You may have heard the term “Therapeutic Parenting” and are wondering what that is or if it could be helpful for you. Therapeutic parenting is an alternative to traditional parenting so let’s define what that is first and then look at how therapeutic parenting differs and how it may be just what you are looking for.
Traditional parenting is based on the premise that a solid and secure relationship was developed early and continues to exist between the parent(s) and the child. In this scenario the bond between the parent(s) and child was developed in a healthy way and has not been broken by severe trauma or disrupted attachment.
“Healthy attachment is a reciprocal, enduring emotional connection between a child and his/her primary care-giver(s) that begins when the child is in utero.
For some children, this attachment is disrupted through a variety of circumstances such as the abrupt loss of or extended separation from a parent, child abuse or neglect, invasive and/or painful medical procedures, prenatal exposure to toxins and/or neurological problems. A child is at highest risk of attachment related problems if these disruptions occur during the first two years of their life.” (http://studentsfirstproject.org)
Attachment can be disrupted for many reasons:
In a relationship where the children are secure they are able to rely on their parent(s) for guidance and when things get off track the combination of behavior modification and positive parenting methods gets things back on track fairly quickly. This is the ideal situation and is what we all hope for when we have kids but for many who foster or adopt children this is not an immediate possibility and for many others this process was disrupted with their birth children and needs to be repaired. That is where therapeutic parenting comes in.
Therapeutic parenting, which I also refer to as reparative parenting or connected parenting, focuses on developing this missing security in a relationship after the ideal time for that to be developed. Think about it like learning a language. When we are in the early readiness period for learning a language, we soak it in without effort. We learn it in a traditional manner, from our parents in the natural communications of day to day life. However, if you are in a situation where you need to learn a new language after that readiness period you would have to use other more intentional methods. It is the same with learning the language of security in relationships after the readiness period and after learning a different relationship language based on fear and insecurity. This intentional method of teaching security is what we refer to as therapeutic parenting.
Therapeutic parenting is a brain-based model which works with how the brain functions and processes information, experiences and relationships. In doing so we can intentionally rewire how the brain processes interactions, resolve the fear-based patters and replace them with security-based patterns. A fear-based brain produces chaos and survival behaviors while a security-based brain produces peace and growth-based behaviors. So, our overall goal is to get hurt kids out of fear-based survival mode and into a security-based growth mode. When we do this, kids heal, develop new patterns of interactions and their behaviors improve. The problem with using traditional parenting with kids who need therapeutic parenting is that it focuses on the behaviors as if the underlying security was there. When it is not, those behavior based interventions trigger fear and send the child into chaos and survival mode.
If you not sure and you want to “just be friends” with therapeutic parenting you can check out our free Facebook group and the free resources, including our free eBook on this site.
If you are ready to maybe go on a “first date” with therapeutic parenting you can take advantage of our DANCE Course for $37 (see description below).
If your ready for a more “serious relationship” with therapeutic parenting you can join many others on a similar journey and join our My Kids Membership Community (see description below) with a 30 day money back guarantee…so your not married to anything ?.
This course accompanies the free eBook also available on the site. This course includes 8 videos explaining the step by step process on implementing the DANCE model which is a therapeutic parenting technique that helps you end the battles in the home and instead begin to do a relational DANCE. You can get it here.
In this community you will get:
You can join the community here.
Recently I was talking to a foster parent working towards adoption who said she was considering going back to school for psychology to help the kids she was fostering and adopting. She was seriously considering this because it is so difficult to find answers on how to help kids with severe attachment issues and traumas. Isn’t that sad!? Adoption shouldn’t be this hard!
I’m sure many of you can relate to this feeling…I sure can! I was actually in a masters program for counseling when we started foster care and was appalled at the lack of answers I found there. I asked one professor how I could help my foster daughter and he had not advice or direction to give, only a warning…he told me to be ready for her to falsely accuse me of abusing her. That was his answer! That was unacceptable so I set out on a quest to find answers, help my foster kids and eventually to provide these answers to others in my situation.
You can find several free resources as well as a course and a membership site at www.MyKidsCommunity.com.
This course accompanies the free eBook also available on the site. This course includes 8 videos explaining the step by step process on implementing the DANCE model which is a therapeutic parenting technique that helps you end the battles in the home and instead begin to do a relational DANCE.
In this community you will get