BLOGS
“A few days before school begins, it's a great idea to sit down with your kids and discuss routines and expectations for the term.” - Sarah Munn
Simplifying Your Back-to-School Routine: A Parent's Guide (Back to school routine tips for parents)
The start of a new school term can be a stressful time for both kids and us parents. From last-minute uniform washes to grocery store runs for packed lunches, I find it always feels like a complete whirlwind. But what if I told you there's a way to make this transition smoother and less overwhelming? In this blog post, I'll explore some practical tips to help you prepare for the start of term while keeping your sanity intact.
Lowering the Bar: Embrace Imperfection
Let's face it, being a "good enough" parent doesn't require perfect organizational skills. If your child insists on a peanut butter sandwich and biscuits in their lunchbox, that's perfectly fine. What matters most is that they are happy and well-fed. In reality, many kids don't even finish their lunches at school, so that perfectly crafted sandwich might end up in the bin anyway. Our efforts are often about appearances rather than necessity.
Prepare Your Children: Establish Routines
A few days before school begins, it's a great idea to sit down with your kids and discuss routines and expectations for the term. If the holidays were a mix of unstructured activities, like excessive screen time, it's essential to reconnect and help your children ease back into a more structured routine.
For instance, you can take them out for a special family treat, like an ice cream outing, to discuss expectations. This serves as a reminder of what's to come and the importance of being prepared. Talk about bedtimes, laying out school uniforms, packing lunchboxes in the kitchen, and ensuring everything is ready for the next day.
The results of these conversations can be surprisingly positive. Bedtimes may become slightly earlier, lunchbox preparations can shift to the morning, and school uniforms might be better organized. Sometimes, children need that extra support and guidance to become more independent. It's all about finding the right balance. By providing just enough scaffolding, you can gradually empower them to manage their responsibilities on their own.
Remember, a calm and supportive approach is key to getting your children excited about heading back to school. Overwhelming pressure can make mornings even more challenging, especially for kids with neurodiverse needs.
So, here's to a successful start of the school term. I hope these tips help both you and your kids ease into the routine with minimal stress and maximum enthusiasm.
BOOK REVIEWS
One of my less evidence-based and more woo woo choices which I recommend to people who are in the depths of the despair we call peri-menopausal, or heading into the more mature years.
Hagitude talks of the wisdom and acceptance of older age as women, and tells the myths and stories that surround us. Often as mothers we have our kids with additional needs at home longer, or forever. And unlike other kids still hanging around at home into their thirties and moving in with their partners, even having babies, some of our kids won't do that. They may not work, or have a purposeful activity every day, they may not drive, or be independent at home.
In these circumstances, that quest for self, for the sense of identity that we lost, for the search and essence of who we are, this acceptance and finding oneself in the greying years can be a magical transformation.
And the story telling in this book is a helpful and interesting addition.
This book is an intelligent review of the history of gardening. It has recollections of famous psychologists and artists and the affect that gardens, nature and gardening had on their lives.
From Freud to Winnicott these stories remind us of the inherent nature of gardening within the life of human beings, and the positive and mindful properties of beauty, flowers and the pant, grow, harvest and cycle.
Stuart-Smith takes us back to the first world war and the gardens built among the rubble of the trenches, and to the elderly who cling on to their window boxes and pots to stay present when there is not much time ahead of them.Her addition of photos including, ironically, Freud on his bed in the garden, provide a strong visual to the stories and accounts in the book.
I loved this book for its inspiration to remember that gardening is intrinsically mindful and meditative. There are great examples of garden design which I can include when we make our gardens at the new farm.
I want to create safe spaces where people can feel both safe, protected and free, and Stuart-Smith provides good impetus for this. I want to create spaces where mindfulness will be easier, and where we can engage in activities which allow us to be present. Personally this book reminded me to get outside and get dirt under my finger nails.
A great benefit for me on days when I find meditation difficult due to dissociation which I sometimes experience. I will certainly get my boys in the garden for mindfulness as much as I can. As they get older their interest in my ideas is fading and their own passions take over. But this book reminded me to persist with having them gardening, however dorky and boring they may find it.
Because this is sometimes more accessible than a seated meditation.
This is a big book in so many ways. It is often referenced, packed with ‘aha’ moments and one of the cornerstones of this kind of modern thinking into our own process of letting go.
If you are working on letting feelings come up, noticing them, not judging them, and learning to let them go, then this is a good addition to your reading list.
Some parts I was a bit, ‘yes I already know this’, but then I would find myself thinking ‘Oh Gosh, that’s me, I can do that differently and get a more peaceful result.’
Well worth practicing these techniques if this kind of thinking suits your mindset. I would be surprised if many people didn’t take something away from this book. But it is long and maybe a good one for an audiobook road trip.
I loved romping through this 12 hour audiobook packed full of archetypes, mystery and magic. Not to mention historical characters, Queens and Goddesses, I now recognise as part of who I am.
If you like pure evidence-based, scientific information this definitely is not for you!But if you don’t mind suspending disbelief a bit, it is quite entertaining and is delivered in the form of her live workshops. Archetypes date back to Plato and were popularised in psychology by Carl Jung.
Caroline adds some modernisation to it all by extending beyond Jung’s 4 and 12, but I wonder if it waters down the pure form too much. Caroline has a quirky manner which is very straight forward.I love her and think it’s hilarious. A touch of that autistic witchy no-nonsense about her.
I can imagine she would irritate some people though.If you want to find out if she is for you she has a lot of short YouTube videos on archetypes you can start off with. I loved it, but I also took it with a pinch of curios, comedic salt.
Acknowledgement to Country
We Respect and Acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of Country throughout Australia and their connections to the land, sea and community, and recognise the land on which we work is home to the Bunurong / Boon Wurrung members of the Kulin Nation. We pay our respects to all Elders past, present & future.
We meet the required standards for Insurance and Education.
Farm:
Gadara Farm
470 Boneo Road
Boneo, Vic 3939
Clinic:
Barefoot Therapists
1/16 Henry Wilson Drive
Rosebud Vic 3939
(03) 5981 1120
Sarah Munn Therapy Teachings
ABN 62307340650
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