Love

Trauma Parenting

As we all continue to navigate the twists and turns of this pandemic, Miken and I continue to look at each other and say “well, this is redundant.”

We notice every day moments happening around us come up when humans are in a traumatic experience. We witness regressions and symptoms of pain everywhere. Projection, fear.

Your body is in stress response mode: fight, flight or freeze. And your child(ren)’s stress response is activated too. It’s been 8 weeks of this now, so you may be also be exhausted, the adrenaline wearing thin.

So how are you showing up right now as a parent? Honestly?

What’s really important to remember is everyone is probably showing up different: your friends, your parents, your neighbor, your kids, and your partner. When our stress response is activated, our biological systems take over, and typically they are ones we learned from when we were a child.

I’m going to say that again: our go-to stress response is one we most likely learned as a small child to stay safe.

Do you have an urge to run away? Hide under the covers? Are you paralyzed with the decisions? Are you fighting with all the anxiety to control everything? Are you pleasing everyone? Are you ignoring everyone? Are you “fine”?

Your children are watching your response and formulating their own trauma response in this time period. They are formulating one that makes it safe to be around you, because you are linked to their survival.

It’s interesting to bring awareness to this response. I’ll tell you mine: it’s freeze. That is my comfort — when I don’t know how to handle the stress, I cannot make decisions in fear I will make the wrong one or make someone angry (hello people pleasing!).

I’ve done a lot of work in this area since the accident. I have committed to making decisions in difficult times. And I want my children to see that trauma is real and there will always be inner-work to be done around it. I want them to see me show up for myself.

This week, we’re going to dive into what it is like to parent during a traumatic experience. Miken and I talk about our actual experience in parenting after the accident. We’ll provide tools, including how to show up in a partnership, and how to talk to little kids honestly and openly.

We believe the most important tool you can practice at this time is compassion with yourself. It’s a practice, of course. And it is vital to moving through trauma as a parent.

So, begin to notice your negative self-talk and offer yourself compassion in it.

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Nurturing the Soul

If we are going to nurture the spiritual lives of our children, we have to nurture our own spiritual lives.

— Sandy Eisenberg Sasso

It’s called the ripple effect and it pertains to life and, particularly right now, the practice of parenting. We are all currently in survival mode. As we alluded to in this post, we are in a moment where we must prioritize the most important things and let other things in our life slide. What we do for ourselves in this moment matters. This is the time where, as parents, our oxygen bag must be firmly secured first. Without it, nothing else can happen.

It’s ok if you are waddling about and asking what am I supposed to do? You simply cannot do it all: you cannot cook and clean and work for hours and homeschool and bath and plan toddler activities and go to the grocery store with gloves on and sign on to church on Sunday and do your devotional and create and live and breathe. You cannot do it all.

You are also in a house, close quarters, to your family. (Remember you deserve breaks!) I have never in my life spent more time with my husband (especially by the time this ends). We are balancing working together to both continue to work, finding a place to work, finding time to “relax”, playing with the kids, diaper changes (x2 kids), cleaning — all the things you are doing.

Am I showing up for myself (and my kids) spiritually right now? Am noticing moments of pause and giving them those moments too? Am I showing patience, love, compassion in the ways I hope my children do? To myself, to my husband, to them?

Write this down: what three things trigger me?

It could be: the way my husband drinks his water.

It could be: the third time I’ve done the dishes and it’s 9:00 AM.

It could be: A impatient email from a customer.

It could be: no school until, at the earliest, May 1?

These things can send your head in a tailspin! They are triggering and scary. No one makes their best decisions or is their best self when they are in a tailspin. Our parenting can be overridden with fear and anxiety when in the unknown.

Now write this down (again): what five things bring me joy?

It could be: writing.

It could be: playing (actually playing) with my child or hearing their laughter.

It could be: finishing a cup of coffee (while it’s hot).

It could be: a run.

