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Alfie Kohn |  Anna Jahns |  Helena Norberg-Hodge |  James Prescott, PhD |  Jo Immig |  John Breeding |  John W Travis, MD |  Joseph Chilton Pearce |  Kali Wendorf |  Lisa Reagan |  Marion Badenoch-Rose |  Mark Alok O'Brien |  Meryn Callander |  Nancy Blakey |  Peter Cook |  Robin Grille |  Sarah J. Buckley | 
 
A selection of natural parenting, conscious living and sustainable lifestyle articles from Kindred Magazine....
 
10 tips for shopping with children
The holiday season means that you might be spending just a bit more time in the shops and grocery store. Jan Hunt gives some hints on how you, and your child, can survive. ...more
 
 
99.7% Sure
We all want our children to grow up strong, healthy and happy. What then, when we have a child with special needs? ...more
 
 
A Call from The Wild: How today’s children need nature and how the future depends on it
I received Richard Louv’s new book the day I received the news that I was to become a father for the first time. The book, 'Last Child in the Woods, Saving our Children from Nature Deficit Disorder', is a timely reminder of the challenges that lie ahead ...more
 
 
A Call of the Wild - Feel the Trees: A back-to-nature activity
Trees are incredible but it’s so easy to take them for granted. Without them, life would be very different — there would be no chocolate for a start! We pass trees every day but how often do we really take a close look at them? Close your eyes and picture ...more
 
 
A Call to Arms
One rarely thinks of motherhood as political. But as Kali Wendorf, editor of Kindred sees it, mothers, and fathers, need to find their voices in the political domain. "Our world is becoming increasingly sterile and hostile. We are moving away from the ...more
 
 
A Midwife Who Gives Birth to a Nation
History to Indigenous people is less a matter of events and people, of ancestors, or land, of belongness. Dr Judy Atkinson has become a leading voice for Indigenous Women's health and is highly regarded in both European and Indigenous circles. ...more
 
 
About Parents
In her book, Getting Real .. about growing up, Amrita Hobbs provides advice for teenagers on many parts of growing up, on the changes that are happening within their bodies and their relationships. Here Amrita gives some inside advice to teens about their ...more
 
 
After Attachment … What Then?
We did everything by the book: birthed at home, breastfed over two years, co-slept and wore our babies on our bodies 24/7 — why then do some attached children seem anxious, over-sensitive, angry and even hostile sometimes? ...more
 
 
An Alternative to Diapers
We stopped using cloth diapers when Gabe was just under 10 months old. Diapering and un-diapering had begun to almost always result in tears as he tried his best to wiggle away and I tried my best to keep him from wiggling away. ...more
 
 
An Unschooling Adventure
Unschooling is more than an education – it’s life. In natural learning, everything is connected. Our children have gone from classical music to art, architecture, and ancient Rome, and from there to philosophy, Plato, Pythagoras and mathematics... ...more
 
 
Australian Learning Communities
Australia's own home-based learning community has created a rich tapestry of grassroots networks of folks simply getting on with the job of facilitating learning experiences for their children. ...more
 
 
Awakening to Conscious Parenting
I went home and cried all night. In the morning I rang and cancelled the appointment. That was the beginning of my new consciousness and the search for answers as how best to nurture this child and do what felt right to me. ...more
 
 
Babies, Stress and Healing
Remember gazing into the eyes of your baby? For just a moment, did you feel a sense of peace, deep love and timelessness? As your baby grew into a toddler and then into a child, did those moments become fewer and fewer? ...more
 
 
Banjo’s Entrance into the World
I was awake, as usual, at 5 a.m., staring at the wall, wishing that I were asleep when I thought I had wet my pants. I hopped up to go to the loo and noticed a little blood which was the mucous plug coming away. Then a gush of water came that I knew was ...more
 
 
Bathtime is Quality Time
A practical and enjoyable way for a dad to spend time with his bundle of joy is bathing. At most maternity hospitals, the midwives are more than happy to give fathers a cursory instruction in the practice of bathing a newborn. ...more
 
 
Be proactive with your prenatal care
Being informed is the best way to have a good childbirth. Here, the American Foundation for Maternal and Child Health provides some basic information to support the pregnant couple to make wise choices when confronted with over zealous health professional ...more
 
