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Accessibility-Friendly Fall Bucket List

The Ultimate Accessibility-Friendly Fall Bucket List I love a good list. It’s what keeps me both collected and adventurous – whimsically organized, if that’s a thing. Autumn is my favorite season for list-making. Perhaps it was all those starts to a new school year as a kid or simply because this season feels like it… Continue reading Accessibility-Friendly Fall Bucket List

Jamie Sumner
executive functioning strategies

New School Year, New Executive Functioning Strategies

The new school year is here and it is beginning to find its swing. Our kids are taking tests, and quizzes, and being assigned papers and projects. It’s happening! As parents, we often think about how to help our children who struggle with poor executive functioning skills such as time management, prioritization, starting a task,… Continue reading New School Year, New Executive Functioning Strategies

Dr. Liz Matheis

ADHD in Girls Going Unnoticed

Does my Daughter Have ADHD? When you think about ADHD, your natural tendency may be to envision a little boy who falls out of his seat at school, or who asks a ton of questions while his teacher is presenting a lesson.  You may even imagine a teenage boy who is lost in his thoughts… Continue reading ADHD in Girls Going Unnoticed

Dr. Liz Matheis
back to school blues

Post-Pandemic Back To School Blues

I think we can all agree that the beginning of this school year has been an “interesting” one. Here we are, post-pandemic, two and a half years since our worlds were turned over, upside down and inside out. The vibe in my house has been a bit off since the start of the school year,… Continue reading Post-Pandemic Back To School Blues

Dr. Liz Matheis

Toy Diversity: Inclusive Youth

How Toys Can Reflect Diversity & The Differently Abled Growing up, my favorite toys were always cars, trucks, motorcycles, and action figures— He-Man, Gi-Joe, Superman and Star Wars. My sister preferred Barbie, My Little Pony and Care Bears. However, when I look back at the early objects that influenced me, they were all able-bodied with… Continue reading Toy Diversity: Inclusive Youth

Aaron Baker

National Diaper Need Awareness Week

Diaper need is the inability to provide enough diapers to allow for babies and toddlers to be changed as often as necessary. 1 in 3 US families struggle to provide enough diapers to keep their babies and toddlers clean, dry, and healthy. Since the pandemic there has been an 86% increase in the number of… Continue reading National Diaper Need Awareness Week

Allison Dalton

Teenage Depression: What to Look For

Our teens are suffering. As a parent, it is heartbreaking to watch our (bigger) babies hurt so badly. In addition to normal teen angst, teens are grieving the loss of many in-person milestones that the pandemic made difficult, such as graduations, dances, proms, field trips, athletic games and tournaments, school plays and theater, and the… Continue reading Teenage Depression: What to Look For

Dr. Liz Matheis

Preventing Parent Burnout

As parents, we bear the brunt of childcare, home management, event planning, and social coordinating, often while holding full-time jobs. Although we may have friends and family who support and help tend to the many moving parts of our daily lives, the mental checklists and the energy that we invest in maintaining inventory of household items, coordinating… Continue reading Preventing Parent Burnout

Dr. Liz Matheis

Why New People in Your Child’s Life are Hard (But Also Necessary)

In any job there are certain tricks of the trade. When you work in IT like my spouse, you learn to think in code. When you teach high school English like I did, you learn a different kind of code – how to interpret silence and which body language translates to “I am texting under… Continue reading Why New People in Your Child’s Life are Hard (But Also Necessary)

Jamie Sumner

How Finding the Glimmers Helps Heal Trauma

There is a concept in trauma therapy often referred to as a “glimmer.” Most people are familiar with the idea of triggers – certain people, places, incidents, sensory stimuli – that cause your nervous system to go on high alert. Your body becomes aware of a potential danger nearby and then floods your system with… Continue reading How Finding the Glimmers Helps Heal Trauma

Jamie Sumner
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