Notice when your spirit is triggered. Simply make note tenderly: wow, that’s making my blood boil. Can you feel, truly let yourself feel it (write it down in the notes section of your phone)?

Then can you counteract it with something from your joy list?

Know these lists. Write your joy down on a notecard and place it on your computer or in your workspace or in the play space so you can turn to it quickly. In survival, we get triggered more often than normal and it’s important to remember our heart rate is heightened, our blood pumps faster, our adrenaline is activated. This is the natural physiological response to what this pandemic is: trauma.

Feel the frustration. Turn to the joy. This will ripple to your children.

This will nurture your soul. This will nurture their souls.

The podcast this quote is from can be found below. It’s 4 minutes and it’s a gentle and quick reminder to nurture.


Parents, How Are You Feeling?

Good morning, parents…

How are you feeling today? (I’m really asking.)

We want to invite you to take a really deep breath.

Close your eyes. Settle your seat.
And breathe in through your nose, all the way to the belly.
Feel the air through your nose, your trachea.
Feel it fill your lungs, all the way to your belly. And exhale slowly.
It is safe for you to feel all of your emotions.


I have an inbox full of links upon links (literally hundreds) of educational websites to keep all of you going with your children, to help you fill your days. As I sort through them and work with our teachers to streamline the most relevant for you, the ones focused on PLAY for young learners, we want to first tell you that we are dedicated to the brain, body and spirit of learning not only in our children, but in our parent community as well.

This morning is about your spirit; your care.

Are you taking care of yourself, parents? What does that mean? Self-care is such a buzz word that has the connotation of hair cuts and massages and facials. And while this is true, there are so many other ways to care for your heart right now that you can do right at home. If you do not have a practice already, if you are the dad who goes to work and comes home and does the dishes instantly; or the mom who drives her kids to practice and recitals and games. If you are the parent who is used to putting your children, your career, your family and your spouse before yourself, these questions are for you:

What brings you joy?

What makes your heart burst?

What small moment in the day do you find peace?

What moments of the day are the hardest for you?

What triggers your anger?

What activities do you do for yourself already?

What activities do you want to do more of?

What activities do you wish to do less of?

Sit with these questions. Ruminate. Let them flip in your mind for some time. Because here is the truth: you deserve to take care of yourself.

I can hear your resistance. “But they need me…” “I have to take care of everyone…” “Who is going to do everything?”

Resistance is normal and typically we parents tend to be people pleasers. So I am going to say it again: you deserve to take care of yourself. In fact, by making sure you have taken care of your emotional well-being, your heart will open more to those around you.

Fill your cup up so it can overflow.

Has new resistance arisen? Something like “I don’t have time…” “I’m with them all day now, every day…”

Here is our gentle challenge to you when building your routine: the first thing to add in is 30-40 minutes of alone time a day for yourself to do something that brings you joy. Below is a long list of activities to start, and we encourage you to think for yourself too. Let yourself be a beginner if need be. You don’t have to know how to write poetry to pick up a pen and write words that float into your mind. You can be a slow runner. Allow yourself grace.

And I can still hear: “I don’t have time…”

Use your resources. Speak with your partner about splitting time to prioritize it for both of you. Use PBSKids propped on the iPad and lock your door if you are alone with kids. Break it up into 10 minute increments throughout the day. Wake up before the kids. Do this after bedtime.

Do it for 3 days and come back to us, let us know how it’s going, how it feels to make a little space for yourself.

May you make the space.


Heart-Filling Activities

Journaling
Painting
Praying with Pens
Meditating
Woodworking
Listening to Podcast
Reading a Book
Devotionals
Reading the Bible
Body Movement
Walks
Hikes
Breathwork
Poetry
Coloring
Learning Something New
Cooking Nourishing Food for Yourself
Being Still

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*Social media and TV are not heart-fillers. They have a time and place in your day as well, but that is not what this post is referencing.



What Do Children Need?

