Parenting Book

A Revolutionary Parenting Book  “Parenting With Respect And Peacefulness”
parenting_book_lowrez

 

• teaches parents that respect and peace communicate love, creating an atmosphere for kids to maximize their development.

• shows parents how unresolved childhood feelings can hinder their relationships with their children — then empowers parents to change, not repeat, their history.

• gives authority to parents with its common-sense approach to day-to-day situations in parenting.

• explains concepts that apply to all adult-child relationships

Parenting With Respect and Peacefulness: The Most Difficult Job in the World by Louise A. Dietzel, M.S

Louise A. Dietzel, knows that parents who love and respect themselves parent with respect and peacefulness.

“The significant training for parents is on-the-job and the impact on children is profound and long-lasting. Many people enter parenthood with unresolved childhood feelings that bias their relationships with their children. As parents resolve their childhood issues, they then give to their children the greatest gift of all — loving themselves.” Parenting with Respect and Peacefulness, teaches parents to change, not repeat, their history. It is a practical, common-sense guide to daily challenges that empowers parents to create an atmosphere for children to feel loved and secure. Filled with gentle support and valued insights, this helpful resource offers encouragement, wisdom, and hope on every page.

Endorsement/Preview The key to a happier home!

“If all children were welcomed into a world where they were treated with respect and peacefulness, the rate of later emotional disorders would be greatly reduced. Louise Dietzel’s book is a major contribution to such primary prevention.”
– George W. Albee, Professor-Emeritus of Psychology, University of Vermont

Overview of the book “And the greatest of these (for parents) is love” — loving themselves. Parents who love and respect themselves, parent with respect and peace. Yet, parenting with respect is the most difficult job in the world. The significant training is on-the-job and, unlike other roles, has long-lasting impact on children. Parents are unsure of their wisdom and skills when their kids are young. The training issue is compounded by an obvious and insidious fact.  Parents go through the same developmental stages as their children, and enter parenthood with unresolved childhood feelings which bias their relationships with their children. Parents need new resolve and learning so that their behavioral patterns are changed and are not handed on to present and future generations.

Louise A. Dietzel, M.S.  Author, Teacher and Psychologist-Master