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Your Parenting Struggles Actually Mirror Your Own Childhood: Understanding Emotional Triggers, Generational Patterns, and the Intelligence of Your Reactive Moments with Your Children
Indigo
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Your Parenting Struggles Actually Mirror Your Own Childhood: Understanding Emotional Triggers, Generational Patterns, and the Intelligence of Your Reactive Moments with Your Children
By None
Current price: $14.99


By None
Your Parenting Struggles Actually Mirror Your Own Childhood: Understanding Emotional Triggers, Generational Patterns, and the Intelligence of Your Reactive Moments with Your Children
Current price: $14.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
This book explores the often-hidden connection between your parenting challenges and your own childhood experiences, examining how the moments you feel most triggered, overwhelmed, or inadequate as a parent reveal unresolved patterns from your own upbringing. Rather than treating parenting struggles as simple failures of patience or technique, it investigates how your children's behaviors, needs, and emotions can activate your nervous system in ways that point directly to what you experienced—or didn't receive—when you were young. Through insights into intergenerational patterns and emotional regulation, the book examines why certain parenting situations feel disproportionately difficult, how your reactive moments often replay dynamics from your own childhood, and what your emotional responses reveal about attachment wounds, unmet needs, and the parenting you internalized. It offers perspective on recognizing the difference between responding to your child's actual needs and reacting to your own childhood pain, the intelligence of noticing your triggers, and how self-awareness becomes the foundation for breaking cycles rather than perpetuating them. Grounded in compassionate self-reflection and developmental psychology, this is not about becoming a perfect parent or eliminating all reactivity. It's about understanding that your hardest parenting moments are invitations to meet the parts of yourself that still need what you're trying to give your children.
This book explores the often-hidden connection between your parenting challenges and your own childhood experiences, examining how the moments you feel most triggered, overwhelmed, or inadequate as a parent reveal unresolved patterns from your own upbringing. Rather than treating parenting struggles as simple failures of patience or technique, it investigates how your children's behaviors, needs, and emotions can activate your nervous system in ways that point directly to what you experienced—or didn't receive—when you were young. Through insights into intergenerational patterns and emotional regulation, the book examines why certain parenting situations feel disproportionately difficult, how your reactive moments often replay dynamics from your own childhood, and what your emotional responses reveal about attachment wounds, unmet needs, and the parenting you internalized. It offers perspective on recognizing the difference between responding to your child's actual needs and reacting to your own childhood pain, the intelligence of noticing your triggers, and how self-awareness becomes the foundation for breaking cycles rather than perpetuating them. Grounded in compassionate self-reflection and developmental psychology, this is not about becoming a perfect parent or eliminating all reactivity. It's about understanding that your hardest parenting moments are invitations to meet the parts of yourself that still need what you're trying to give your children.


