I’m watching the stock market. It’s ticking across my screen with intermittent interruptions of breaking news from The White House and CEOs talking about their strategies to keep their businesses alive. You’re stressed: about your parents, those around you who are immunocompromised, your job. I’m stressed about my business, this one, Nourish. How will this small business survive a pandemic?

Who would have thought a pandemic would come?

Nourish has survived challenging times before. We are being diligent to plan all scenarios AND putting faith in our leaders, and our God.

And mostly, we are thinking about the children: what do they need right now when the adults around them seem so distracted by this illness? Henry keeps asking me why I am on my phone again when usually my phone is plugged into a wall on the other side of the room when I am with him. I’ve read the articles on how to talk to kids about this (some of them are here), I’ve seen the sample schedules people have posted; I applaud all of the educational resources that are being created in this virtual world.

Educators are mobilizing to keep children engaged in learning and parents are willing to learn how to do what is best for there kids. Some parents are continuing to work from home and committed to continuing the education of their children.

Nourish, of course, focuses on young learners, and felt we could share some overarching themes to keep in mind. These aren’t new or life transforming and yet, we all need reminders from time to time.

routine.
The beauty of routine is that every family will have a different one. Time is an abstract concept to young children, not quite coming to full understanding until ages 5-7. We can expose children to time young, but it will be out of grasp mentally for a two year old. In this, a more appropriate routine would not include time. Instead it would show consistency day after day. “This happens, then this happens, then this.” Younger learners can handle about three actions at a time. “We are going to eat breakfast, then sort colors in the laundry, then do some dancing!”

Young children thrive in repetition, so your morning could be a breakfast invitation, a chore, puzzle time (a fine motor skill, small muscles), and a morning snack invitation. We’ll share some samples in the days to come, but mostly know to work within your child or children’s lead. If they tend to sleep in, you may not start your day until later. You may have early risers and start at 6:00 AM. Or, if you’re like me, you have both!

connect (and disconnect).
Place boundaries around your time on your phone or with the news. This is difficult, we understand, especially with news that is constantly shifting. Maybe you can check in every two hours, or at snack and meal times. My practice (before this past week) is to charge my phone from 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM every evening to connect with my kids.

Another practice you could add to your routine is Facetiming/calling friends and family (and even teachers!) to continue hearing the voices and seeing the faces that love your children. It is important they continue to feel that love surrounding them.

validate their feelings.
We are sometimes quick to dismiss kids in their small feelings, particularly when we ourselves are on edge. In times of big crisis, small things, like a bump or not getting their favorite snack or the strawberry being cut in half instead of whole, may come out in big ways because they are processing all of it in bursts. Tantrums are necessary for young children. We can also call these upsets. They release the energy inside them in the best way their bodies know how. In those moments, it’s important that we allow those big feelings.

“I’m here,” is a phrase you can use in this moment. Sit with them.

If you feel your patience waning, you can model regulation by you yourself taking a break. State it out loud: “I’m losing my patience and need a break to regroup.” Imagine a child seeing that self-regulation at such an uneasy time. Imagine you validating your own feelings of frustration. Let me admit, this is a practice!

play. play. play. play.
Children learn through play. Every aspect of being a human on this Earth shines through play. “Just playing,” does not articulate what is actually happening in their brains when they play. Dancing, painting, building, running, tag, play-doh, dress-up, skits. Release the pressure and allow them to be young children. Make your environment conducive to play and we assure, they will feel it.

breathe.
We are in uncertain times. Parents, take a deep breath yourselves. Write down 5 things that ground you, that bring you joy, that relieve your stress. Walks, working out, prayer, journaling, meditating. If you don’t know, take a few minutes to think about it and come back to those items when you begin to feel the overwhelm. Come back to your beating heart, your automatic breath, to the life inside you. Listen to your child’s laughter, their silly words — allow yourself to be with them.

Connection with your children in this time is such a generous gift to them. In uncertain times, their psychological side wants to know they are safe. That comes with connection to you, the parents.

May you be safe. May you have abundant health. May love surround you.

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