1.

Why it is a Good Thing When Your Kids Feel Disgust

No items found.

Disgust gets a bad rap. We often forget it is an emotion and natural to our bodies. It isn't disrespectful or even rude.

It's designed to help us move away from material and people that might be rotten.

Help your kids learn to trust and listen to the creepy feeling they get when someone touches them or stands too close to them etc.

You can still teach kids how to communicate their disgust feelings respectfully without shutting them down.

Our disgust can be the difference between safety and trauma if we see it as a trustworthy warning and not simply something to stuff away.

This is some text inside of a div block.
No items found.

Join the Attachment Nerd Herd

Complete access for $29

Similar to what you just watched

Example: Reviewing Body Safety Rules Before a Playdate
00:57

Learn how to prevent child to child sexual trauma by teaching your child body safety rules, including keeping private areas private, asking for permission for physical touch, and sharing secrets with grown-ups.

View
How to Stay Calm When Your Children Are Not
01:29

Discover valuable tips for staying calm and helping your children regulate their emotions in this must-watch video, where you'll learn how to teach them about their feelings and embrace your own body state.

View
Why a Protective Parenting Stance is Less Protective than a Connection Focused Parenting Stance
00:59

In this video, you'll learn that hovering over our kids to protect them is not the best form of protection, as they need us to be connected with them so they can come to us as a refuge, and that the best protection we can offer them is connection.

View