by Raising Relatives | Dec 19, 2024 | Challenging Behaviors, Healing from Trauma/Neglect/Abuse, Impacts of Prenatal Exposure to Alcohol and Drugs
Many of the children you are raising have experienced painful losses or abuse. Others were exposed during pregnancy to alcohol or drugs. Still, others have both of those challenges in their history and are living with the impacts today. Those impacts may show up in...
by Raising Relatives | Dec 19, 2024 | Challenging Behaviors, Healing from Trauma/Neglect/Abuse
Anger is a normal human emotion, but it can be scary for many of us to express or manage. When a child grows up with unsafe expressions of anger, or when they are no taught appropriate ways to work through their angry feelings, they may bubble over and act out anger...
by Raising Relatives | Dec 19, 2024 | Healing from Trauma/Neglect/Abuse, Self-Care for Kinship and Foster Parents
Occasionally, it’s good for your mental and emotional health to pause and consider what you are doing and why it matters. Kinship caregivers play a unique and vital role in a child’s healing and overall well-being. Do you stop to think about why and how to be sure you...
by Raising Relatives | Dec 19, 2024 | Healing from Trauma/Neglect/Abuse, Working Together For the Good of the Child In Your Care
Many factors have come together to lead you to welcome your grandchild (or any other relative) to your home. This new situation can be fulfilling and satisfying – after all, you are helping this child find healing and safety to grow and thrive. However, the new...
by Raising Relatives | Sep 10, 2024 | Healing from Trauma/Neglect/Abuse
When raising kids who have experienced loss, chaos, or neglect, it’s easy to get lost in the responsibility of helping them heal. Structure, routine, and predictability are essential to creating a foundation for that healing. But sometimes, we forget that good...
by Raising Relatives | Sep 10, 2024 | Challenging Behaviors, Healing from Trauma/Neglect/Abuse
Many young children feel free and safe to approach strangers with smiles and waves. They have not yet processed the “stranger danger” conversations that parents and caregivers will dole out over the coming years. They are curious, innocent, and trusting....