The Happy Confident Me Journal for Kids – Pre-order at a Discount!
A daily journal for children aged 7 to 12 to nurture their emotional intelligence and develop essential skills that will help them become happier and more confident.
The Happy Confident Me Journal is based on the latest research on happiness, emotional development and neuroscience. It teaches children essential life skills that will make them happier and more confident.Through a few minutes of daily journaling based on gratitude, self-awareness and growth mindset, they will develop positive daily habits that will change their life for the better.
This journal is a great complement or replacement of the bedtime story as children grow up. It will enable you have some invaluable conversations with your child(ren) about essential life skills such as gratitude, confidence, self-awareness, naming and managing emotions, mindfulness, etc. and how they can apply these in their daily lives.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE: HAPPY CONFIDENT ME JOURNAL
PARENTING BOOK FOR ADULTS:
Discover the secrets to raising happy and confident children
The tips in our Best of Parenting app are based on our book Kids Don’t Come With a Manual. Here is more information on it:
Through a series of easy-to-apply tools, insights from the perspective of parents and children and real-life examples, Carole and Nadim Saad have helped thousands of parents with their parenting programme that equips parents with tools and techniques to raise happy and confident children and find better alternatives to time-outs, threats, rewards, yelling, giving-in and punishing.
- Help your children to become happy, confident and responsible
- Discover Step-by-step solutions to common parenting and family challenges including whining, arguing, homework, tantrums and lack of cooperation
- Build a stronger relationship with your children and maintain it as they grow
- Take the blame out of your relationship if you have conflicting parenting styles
- Tailored to children aged 1 to 18
- Based on the latest research in child psychology and neuroscience
CLICK HERE TO BUY IF LIVING IN THE US (or other parts of the world)
CLICK HERE TO BUY IF LIVING IN THE UK
Praise for Kids Don’t Come With a Manual
‘Kids Don’t Come With a Manual is beautifully presented, really easy to read – a compendium of all the best advice from parenting research, based on the authors’ own real-life experience. I love the Troubleshooting section at the back. It’s the book I would’ve liked when I was a parent.’ – Sue Palmer (Literacy Specialist, former Head Teacher and author of Toxic Childhood)
‘This book offers a fresh perspective that helps parents harmonise their conflicting parenting styles, rather than make them feel guilty for failing to fit into an idealised parenting mould. The practical tools provided allow parents to do away with good cop/bad cop roles and work better as a team.’ – Oliver James (Clinical Psychologist and Author of They F*** You Up)
‘It is very erudite and strong and it is one of the best and most pragmatic books on parenting and family life I have read in a long time. I think that the ‘Voice of the Child’ and the practical strategies and solutions will be a boon to most parents.’ – Stephen Adams-Langley (Senior Clinical Consultant Place2be.org.uk)
‘A wonderful piece of work. It reads well, it is easy to digest, and it contains useful and practical information for parents.’ –Grendon Haines (School psychologist at Harrow school)
‘This is a wonderfully all-round emotionally intelligent book. I loved the format – the voice of the Child vs Strict and All heart parent as it helps parents accept responsibility for how their behaviour plays out in their children. So many relationships are damaging children because couples are fundamentally at odds about their parenting styles. This book helps create a unified approach, which will make for happier families – and ultimately happier children.’ – Tanith Carey (Award-winning journalist and author of Girls Uninterrupted)
‘How I finally stopped my children’s fights and tantrums – After veering wildly between ‘hippy liberal’ and ‘Victorian’ attitudes to parenting, Julia Llewellyn Smith calls in the experts. Nadim and Carole tackled their differences in parenting styles by studying reams of child-rearing research. The result was Kids Don’t Come with a Manual, a guide to parenting techniques that uses mainly soft philosophies (proven to be more successful in the long term), while ensuring our children don’t become entitled brats.’ – The Telegraph
‘Top tips for a happy family life’ – Sunday Express
‘There is no how-to guide for raising a child, so what do you do when you and your partner have very different ideas? Desperate to find a middle ground, Carole and Nadim turned to child psychology, neuroscience and education to find simple tools they could both use, to give a more balanced approach to parenting. Kids Don’t Come With a Manual helps parents going through the same struggles.’ – Prima Baby and Pregnancy
‘I think this is genuinely one of the best parenting books I’ve read; it doesn’t focus on tactic related to gender or age, it provides clear strategies based on real life scenarios and is not condescending. The format works very well and its easy to quickly dip into and absorb. I wouldn’t be surprised if this becomes one of those ‘classic’ parenting manuals for our generation.’ – www.beingamummy.co.uk