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The Blessing of A Skinned Knee

by Wendy Mogel

With authority, warmth, and humor, Mogel distills ancient Jewish teachings and contemporary psychological insights into nine blessings that address key parenting issues, and shows parents how to teach children to respect others and raise them to become optimistic, well-behaved, and self-reliant.

FORMAT
Paperback
LANGUAGE
English
CONDITION
Brand New


Publisher Description

New York Times bestselling author and host of the podcast Nurture vs Nurture Dr. Wendy Mogel offers an inspiring roadmap for raising self-reliant, ethical, and compassionate children. In the trenches of a typical day, every parent encounters a child afflicted with ingratitude and entitlement. Parents want so badly to raise self-disciplined, appreciative, and resourceful children who are not spoiled. But how to accomplish this feat? The answer has eluded the best-intentioned individuals who overprotect, overindulge, and overschedule their children's lives. Sharing stories of everyday parenting problems and examining them through the lens of the Torah, the Talmud, and important Jewish teachings, The Blessing of a Skinned Knee shows parents how to teach children to honor and respect others. Parents will learn to accept that their children are both ordinary and unique, and treasure the power and holiness of the present. Mogel makes these teachings relevant for any era, and any household of any faith. A unique parenting book, The Blessing of a Skinned Knee is both inspiring and effective in the day-to-day challenge of raising self-reliant children.

Author Biography

Wendy Mogel, PhD, is a practicing clinical psychologist, international public speaker, and the author of Voice Lessons for Parents, the New York Times bestseller The Blessing of a Skinned Knee, and The Blessing of a B Minus. She is also the host of Nurture vs Nurture, a new podcast from Armchair Expert, and lives in Los Angeles. Please visit her website at WendyMogel.com.

Table of Contents

Contents Author Notes How I Lost One Faith and Found Another The Blessing of Acceptance: Discovering Your Unique and Ordinary Child The Blessing of Having Someone to Look Up To: Honoring Mother and Father The Blessing of a Skinned Knee: Why God Doesn't Want You to Overprotect Your Child The Blessing of Longing: Teaching Your Child an Attitude of Gratitude The Blessing of Work: Finding the Holy Sparks in Ordinary Chores The Blessing of Food: Bringing Moderation, Celebration, and Sanctification to Your Table The Blessing of Self-Control: Channeling Your Child's Yetzer Hara The Blessing of Time: Teaching Your Child the Value of the Present Moment The Blessings of Faith and Tradition: Losing Your Fear of the G Word and Introducing Your Child to Spirituality Notes Recommended Reading Index

Review

"The larger lesson is that children need to learn to fend for themselves...for the professionals who work with children--principals, teacher, camp directors, school psychologists--that lesson is worth the price of Mogel's paperback." --The New York Times Magazine "[Mogel's] thoughtful observations consistently illuminate and reassure. Impassioned, lyrical, and eminently practical, this inspiring volume is a real treasure." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Writing with great warmth and humor, [Mogel] gives examples from her own family life and those whom she has counseled. Highly recommended for all parenting collections." --Library Journal "You don't have to be religious, you don't even have to be Jewish, to appreciate Mogel's philosophy that allowing children to fall down and pick themselves up (with kisses as needed) is the way to raise resilient, self-confident kids." --Lisa Belkin, The New York Times "For anyone who has a child, was a child, or cares about children. Wendy Mogel teaches you how to raise a child to be a good person and not just raise a child to feel good. Great for the Jewish parent, great for the Presbyterian parent, the Buddhist, and even the skeptic." --Carrie Fisher A treasure trove of information for parents. Dr. Mogel's personal and caring touch comes through clearly as she presents practical and useful suggestions for parents. --Jacqueline Haines, Gesell Institute for Human Development "We like the emphasis this book places on the parents being the center of the wheel of the family and the importance of raising children who appreciate their place in the world and their obligation to be mensches [Yiddish for 'people of integrity and honor']." --Ayelet Waldman and Michael Chabon "All hail Wendy Mogel's Overparenting Anon list: Folks, Wendy Mogel got the anti-helicopter parenting movement rolling with her book, The Blessing of a Skinned Knee. Here's a taste of her fabulous list that I wish I had tattooed (just for the first 20 years or so) on my arm." --Lenore Skenazy, Creator, FreeRangeKids.com "Wendy Mogel presents us with one of the finest and most challenging books on parenting to emerge in recent years. In a firm and loving voice, she reminds parents and all those who care about children of the sanctity of parenting. Her blending of Judaism and parenting wisdom jumps off every page. I love her work--both as a rabbi and as a father." --Rabbi Jeffrey K. Salkin, author of Putting God on the Guest List "Prophets call on the wisdom of a tradition, its revealed truth, to say out loud what we know but are afraid to utter. Wendy Mogel has issued a prophetic call to good parenting, one laced with psychological insight, practicality, and humor. Her words are themselves a gift of faith and a blessing." --Peter Cobb, Council for Spiritual and Ethical Education "While reading The Blessing of a Skinned Knee, I felt that I was being tutored by an elder in the ways of the world. As a Christian minister, I have found that our faiths have that relationship to each other. As a parent, I was encouraged in the very ways that our generation of parents is baffled. You have hit on all of the issues that are difficult: materialism, permissiveness, guardianship against the destruction of humane values, and preservation of sacred time and space in a harried, dislocated world." --Reverend Robert Thompson, Phillips Exeter Academy

Review Quote

Reverend Robert Thompsonschool minister of the Phillips Exeter AcademyWhile readingThe Blessing of a Skinned Knee,I felt that I was being tutored by an elder in the ways of the world. As a Christian minister, I have found that our faiths have that relationship to each other. As a parent, I was encouraged in the very ways that our generation of parents is baffled. You have hit on all of the issues that are difficult: materialism, permissiveness, guardianship against the destruction of humane values, and preservation of sacred time and space in a harried, dislocated world.

