide, suicide, and accident. https://t.co/PJjGNyeQRA (N = 728,160)