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Blogs From Our Counseling Experts


Teaching Kids About Rest, Play, and God’s Care
In many homes, life moves fast. There are school drop-offs, sports practices, grocery runs, endless laundry piles, and the quiet pressure parents often feel to “do more” for their children. Even young kids can begin to absorb the hurried pace of life before they fully understand what stress even is. But children were not created to live in constant busyness. They were created to rest, to play, to laugh, to wonder, and to feel safe in the care of both their caregivers and God.


Managing End-of-School-Year Stress for Parents and Kids
As the school year winds down, many families expect things to feel lighter. Summer is around the corner, routines are shifting, and there’s a sense of “almost there.” But for many parents and kids, this season actually brings a unique kind of stress. There are final projects, testing schedules, performances, field days, spirit weeks, and endless calendar reminders. Emotions run high—excitement, exhaustion, pressure, and sometimes even anxiety about what’s next. If your househ


Helping Children Understand and Express Big Feelings
If you’ve ever watched your child melt down over the “wrong” color cup… you’ve witnessed a big feeling in a little body. Children experience emotions just as intensely as adults — but without the language, perspective, or brain development to manage them yet. What looks like defiance, drama, or overreaction is often a child’s nervous system saying, “This is too much for me.” The good news? Emotional skills can be taught. And parents and caregivers are the most important teach


Creating Healthy Rhythms for Your Family in a New Year
January has a way of making everything feel loud. New calendars. New goals. New expectations. As parents, that pressure can sneak into our homes quickly — “This is the year we’ll finally get it all together.” Better routines. Fewer meltdowns. More family dinners. More Bible reading. Less screen time. But somewhere between the first week of school and the second forgotten lunchbox, many families realize something important: big resolutions don’t usually stick — but small rhyth
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