Description for Reading Group Guide

The Blessing of a Skinned Knee:Using Jewish Teachings to Raise Self-reliant ChildrenParenting Class GuideWelcome! This on-line guide was developed to help parents who would like to participate in a parenting class using the concepts inThe Blessing of A Skinned Kneeas a foundation. However, there are many ways you can benefit from the ideas in the guide. We invite you to print it out and use it for:

Excerpt from Book

Chapter 2: The Blessing of Acceptance: Discovering Your Unique and Ordinary Child I recently read a third-grade school newsletter that used the word special five times on two pages. The Thanksgiving Sing was special. So was the Spellathon. The Emerging Artists exhibition was special. Even the unassuming Pie Drive was, for reasons not clearly revealed by the newsletter coverage, special indeed. And, finally, this year''s third-grade class was in itself a very, very special group. I wondered, Is it possible? So much specialness concentrated in one place? A cosmic coincidence? Or was this really an extraordinary school with unusually dazzling children, committed teachers, generous and energetic families? In fact, this school is a fine and good one. The children are intelligent and well behaved, the teachers care, the parents give of their time and money. But it is not a terribly unusual school, and I questioned the benefit of believing otherwise. The third-grade newsletter was not unique. At nearly every campus I visit, the staff, the posters on the walls, and the overall atmosphere emphasize that this is not merely a place of learning, it''s a breeding ground for enlightened, compassionate champions. The schools are not to blame for their hubris. Parents, with their grand expectations for their children, have sparked the outbreak of specialness. My friend Paula, who runs a terrific elementary school, told of taking a mother on a prospective parents'' tour of the campus. The mom said that her daughter Sloane had a strong interest in science. "At another school I visited, the kindergarten teachers put streamers in the trees to demonstrate the properties of wind to the students," she reported. "I''m hoping you would do that here too. I wouldn''t want Sloaner to miss out." "We have leaves on our trees," Paula responded. "They do the same thing. Can''t guarantee we''ll be using streamers." Sloane''s mother sent her daughter to the school with the streamers. The principal of another school complained to me about his frustration with parents'' expectations: Too many parents want everything fixed by the time their child is eight. They want academic perfection, a child as capable as any other child in the Western hemisphere. Children develop in fits and starts, but nobody has time for that anymore. No late bloomers, no slow starters, nothing unusual accepted! If a child doesn''t get straight A''s, his parents start fretting that he''s got a learning disability or a motivation problem. The normal curve has disappeared. Parents seem to think that children only come in two flavors: learning disabled and gifted. Not every child has unlimited potential in all areas. This doesn''t mean most kids won''t be able to go to college and to compete successfully in the adult world. Almost all of them will. Parents just need to relax a little and be patient. What''s going on here? Why does the newsletter shout hosannas? Why is Sloane''s mother so anxious for her daughter to experience a miniature physics lab in kindergarten? Why can''t parents let their eight-year-olds develop at a natural, raggedy pace? When I began studying Judaism, one of the first things that struck me was how directly it spoke to the issue of parental pressure. According to Jewish thought, parents should not expect their children to be anyone other than who they are. A Hasidic teaching says, "If your child has a talent to be a baker, don''t tell him to be a doctor." Judaism holds that every child is made in the divine image. When we ignore a child''s intrinsic strengths in an effort to push him toward our notion of extraordinary achievement, we are undermining God''s plan. If the pressure to be special gets too intense, children end up in the therapist''s office suffering from sleep and eating disorders, chronic stomachaches, hair-pulling, depression, and other ailments. They are casualties of their parents'' drive for perfection. It was children such as these who spurred me to look outside standard therapeutic practices for ways to help. In Judaism I found an approach that respects children''s uniqueness while accepting them in all their ordinary glory.

Details

ISBN1416593063
Author Wendy Mogel
Short Title BLESSING OF A SKINNED KNEE
Pages 304
Publisher Simon & Schuster
Language English
ISBN-10 1416593063
ISBN-13 9781416593065
Media Book
Format Paperback
DEWEY 296.74
Year 2008
Publication Date 2008-12-02
Residence Los Angeles, CA, US
Birth 1951
Imprint Scribner
Subtitle Using Jewish Teachings to Raise Self-reliant Children
DOI 10.1604/9781416593065
Audience General
Place of Publication New York
Country of Publication United States
AU Release Date 2008-12-02
NZ Release Date 2008-12-02
US Release Date 2008-12-02
UK Release Date 2008-12-02

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