 
Beastly Bees and Fatal Footwear: The New Perils of Parenting
‘Stop running with that in your mouth or you’ll trip over and die!’ So yelled a mother to her child in a shopping centre last week. Maybe she’d just had way too many coffees that morning... ...more
 
 
Between the lines: What to do if you think your child is gay
Shelley Argent writes from her own experience of what children need to feel accepted, loved and respected as they come into understanding their sexuality, particularly if they are gay. ...more
 
 
Big boys don’t cry
Published as part of a feature on Australian men and attitudes towards crying, and how they are often forged in dog-eat-dog playgrounds and sporting fields where to cry is to show weakness. ...more
 
 
Birthing at Home - a powerful and important social contribution
In 2001, actress Ricki Lake gave birth to her second child in her home—with the assistance of a midwife. She decided to birth at home after she experienced unwanted medical interventions while delivering her first child. ...more
 
 
Bonding and the Origins of Love
Western culture has built an entire system of care — obstetrics — around the belief a woman is not able to successfully birth on her own. ...more
 
 
Bonding: The journey of the mother who adopts older children
Adopting an eleven-year-old boy, Laurie Couture was determined to play catch up with years of missed bonding and attachment for her adopted son. Normally an older adoptee has more history of pain and rejection than someone younger, thus it was a great jou ...more
 
 
Breaking out of the Box
The average Australian child watches about four hours of television a day! Videos, computer and Playstation games add to the amount of time children spend staring at a screen. How does all this viewing affect their developing minds? ...more
 
 
Can Yuppies Bear Children?
My daughter would like to know just about everything, and is not above asking all the questions, all day long. How are teddy bears made? How do you make windows? Who is the Sandman? ...more
 
 
Children as the Catalyst for Forming a Tribe
As soon as children are old enough to begin to interact with the wider world, the need to form a tribal bond becomes almost a developmental imperative. Because even though young children have little bodies – they don’t have little minds! ...more
 
 
Chores: Rolling up our Sleeves
Why are chores important for children’s development, and which chores are appropriate for what age? Michele Dennis tells us more. ...more
 
 
Clowning Around
Hospitals are serious places,and research is now showing that this seriousness is actually contributing to ill health, to dis-ease. An Australian group of doctors, calling themselves the Clown Doctors, use the healing powers of laughter to facilitate heal ...more
 
 
Computers in Early Childhood Education - A jump start or a setback?
We want the best for our children, so it's easy to think the latest technology of our time will benefit them, but does it? ...more
 
 
Confessions of a Proud Mum
My son is 15 and has brought me nothing but... 'Trouble?' I thought you’d say that! No, my son is 15 and has brought me nothing but joy. 'You’re kidding! How did you do that?' ...more
 
 
Death through the eyes of a child
Death hurts. When we lose someone or something we love, every level of us hurts and is affected. There is nothing that can prepare us for exactly what happens when a sudden loss occurs because every single person responds differently. ...more
 
 
Down with Homework!
Do bulging backpacks mean learning? Is the teacher who gives out lots of homework helping students to learn or actually undermining them? With his new book, 'The Homework Myth', expert Alfie Kohn says homework is outdated. ...more
 
 
E - I - E - I…Oh!
Traditionally, being 'smart' has meant having high academic test scores. While this definition may have served us well in the past, for children to succeed in today's world, we need to redefine what 'smart' really means. ...more
 
 
Eating By Colour: a New Approach to Food
Rainbow Food is a fresh approach to eating for the whole family. Rainbow Food is designed to restore our original innocent relationship with food. It is practical, easy to use, and is beneficial to the emotional body as well as the physical body. ...more
 
 
Every Mother Knows
Every mother intuitively knows the supreme importance of the relationship between her and her child with every fibre of her being, for Nature has designed it to be this way. There is nothing obscure or esoteric about the bond of intuitive connectedness th ...more
 
 
Feminisim and Motherhood
Are these terms mutually exclusive, or can they be complementary? Can they co-exist within the confines of parenthood? Women, particularly young women, find the idea of feminism as something outdated, out of touch. Many of these women may never contempla ...more
 
 
Feminism Childcare and Family Mental Health: Have women been misled by equality feminism?
Have feminists, in their quest for equality rather than liberation, led women out of the frying pan into the fire, with adverse repercussions for themselves, their families, and social wellbeing? If so, as plans affecting the family develop, it is importa ...more
 
