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Parent Express for 08-Jun-2006
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Summer can be a wonderful time for play! This e-zine promotes the importance of play in all our lives and the need to relax and have fun. The article below makes distinctions between video game playing and real play and provides some ideas for supporting children's imaginative play. The DVD listed under "Parenting Tip" is for parents and kids, ages 6-12. It is a joyful reminder about the power of play to support numerous cognitive and social skills. This will be the last e-zine as we begin our summer. While the PCI is open (closed June 14 - June 27 for vacation) and we are in full swing the end of June through August with our summer quarter classes, we know you are busy with your children and with vacations. We will resume in mid-August. Until then, A safe and playful summer to you all! Gloria DeGaetano, Founder and CEO Check
out our new Video About
the PCI Parent Coach Training Program. If
you are a forward-thinking professional with an undergraduate degree
and a deep calling to work with parents, welcome
home. We seek the “best of the best” for our acclaimed
distance-learning Parent Coach Certification Training Program™.
Please click
here for more information. As
a PCI Certified Parent Coach™ you’ll have the opportunity
to create a parent coaching practice, working with moms and dads who
want to take their parenting to the next level. Call today for an application
packet: 425-401-1519 or email: info@thepci.com. Working with a PCI Parent Coach is giving yourself
the gift of time out for reflecting, re-grouping, and renewing. Check
out our new Video about the PCI Parent Coaching Services. Through a series of coaching conversations that can be either by
telephone or in person, PCI Parent Coaches help you re-discover
your dreams and design your life for more joy and satisfaction. Moms and Dads, tune in every Saturday morning at 11 a.m. on 1150 AM for true understanding, authentic affirmation, and real-world solutions to parenting challenges while sharing laughter and conversation. We want to hear your stories too! So call us on Saturday! In the Seattle area, call 425-373-5527. Out of town, call 888-298-5569. Listen to us on the web: www.1150kknw.com Upcoming topics and guests:
Live and Play in Your World by Gloria DeGaetano Recent Play Station ads command us: “Live in Your World, Play in Ours.” And what is that world they want us, and our children, to play in? A world artificially constructed by others to keep eyeballs glued on images that are also constructed by others. A world where game rules belong to distant strangers, who also dictate indicators of game success and what is currently “cool” if you want to be top dog. And what, pray tell, are we “playing?” in this world? We “play” at being bullies, sexist pigs, demeanors and dominators, laughing at others’ sufferings. We “play” at striking out violently, blowing things up for “fun.” We play at being sadists, rapists, and murderers. So what’s the difference between playing violent video games and playing pretend, you know the old-fashioned way in the natural world—the world we live and still breathe in? After all, kids have always played violently, haven’t they? Yes, but play in its human form, as opposed to its machine form, has built-in regulators. We may make guns out of our peanut butter sandwiches when we are seven, but that would be considered quite babyish when we are seventeen and in possession of a healthy self-identity with capacity for healthy emotional relating. Violent play in early childhood is to be expected and regulated. When it’s directed by loving adults, “OK let’s make that stick be a wand now with magical powers to heal instead of a sword to kill,” children learn more about the celebration of life than feeding an obsession with death. Violent play in the real world diminishes with maturity because the reason for violent play in the first place is to come to terms with death, suffering, and our ability to harm carte blanche, as guiltless and gut-less low lives we all can be or become. Once we get that figured out, around age 9 or 10, violent play loses its allure. The glamour in making other people suffer leaves permanently. That’s the natural way. (For more information on how this works, see my book: Stop Teaching Our Kids to Kill). Isn’t it a great relief to know that if we support our youngsters in their natural play in the 3-D world and guide it to include more life-enhancing elements, that the likely course of events will be a waning, not a waxing of violent tendencies? In my book, Parenting Well in a Media Age, I devised a chart on the distinctions between imaginative play and imitative play. Children will imitate what they see on TV and hear on their iPod. What is crucial is that we make sure their imaginative play far exceeds their imitative play. Imaginative play may include images from the most recent movie, but it would also include bits and pieces of the child’s experiences. A tidbit from a visit to grandma’s, animals she recently saw at the zoo, a line from the song you sing before she goes to sleep. This is pure and wonderful play that is called generative play, because the child is generating something new, something unique, and something all her own. It is the essence of imaginative play and it’s essential for healthy development. Without it, our children are caught in the Play Station world and have no way of getting out. It can be seem overwhelming to steer children to make up their own play scenarios and help them enjoy being in those scenarios given the pressure to be a cookie-cutter kid of a counterfeit culture—a culture that continually bombards youngsters with distractions away from their world and with enticements into this un-natural, nihilistic nightmare. So what’s a parent to do? At the Parent Coaching Institute we emphasize several important parent actions:
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Video Clip About PCI Parent Coaching Services Check out our new Video About
the PCI Parent Coaching Services. Featured in this five-minute
video are PCI Certified Parent Coach™ Debbie Wiedner Time to Transform™ Workshop Series begins in September This series of 3 weekends (September 22-24, Nov, 10-12, and Feb, 2-4, 07) offers teachers, administrators, directors, or parents a comprehensive plan to radically revamp their school, entire district, or non-profit organization. Exciting, new research is shared, powerful assessment tools given, and practical ways to catalyze profound positives changes, the end result. Why not wake up next spring knowing you have entirely transformed your current challenge? For more information, please call Gloria DeGaetano at 425-401-1519 or 1-888-599-4447. Podcasts of Parent
Appreciation Radio are now available.You can find them in itunes by entering Parent Appreciation Radio. You can go
to www.ParentAppreciation Your Parenting Coach column for June is on the topic of "Taking Care of Ourselves While We Take Care of the Kids."
July 7, 8:30 AM- 4PM, Bellevue, WA Your Vocation Identity:
Blessing Your Calling
Drawing insights from Renaissance lives and the latest research in positive psychology, this workshop will help you affirm your vision, overcome obstacles, uncover hidden stepping stones to success, and create powerful new possibilities in this season of your life. Please call 425-401-1519 to register for this workshop. Cost: $129.95 (includes lunch) August 5, 9:30 am - 4:30 pm, Mindful Parenting Workshop,
with PCI Certified Parent Coach™ Bridgid Normand who specializes
in mindfulness for parent . The workshop is being held in her studio on Vashon Island and includes healthful snacks and a home-cooked lunch. There is an optional day camp for 5 – 11 year olds. Childcare for younger children can be arranged as requested. Cost is as follows:
For more information contact Bridgid Normand at 206-463-6234, or email her at imaginefamily@gmail.com . Registration is limited. A few reduced fee places are available. Read Bridgid’s article on mindfulness. Bridgid also offers Family Days. Come as a family and through art, play, outside activities and dialogue reinvigorate your life as a family. Contact Bridgid for more details. To engage Gloria DeGaetano for a keynote or workshop, contact her at 425-401-1519 or 1-888-599-4447.
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This issue of Parent Express was originally published June 8, 2006. Some content, contact information, and links may be out of date, and the conversion from the original email edition may introduce formatting inconsistencies.
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