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clkelyqld2
Posted: Fri 16:23, 06 Sep 2013
Post subject: hollister pas cher The Gift Of Light
the gift of lightLast night as Steve and I were cleaning up the kitchen, I asked him if he had read all of the comments from my parenting book post. He sighed and said, “I [url=http://www.lcdmo.com/hollister.php]hollister pas cher[/url] did. People want and need so many different things. Did asking help or did it stress you out,I leaned against the counter, let out a huge breath, and smiled, “For the first time since I started writing this new book I feel excited and clear. Those 150+ comments and 300+ emails were exactly what I needed. I’m ready,I always struggle with writing. For me, the process is very much like the famous quote from Red Smith: “Writing is easy. You just open a vein and bleed, The parenting book has been tougher than the others because it’s such vulnerable topic. The veins that need to be opened are tender.Reading through your ideas, suggestions, and “please don’ts” was invaluable for me. What I learned in the process surprised me and Moncler Coats 2011 changed my entire outlook about the book:I’m not a parenting expert, I don’t want to be one, and I’m not sure that I even believe in the idea of “parenting experts,I’m a researcher and a parent. A mapmaker and a traveler. Moncler Vest MenAs a mapmaker, I’ve spent a decade studying the paths to wholeheartedness and I’ve developed a strong understanding of how families forge these paths and stay on them. The map was drawn based on the stories and experiences of thousands of people who walked down different trails that were all heading in the same direction. There wasn’t one model, one expert, or one way.I’ve learned that wholehearted parenting is about engagement and awareness, not perfection or outcomes. I’ve learned that raising children who engage with the world from a place of worthiness – who believe they are enough – is almost subversive in our culture and doesn’t happen by default.As a parent, I’m trying to create and follow a path that leads our family toward love and worthiness. That doesn’t make me an expert, that makes me a fellow traveler. I climb and stumble just like everyone else. There are days when it all makes sense and I can hold space for the uncertainty and vulnerablity, and there moncler jackets sale are days when I don’t know how I’ll make it through another night of baths and tuck-ins.The only thing I know for sure is that embracing wholehearted living and parenting [url=http://www.waterhouselab.com/louboutinpascher/]louboutin pas cher[/url] has made a profound difference in our lives. It has brought us more joy, more courage, and instilled in each of us a deep sense of love and belonging.I am so grateful for the light that you brought to what has been a somewhat dark process. You helped me realize that there’s only one book that I can write… it’s the one based on what I know, who I am, and what I’m learning.Thank you. I couldn’t have done it without you.One thing is for certain, there is NO one book for being a child or parent. I have learned that we are children until we lose a parent and even then we carry so much of the child inside of us. A helpful parenting book is one where many voices share many success and failure stories.Ah yes Brene, This is a very familiar conclusion for me as well. I too view myself as a traveler on my own path who often serves well as a “guide” for others who have interest in walking a similar path that I have chosen. Thanks for continuing to lean in, show up, share your truth and shine your light. It matters! AmyBrene, You are an inspiration! I have just recently discovered your blog after a friend recommended your Houston TEDtalk to me. I love your wholehearted approach to life and how you [url=http://www.achbanker.com/home.php]www.achbanker.com/home.php[/url] learned to embrace not having or needing to have “all the answers. I want to be just like you when I grow up. oops. I already grown up. (still growing, of course). I am in a pretty different phase of parenting: my oldest child is just beginning the process of launching from the nest (senior in HS and in the midst of the college application process), the next is a freshman in HS and my youngest in 6th grade. However I sure that there will still be wonderful insights in your book that will help us on our journey. Wishing you many moments of uninhibited flow as you pour your thoughts on parenting into what [url=http://www.mansmanifesto.com]www.mansmanifesto.com[/url] I sure will be an amazing book. This is off topic, but I just wanted to say that your TED talk on “vulnerability” brought me to tears last night (I a [url=http://www.1855sacramento.com/peuterey.php]peuterey prezzi[/url] 26 year old male who has been handcuffed more times than he can count, to put my crying in perspective.)I cried because I felt like you were explaining part of a deep spiritual shift that has recently occurred in my life, and you explained it a little better than I have been able to, to this point. I write a lot, but a lot of my writing is ephemeral and borders on the poetic, so I have trouble getting my thoughts across, or, sometimes, even getting my thoughts to coalesce. So I wanted to say [url=http://www.getconversational.com]www.getconversational.com[/url] “thank you” about a thousand times for what you said that day in. Texas, was it?I am interested in sharing my story with you. Or talking to you in some capacity. I would be interested to see where you and I stand on common philosophical ground, and where we might differ. “Philosophy” is a cruddy way to describe my life and what I going through of late. but I suppose it works. Language is a constant cage, eh?Anyway. I will be following your blog anxiously to see what your next revelation might look like. Thank you again for. being alive. I am a proud member of the counter-culture that believes each child is a precious being sent to teach me how to be a better person. Montessori taught us that respect for the individuality of each child in his or her totality, and his or her circumstance, is the only key to helping each child become their most natural self – the key is that there is no key, only, as you say, a map. I believe we can extend that same courtesy to parents. Each parent is also an individual, and subject to a variety of circumstances and a lot more baggage. We owe ourselves the same respect, compassion and patience that we offer our children. Hopefully if we show them how to do it for ourselves, we can not only do it more easily for them, but they will learn how to do it for themselves. There are books out there that do embrace the philosophy [url=http://www.vivid-host.com/barbour.htm]www.vivid-host.com/barbour.htm[/url] of engaging with children and truly knowing them, and ourselves, but they are in the minority, and the more voices we have speaking for us, the better! I can hardly wait to read this new book of yours!Thank you!This sentence from your blog: “I learned that raising children who engage with the world from a place of worthiness – who believe they are enough – is almost subversive in our culture and doesn happen by default, matches [url=http://www.mansmanifesto.com]doudoune moncler[/url] exactly what I have been trying to do in now 26 years of parenting. I have always felt I have been tending and watching a garden and my job is only to encourage the life force and personality of each child to his or her fullest (whether it matches the current culture around them or not,). What supports me in this is to parent in the way I longed to be parented as a child. What I loved the most about was that it was so wholehearted (ha ha). Seriously, I felt like I was really seeing YOU through the book, and I loved that. I really value the research, and I think we parents need that, but I loved that you didn just share information out of your head, but that you had run it all that knowledge through your heart and experience and then shared it. That what I want from your parenting book–solid research and knowledge that has been refined through your story and others stories. Yay–I can wait,Parenting is such a daunting task. I think you can be good at one stage and fall down a bit at another. I was good with babies, always running to answer those cries so that they would know that they are safe and loved in a way that they will never question. I was good with toddlers, letting them bang on my pots and pans exploring their world with encouragement. I was good with the early school years, volunteering and arranging play dates so that they felt that school was important and social connection was a given. But, then came the middle school years and I tried, but fell short, not realizing that my own fears and anxiety about the world would be transferred to my children as I parented. My son is 22 now and I know that he has a good heart and is a kind sole and I could not wish for more than that, but it isn easy watching him avoid opportunities because of anxiety. My daughter is 15 and is such an amazing child, but she too fears so many things. I guess I am writing this to say that when I began the journey that parenting became for me, I had so many hopes for my children. After 22 years, I have reassessed, adjusted, and decided that all the hopes were about me and that the only positive outcome worth a moment of thought is that they are kind loving people who make this world a better place just by being in it. Thanks Brene for being in the world and making it a better place.what a wonderfull post – and so helpfull! i am writing a book on heartache cheap moncler jackets and i always thought it will be easy, because i already have it all in my mind. but to my surprise words seem to stumble more than to flow. which is funny, because my blogs are often written within a few minutes. so maybe it is the thought of “oh, this time it has to be different, it is not “just a blog” but a book, if we dont stress ourselfs so much in order to be perfect, to write a perfect, a good, a helpfull or whatever book – we can just share our thoughts! lovesabineHi Brene,There is a really wonderful book on parenting by a medical doctor and a psychologist called “Hold Onto Your Kids: Why Parents Need to Matter More than Peers” that as I read your stuff I believe fits well with it. You might look to it for some inspiration. One of the most iintriguing comments is that they say parenting should not be hard. The Song is Called “The One Who Knows” and speaks wonderfully I believe to what you believe parenting to be about. It is actually [url=http://www.msc-sahc.org/moncler.asp]doudoune moncler pas cher[/url] a song she wrote for her newborn son. The title of your blog post made be think of the line that says “I the shine the light that guides you down the road you cheap moncler walking on, I have included the full lyrics below. Fashionable watches accent a woman personality and mood. You weren there really, but a lovely little matchmaker called my Amazon Suggestions List introduced us. I in awe of the things you say and can wait to hear more. I haven even gotten your book yet. I ordered it yesterday. But this is what I want. To turn from my escapist life and all the things that numb me and to truly live. God told me it was possible. He held out this flame of hope that someday I would be who I really wanted to be as an alternative to suicide when I was a teenager. I still hold on to that hope, and lately have made major changes and come to grips with huge revelations about what I been through in my life. I NEED to live. I WANT to live. And I know that I not. Not really. I guess I saying all of this to say [url=http://www.rtnagel.com/louboutin.php]louboutin pas cher[/url] I glad I found you. Thank you [url=http://www.orlando-apts.com/nfljerseys/]cheap nfl jerseys[/url] God for allowing me to find you. Already you have touched my life and given me something to say, “yes, THAT what I want” to. Having been sick and hiding for so long, sometimes I forget the vision of what I want. Sometimes i forget to even want anything different at [url=http://www.1855sacramento.com/woolrich.php]woolrich outlet[/url] all or think that it possible. wholeheartedness. Yes, God. I want that. Here to many happy days and nights traveling together.
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