 
Finding a Different Way
or me this was a conscious decision made when I was 28 and had just had my first baby. Jay was an unsettled baby, due for the most part because of me and my lifetime of hang-ups with my parents. ...more
 
 
Five Reasons to Stop Saying ‘Good Job!’
Hang out at a playground, visit a school, or show up at a child's birthday party, and there's one phrase you can count on hearing repeatedly: 'Good job!' Here's why it may not be the best thing to say. Even tiny infants are praised for smacking their h ...more
 
 
Fly, baby, fly
This article is a a 'how to' with regards making flying with a young baby as easy as possible. Being prepared for emergencies is important; after all, you are stuck in a narrow tube in the sky for hours, with possibly hostile reactions to a distressed bab ...more
 
 
For the Love of our Daughters and our Future
Imagine a group of pre-pubescent girls, their mothers and friends sitting in the afternoon shade weaving, or sewing, or preparing food. There are giggles and stories and cackles and songs and heartfelt sharing. The scene seems simple, timeless, so natural ...more
 
 
Four Keys to Managing Difficult Behaviour in Children
Dealing with challenging behaviour doesn’t have to be complicated. Here are a few helpful ideas. Sandra Azar, a Boston-based psychologist, believes there are four main rules for parents to follow if they are to do a ‘good-enough’ job of parenting and the ...more
 
 
Frightful Witches and Kissable Toads
Acclaimed storyteller Jenni Cargill writes about the power of story, particularly folktales, in helping young minds sort out issues of good and bad and subtle shades in between. ...more
 
 
From Control to Connection: An Unschooling Journey
What would all our Steiner friends think?’ was the initial thought that came to mind. ‘For that matter, what do I think?’ which began a chorus of debate within my head. There I was at 6:30 am Tuesday morning, my daughter awake, eating a packet of chips, ...more
 
 
From Horror to Hope: the evolution of childrearing
The history of childhood is a nightmare from which we have only recently begun to awaken. The further back in history one goes, the lower the level of child care, and the more likely children are to be killed, abandoned, terrorised, and sexually abused. ...more
 
 
Getting Help at Home
Mostly new mothers are shocked at the relentlessness of life with a new baby, and this can create all kinds of problems if there is no support. Volunteer Home Visitor Programs are set up to provide that extra bit of support for the new mum as she struggle ...more
 
 
Give your child a head start in life through early childhood music
The first five years of a child’s life is a window of opportunity for laying foundations through stimulating experiences for their overall development. Cynthia Ensign Baney, an early childhood music consultant and composer states that the opportunity to ...more
 
 
Goldenheart
Goldenheart is a poem story from Jenni Cargill, award winning author and storyteller, from her CD, Wondertales of Earth and Sea, re-released as Mollie Whuppy and other Tales ...more
 
 
Green Tram
Zachary was so excited, he was nearly beside himself with excitement. This was to be his big day out in Melbourne. He had graciously accepted my offer to go and catch a tram — nay, he had grabbed the opportunity with alacrity. And off we went, he and I, h ...more
 
 
Growing a Community
World wide community gardens are springing up and with them a growing sense of community, of belonging. Local food, being responsible for and engaged in food production is transforming communities, bringing people together and breaking down the barriers. ...more
 
 
How Culture Shapes the Developing Brain and the Future of Humanity
Without embodied love, peace is not possible. Without integrative bodily pleasure, moral behaviours of peace, harmony and human equality are not possible. Depression replaces joy and drugs are sought to drown the depression, the anger and rage that escala ...more
 
 
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undefined Chores: Rolling up our Sleeves
Why are chores important for children’s development, and which chores are appropriate for what age? Michele Dennis tells us more.
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undefined Touch Me and Help Me Grow
Touch, especially, is a powerful nutrient for your baby’s development – it is the first sense to develop, just days after conception, and is important for a whole lifetime.
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undefined Can Yuppies Bear Children?
My daughter would like to know just about everything, and is not above asking all the questions, all day long. How are teddy bears made? How do you make windows? Who is the Sandman?
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undefined Touch Wood
Given the dangers and environmental costs associated with plastics, more and more people are turning back to wooden toys. It is, however, still important to check on the origins and manufacturing ethics of all toys, wooden and otherwise.
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