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Read previewLate-night pillow fights, junk food, and movie marathons during sleepovers are a rite of passage for many kids and teens. Here's how to decide whether to allow sleepovers, and how to set up safety plans for when your kids sleep away from home. Make a safety plan with your kidsThe most important conversations are the ones you'll have with your child before the sleepover, experts say. Advertisement"These conversations should include respecting personal boundaries, recognizing uncomfortable situations, and knowing how to communicate with you anytime during the sleepover," Rinaldi said. Acknowledge that missing out on sleepovers is hardIf you decide against sleepovers, "empathize with your child, acknowledging their disappointment," Williams said.
Persons: , sleepovers, Traci Williams, PsyD, Williams, Daniel Rinaldi, " Rinaldi, Daniel Ganjian, Ganjian Organizations: Service, Healthy Wealthy, Business, Providence Saint John's Health
Sarah Gundle Sarah Gundle, PsyDThese are appropriate questions, when you consider the public fascination with stories about Gypsy Rose Blanchard, who was recently released on parole after serving eight and a half years for helping to kill her abusive mother. The revelation drove Gypsy Rose to seek revenge by convincing her boyfriend to murder her mother. Of course, the behavior of Dee Dee Blanchard and Debra McCurdy was beyond the pale, rising to the level of evil. And would Dee Dee Blanchard have been able to stop the train of destruction if someone had more doggedly recognized and confronted her mental illness? Maybe we need to heed the words of Gypsy Rose Blanchard, who has said that trying to understand where her mother was coming from “brought me to a place of forgiveness.” Blanchard recently told CNN of her mother: “She was not an evil woman.
Persons: Sarah Gundle, Sarah Gundle Sarah Gundle, Gypsy Rose Blanchard, Gypsy Rose Blanchard ”, Blanchard, Claudine “ Dee Dee ” Blanchard, Gypsy Rose, Dee Dee, , Jennette McCurdy, McCurdy, , Debra, Dee Dee Blanchard, Debra McCurdy, , I’m, ” Andrew Solomon, Rozsika Parker, “ We’re, that’s, Carl Jung, don’t, Dee Dee Blanchards, Debra McCurdys, ” Blanchard, Organizations: Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai Medical, CNN, Nickelodeon Locations: New York City
It also happens to be the most important skill every therapist needs to be good at their job: reflective listening. But there's one powerful tool we teach that can be used not just in your intimate relationships, but with friends, family and even coworkers. The goal of reflective listening isn't to solve the problem for the other person, but rather for them to feel validated and heard. Begin the conversation with the person who has the object; the other person doesn't get to talk until they're handed it. Pepper Schwartz, PhD, is a sexuality expert and co-author of "Relationship Rx: Prescriptions for Lasting Love and Deeper Connection."
Persons: we've, they've, Jessica Griffin, Jessica, Pepper Schwartz, Pepper Organizations: University of Massachusetts Chan Medical, Twitter, University of Washington Locations: PsyD, Seattle
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