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4 Excellent Books About Parenting

Books have been a one-time fee advisor for a long while now. We look up books for everything from Finances and Business to Entertainments like a Murder Mystery. Parenting can be a hard job sometimes but it is also the most important one you’ll ever get. The beauty of parenting is that you’re not the first person to do it and certainly won’t be the last meaning there are probably some great books about parenting, for folks just like you.

Reading has proven to have numerous advantages so listing them would take a whole another article. As parents you need to read books about parenting because nobody is perfect. So, we compiled a list of 4 Books about parenting so you can become the perfect parent: –

books about parenting
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1. The Danish Way of Parenting: What the Happiest People in the World Know About Raising Confident, Capable Kids

 

The Danes have consistently been voted the happiest people on the planet. For the previous four decades! A lot of research has been done to figure out why this is, and a lot of it speaks to their parenting approach.

‘The child is the father of man,’ as the proverb goes. As a result, happy, well-adjusted kids grow up to be happy, well-adjusted people.

The authors have a strong connection to Danish culture. One is an American who is married to a Dane while the other is a Danish psychologist.

They have summed it up with the mnemonic PARENT.

So, the secrets are:

P- play time. More unstructured, the better

A- be authentic

R- Reframing negative experiences so that they are taken in stride

E- Empathy should be taught

N – No ultimatum.

T- time together

 

2. How to Talk So Kids Will Listen and Listen So Kids Will Talk

 

This book outlines a new and healthier approach to raising children who are capable of taking responsibility for themselves and maturing into self-assured, shame-free adults. It will take some time for the techniques to become second nature, but many parents have already highlighted, and tried many ideas, and their kids are responding, demonstrating how much we underestimate their ability to solve problems without conflict.

 

3. The Whole-Brain Child: 12 Revolutionary Strategies to Nurture Your Child’s Developing Mind

 

In today’s world of “technology and children’s screen time”, this book would certainly help parents understand the importance of integrating the emotional and logical sides of the human brain. Understanding why our primary brain is beneficial can also kidnap children by being “out of control”.  This book should be part of our “educators” training. If you are a parent struggling with communication and teaching calm demeanour, this book is easy to read, has plenty of examples, and explains how to do it without sounding silly.

The book is full of practical advice, and the authors provide many sample scenarios to demonstrate each point. As a result, it can appear a bit repetitive and even spoon-like in some places. However, that makes it very easy to read.

4. No-Drama Discipline: The Whole-Brain Way to Calm the Chaos and Nurture Your Child’s Developing Mind

 

This is a reasonably good parenting book that will make a point of connecting and teaching your child. Think of discipline for its original meaning “to teach”. The underlying idea is that children’s brains are malleable and we should view disciplinary moments as teaching opportunities rather than punishment.

To this end, they emphasize that they should get in touch with your child to calm them down, then discuss with the child what happened to promote understanding, and finally develop a long-term neural ability for good decision-making and self-control to develop. who controls parts of the brain rather than the reactive and instinctive parts of the brain.

The authors certainly argue that there are times when you can’t take the time to calm everyone, or that a child around can always calm down. They admit that parents are not perfect, that this type of discipline doesn’t work in all situations, and they give numerous personal and client examples of how it works and how it can fail.

It’s not a perfect book, however. In their eagerness to promote attachment discipline, they overlook and / or reject simpler forms of punishment and reward. It goes too far in relying almost entirely on stern rewards and punishments. But this book goes too far in its own zeal.

There is a time and place for a simple “no means no” just as there is a time and place for a longer and deeper disciplinary moment. The authors actually state just that, but it’s easily glossed over in their repeated emphasis on connective discipline

 

If you liked this article that discussed books about parenting, let us know in the comments. Here’s an article we think you should read next- 5 Tips for Parents.

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