The final week of the holidays always arrives faster than you expect. One day, your child sleeps until 10 am and spends the afternoon in pajamas. Next, you are scrambling for school shoes, hunting for a missing lunchbox, and realizing nobody has looked at a …
Every child gets angry. It is a normal emotion, not a behaviour problem. The question is not how to stop your child from feeling anger. It is about how to help them express it without hurting themselves, others, or losing control. Usually, how a parent …
You do not need to be a nutritionist to feed your child well. You need a few clear principles, some consistency, and the willingness to keep offering good food even when it gets rejected for the fifth time in a row. At home, you shape …
The hardest part of a new school term is not the work itself. It is getting back into the routine of doing it. After weeks of late mornings and unstructured days, expecting your child to switch into focused study mode overnight is unrealistic. It takes …
Your children will not develop healthy habits because you told them to. They will develop them because they saw you doing it, because it was part of normal life at home, and because no one made it feel like punishment. That is the good news. …
If you have a teenage boy at home, you already know the shift. The kid who used to tell you everything now gives you one-word answers. The boy who followed you everywhere now disappears into his room for hours. Conversations that used to be easy …
Anger is a natural emotion, but in childhood, it often manifests as aggression or defiance. For parents and educators, the challenge lies not just in identifying triggers, but in managing the behavior without damaging the child’s psychological security. Modern research suggests that childhood aggression is …








