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The Pause Practice: Your 30-Second Reset Button for Parenting Chaos
Published 4 days, 19 hours ago
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Hey there, I'm Julia Cartwright, and welcome back to Mindful Parenting: Daily Tips for Raising Calm Kids. I'm so glad you're here on this Wednesday morning. Take a breath with me—you're exactly where you need to be.
If you're listening right now, I'm willing to bet you're in that Wednesday slump where your kids have already asked you seventeen questions before nine a.m., you've referee'd at least two small conflicts, and your coffee's gone cold. The good news? That's exactly what we're here for today.
The truth about mindful parenting isn't that it makes everything perfect. It's that it gives you a little oxygen mask so you can actually show up the way you want to. Because you can't pour from an empty cup, as they say, and right now, maybe yours feels more like a thimble.
Let's do something simple together. Find a comfortable seat, wherever you are. Your feet on the floor is perfect. Feel that contact—the solid ground beneath you. That's your anchor today.
Now, let's breathe like this: breathe in slowly through your nose for a count of four. Hold it gently for four. Exhale through your mouth for a count of six. There's something magical about that longer exhale—it tells your nervous system, everything is okay. We can slow down. Let's do that three more times at your own pace. In through the nose. Out through the mouth. Beautiful.
Here's the main practice I want to leave you with today. It's called the Pause Practice, and you can do it anywhere—in the kitchen, the car, even in the bathroom if you need a thirty-second escape hatch. When you feel that spike of frustration rising, when your kid just spilled juice on the one white shirt you own, pause. Just pause. Don't react yet. Notice what you're feeling in your body. Is your jaw tight? Your shoulders up by your ears? That's information. That's you waking up to what's actually happening. Then, place one hand on your heart and one on your belly. Breathe there. Three full breaths. That's it. Your child is still there, the juice is still there, but now you're present instead of reactive. You're the calm they're actually looking for.
The beautiful thing about this? Your kids are watching. They're learning that feelings don't have to run the show. That we can notice them, pause, and choose what comes next. That's the gift of mindful parenting.
So today, try the Pause Practice three times. Just three. Notice what shifts. I'd love to hear about it.
Thank you so much for joining me on Mindful Parenting: Daily Tips for Raising Calm Kids. Don't forget to subscribe so you never miss a practice. You've got this, friend.
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/47ZqpWT
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
If you're listening right now, I'm willing to bet you're in that Wednesday slump where your kids have already asked you seventeen questions before nine a.m., you've referee'd at least two small conflicts, and your coffee's gone cold. The good news? That's exactly what we're here for today.
The truth about mindful parenting isn't that it makes everything perfect. It's that it gives you a little oxygen mask so you can actually show up the way you want to. Because you can't pour from an empty cup, as they say, and right now, maybe yours feels more like a thimble.
Let's do something simple together. Find a comfortable seat, wherever you are. Your feet on the floor is perfect. Feel that contact—the solid ground beneath you. That's your anchor today.
Now, let's breathe like this: breathe in slowly through your nose for a count of four. Hold it gently for four. Exhale through your mouth for a count of six. There's something magical about that longer exhale—it tells your nervous system, everything is okay. We can slow down. Let's do that three more times at your own pace. In through the nose. Out through the mouth. Beautiful.
Here's the main practice I want to leave you with today. It's called the Pause Practice, and you can do it anywhere—in the kitchen, the car, even in the bathroom if you need a thirty-second escape hatch. When you feel that spike of frustration rising, when your kid just spilled juice on the one white shirt you own, pause. Just pause. Don't react yet. Notice what you're feeling in your body. Is your jaw tight? Your shoulders up by your ears? That's information. That's you waking up to what's actually happening. Then, place one hand on your heart and one on your belly. Breathe there. Three full breaths. That's it. Your child is still there, the juice is still there, but now you're present instead of reactive. You're the calm they're actually looking for.
The beautiful thing about this? Your kids are watching. They're learning that feelings don't have to run the show. That we can notice them, pause, and choose what comes next. That's the gift of mindful parenting.
So today, try the Pause Practice three times. Just three. Notice what shifts. I'd love to hear about it.
Thank you so much for joining me on Mindful Parenting: Daily Tips for Raising Calm Kids. Don't forget to subscribe so you never miss a practice. You've got this, friend.
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/47ZqpWT
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI