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I spoke with Weaver about her anxiety and how her new book can give other people with anxiety a starting point for talking about it. Haley Weaver: At its core, anxiety wants to keep us safe — safe from disaster, safe from judgment, safe from rejection — the list goes on! Not to be meta, but my anxiety about sharing my anxiety was present throughout the entire writing process. Additionally, caring for anxiety may look different depending on how the anxiety presents — maybe it’s helping kids pinpoint helpful coping mechanisms. Weaver: I wrote this book for anyone who struggles with anxiety or cares about someone who deals with anxiety in their everyday life.
Persons: CNN — Haley Weaver, wouldn’t, ” Kimberly Person, Weaver, Haley Weaver, It’s, There’s, , Michelle Icard, Organizations: Lifeline, CNN, Haley Weaver CNN
Why failure is your child’s best tool
  + stars: | 2023-08-24 | by ( Faye Chiu | Analysis Michelle Icard | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
Parents and guardians often feel exhilarated by our children’s successes as much as we feel panicked and exhausted by their mistakes. We feel what they feel, and it’s a lot to go through, for them and for us. You need to experience “just the right amount” of setbacks to feel pain, learn from it, repair and become stronger. But there is something you can use to make sure that your child’s setbacks don’t become the headline of their childhood and, instead, become a launchpad for growth. Her latest book, “Eight Setbacks That Can Make a Child a Success,” is available at all major and indie booksellers.
Persons: she’d, Michelle Icard, Danielle Siess, you’ll, , don’t Organizations: CNN
“Social media is neither inherently harmful nor beneficial to our youth,” said Dr. Thema Bryant, the APA’s president. The recommendations emphasize that adolescents should have instruction in social media literacy and psychological development before joining social media as well as occasional training to bolster their knowledge as they go along, all to minimize potential harm. They also advise that social media use should be tailored to the child’s developmental stage — and monitored by adults in the case of younger children. But how do you convince a teenager to get on board with safer social media use? Teens are experiencing much of their social life on social media, and rather than shame it, we should collaborate with the younger generation, she said.
Parents need not fear adolescent weight gain
  + stars: | 2023-05-08 | by ( Michelle Icard | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +11 min
Yet it sends adults into a tailspin of fear around weight, health and self-esteem. Yet weight gain remains a sensitive, sometimes scary subject for parents who fear too much weight gain, too quickly. “About 25 percent of growth in height occurs during this time so as youth grow taller, they’re also going to gain weight. Parents need to work on their own weight bias, but they also need to protect their children from providers who don’t know how to communicate with their patients about weight. “We all have a lot of work to do when it comes to conversations about weight,” Hutchison said.
CNN —Teens are entering the chat around social media. The youths were asked about their thoughts, feelings and use of social media. One theme of the survey’s results: Teens see their experience on social media as more positive than adults imagine it to be. And if encouraged the right way, Icard has seen social media as a good way to showcase talents and humor. And 60% of all teens report feeling little to no control over the data social media companies collect from them.
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