Voice Lessons for Parents: What to Say, How to Say it, and When to Listen Audiobook | BooksCougar

Voice Lessons for Parents: What to Say, How to Say it, and When to Listen Audiobook

Voice Lessons for Parents: What to Say, How to Say it, and When to Listen Audiobook

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New York Occasions bestselling author Dr. Wendy Mogel “shows parents the dialect had a need to speak to their daughters and sons at every stage of lifestyle. It’s kind and caring, but it’s also strategic” (Chicago Tribune).

Many parents are perfectly great communicators—unless they’re talking to their children. Then, too often, their pitch rises and they run into as pleading, indignant, wounded, outraged. In firmness and body gestures they indication, I can’t handle it when you become a child.

Dr..LEARNING MUCH MORE about Tone of voice Lessons for Parents: What things to State, How to Mention it, and When to pay attention Wendy Mogel, “1 of the very most astute psychologists on earth (Angela Duckworth, New York Times bestselling writer of Grit) saw this pattern over and over in her clinical practice. In response, she developed an amazingly effective group of “tone of voice lessons,” which she shared with parents who have been fighting their kids. The results were immediate: a change in vocal design led to kids who have been calmer, listened more attentively, and communicated with an increase of comfort, respect, and sincerity.

In Tone of voice Lessons for Parents, Mogel elaborates on her behalf novel clinical approach, revealing how each age and stage of the kid’s life provides new opportunities to connect through language. Drawing from resources as varied as neuroscience, fairy stories, and anthropology, Mogel presents specific guidance for talking to children over the expanse of years as a child and adolescence. She also explains the very best ways to discuss your son or daughter to partners, exes, and grandparents, as well as to teachers, coaches, and caretakers.

Throughout the book, Mogel addresses the distraction of digital devices—the way they impact our reference to our families, and what we can do about any of it. “In this intelligent and useful reserve, Wendy Mogel explains the way the tenor of the remarks may make as much difference as their content…and shows how minor changes may help lower the natural stress of parent-child human relationships” (Andrew Solomon, bestselling writer of Far From the Tree).

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