Havard-trained psychologist and Psychology Today parenting expert Carl Pickhardt gives parents an eye-opening lifeline to what to expect on rocky road of middle school, revealing the Four Freedoms that every child must master to become a healthy adult--and how parents can adapt, encourage, and grow themselves
This book explains to parents how four unfolding drives for freedom sequentially and cumulatively motivate adolescent growth, as this ten to twelve year coming of age passage forever changes the child, the parent in response, and the relationship between them. The four unfolding freedoms are these. First is freedom from rejection of childhood, around the late elementary school years, when the girl or boy wants to stop acting and being treated as just a child anymore. Second is freedom of association with peers, around the middle school years, when the girl or boy wants to form a second family of friends. Third is freedom for older experimentation, around the high school years, when the girl or boy wants to try more grown up activities. And fourth is freedom to claim emancipation, around the college age years, when the girl or boy decides to become their own ruling authority. With each successive push for freedom, parent and adolescent both have to do less holding on to each other while doing more letting go.
Thank you Net Galley and Health Communications Inc. for allowing me to read this book ahead of its release and give an honest review.
I think this book is a good book for parents, or anyone working with kids. It gives very insightful and useful information on things that will occur in kids’ lives as they get older, before reaching adulthood.
Parenting a teenager for the first time is a new arena for parents and one that is often met with angst, Holding On While Letting Go guides parents through this new field with a new way of understanding and provides tools to navigate this new terrain effectively.
Dr Pickhardt outlines the four freedoms teenagers require to mature as healthy, whole persons. Teenage years are years of change and when parents understand what this change entails and how they can assist this transition is smoother for all involved,
A really useful book to help parents. Personally I know of times I thought I was providing my teen autonomy but in her teenage mind it was seen as control. Enlightening and crucial to getting. Through the other side unscathed (well as much as possible ).
Thank you HCI and NetGalley for this ARC in Return for my honest review.