Baby and Parent

Screamfree Parenting: The Revolutionary Approach to Raising Your Kids by Keeping Your Cool

by Chris


Product Description
You Can Start a Revolution in Your Family . . . Tonight

ScreamFree Parenting is not just about lowering your voice. It’s about learning to calm your emotional reactions and learning to focus on your own behavior more than your kids’ behavior . . . for their benefit. Our biggest enemy as parents is not the TV, the Internet, or even drugs. Our biggest enemy is our own emotional reactivity. When we say we “lost it” with our kids, the “it” in that sentence is our own adulthood. And then we wonder why our kids have so little respect for us, why our kids seem to have all the power in the family.

It’s time to do it differently. And you can. You can start to create and enjoy the types of calm, mutually respectful, and loving relationships with your kids that you’ve always craved. You can begin to revolutionize your family, starting tonight.

Parenting is not about kids, it’s about parents.
If you’re not in control, then you cannot be in charge.
What every kid really needs are parents who are able to keep their cool no matter what.

Easier said than done? Not anymore, thanks to ScreamFree Parenting, the principle-based approach that’s inspiring parents everywhere to truly revolutionize their family dynamics. Moving beyond the child-centered, technique-based approaches that ultimately fail, the ScreamFree way compels you to:

focus on yourself
calm yourself down, and
grow yourself up

By staying calm and connected with your kids, you begin to operate less out of your deepest fears and more out of your highest principles, revolutionizing your relationships in the process.

ScreamFree Parenting
is not just another parenting book. It’s the first parenting
book that maintains—from beginning to end—that parenting is NOT about kids . . . it’s about parents. As parents pay more attention to controlling their own behavior instead of their kids’ behavior, the result is stronger, more rewarding, and more fulfilling family relationships.

For those of you reading who are parents, know parents, or have had parents, the notion that the greatest thing you can do for your children is to learn to focus on yourself may sound strange, even heretical. It’s not. Here’s why: we are the only ones we can control. We cannot control our kids—we cannot control the behavior of any other human being. And yet, so many “experts” keep giving us more tools (“techniques”) to help us try to do just that. And, of course, the more we try to control, the more out of control our children become.

“Don’t make me come up there.” “Don’t make me pull this car over.” “How many times do I have to tell you?” Even our language suggests that our kids have control over us.
It’s no wonder that we end up screaming. Or shutting down. Or simply giving up. And the charts, refrigerator magnets, family meetings, and other techniques in most typical parenting books just don’t work. They end up making us feel more frustrated and more powerless in this whole parenting thing.

This practical, effective guide for parents of all ages with kids of all ages introduces proven principles for overcoming the anxieties and stresses of parenting and setting new patterns of connection and cooperation. Well-written in an engaging, conversational tone, the book is sensible, straightforward, and based on the experiences of hundreds of actual families. It will help all parents become calming authorities in their homes, bring peace to their families today, and give kids what they need to grow into caring, self-directed adults tomorrow.
Screamfree Parenting: The Revolutionary Approach to Raising Your Kids by Keeping Your Cool


Share and Enjoy:
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Technorati
  • Google
  • Furl
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • Ma.gnolia
  • Reddit
  • Simpy
  • Spurl
  • Print this article!
  • E-mail this story to a friend!

{ 1 trackback }

Could You Do Without Paperwork in Pregnancy? -> Babyfolk
04.03.10 at 5:22 pm

{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

1 B. A. Moseley 03.25.10 at 2:03 am

I saw Hal on Matt Lauer.

While he may be on topic on raising kids, he is appallingly ignorant when it comes to gifted kids.

As a former gifted child and a parent of a gifted kid, I’d like to weigh in.

Gifted kids are at great risk for psychological problems if their gifts are not recongnized and they are not accelerated. What Hal proposed is not the recommended approach for dealing with gifted kids and will very likely lead to the kids being stunted emotionally and mentally.

Interested parents should look up Dr Ruf’s book as a starting point on raising gifted kids, rather than listen to an ill-informed person who is out of their area of expertise.

Losing Our Minds: Gifted Children Left Behind

Rating: 3 / 5

2 C. Fehrenbacher 03.25.10 at 2:27 am

Thank you for your promptness in sending this text. It is in the condition that was listed.
Rating: 5 / 5

3 Murrjjr 03.25.10 at 3:56 am

I gave this book 3 stars it is helpful in some areas. I wasn’t really impressed with some of the points, not very many tips and not geared for toddlers.
Rating: 3 / 5

4 Debbie Milam 03.25.10 at 6:24 am

Learn how to be a better parent is the greatest gift we can give our childrenA Moment of Peace: Relaxation for Parents AudiobookA Moment of Peace: Relaxation for Children
Rating: 5 / 5

5 a reader 03.25.10 at 7:09 am

I’ll admit that I’m only half way through the book and I’m writing this review. If I get through the whole book, I’ll edit this review. But I feel like there is so much time being spent talking about how we should want to be scream-free parents (I know … I get it … that’s why I picked up the book.) Now give me the meat already. What are the techniques?? Should have been hitting those way earlier on. I hope I can hang on a little longer …
Rating: 3 / 5

Leave a Comment

You can use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>