31 Parenting Resolutions to Transform Your Child, Your Family, Yourself
There's no time like the beginning of a new year to look at the things you're less than happy about in your life and resolve to do better. Here's one realistic resolution for every day in January -- or any month you want to give your life a little kickstart -- along with the solid information and support you need to help you make your resolutions a reality.
No one quite knows like another parent of special-needs children what you deal with on a daily basis and how you struggle with hopes and fears and the daily realities of your child's disability. Finding a support group, whether in your community or online, can open a world of advice and understanding to help get you through. These articles and resources will help you find the right group for you, or give you a little support right now.
• Finding a Support Group
• First Five Things to Do
• Love Notes for Special Parents
• Parenting Special Needs Forum
• Reactive Attachment Disorder Forum
Cover image courtesy of the Sladek/Ruffman Publishing Company
Keeping a contact log is important no matter which professional you're talking to -- doctors, specialist, therapists -- but perhaps never more so than when you're talking with educators and special education administrators about your child's special needs. You'll want a record of what has been promised or denied as you move through the process of getting an IEP and enforcing it. These articles and resources can help you understand that process, and take a bigger role in it.
• How to Keep a Contact Log
• Book Review: Now What Do We Do?
• Take Periodic Videos
• How to Report an IEP Violation
• Frequently Asked Questions about IEPs
The relative who criticizes your parenting. The teacher who hates your child. The doctor who makes you feel stupid. The stranger who glares when your child acts up. The world is full of people who should carry a warning label due to their poisonous effects on your mind and your heart. You may not be able to change those toxic people, but you can change your reaction to them. These articles and resources will empower you to defend rights, evade slights, and make sure you're not part of the problem.
• Dealing with Toxic People
• Special-Needs Children and Special Occasions
• How to Protest a Grade
• Books on Disability Rights
• Self-Esteem Boosters