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  • How to Stop Yelling and Start Connection workshop registration is officially open!
    2025/10/18

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    Join us for this virtual workshop. Seats are limited, so grab your spot now!
    Hit this link for all of the details:

    https://stan.store/PamPalanza/p/how-to-stop-yelling-and-start-connecting OR go to PamelaPalanza.com and look for the link in the banner at the top of the page.

    Look forward to seeing you there.

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    1 分
  • You Are Doing Better Than You Think
    2025/10/08

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    We reassure overwhelmed parents that progress, not perfection, is what matters, and we share simple ways to repair, reset, and grow without the guilt spiral. We offer practical questions, a grounding mantra, and reminders to see yourself through your child’s eyes.

    • naming social pressure and comparison
    • presence over perfection as the core goal
    • guilt reframed as a signal for care
    • practical repair: apology, breath, do-over
    • questions that drive growth and learning
    • modeling grace and forgiveness for yourself
    • seeing what kids actually remember and need
    • a simple mantra for hard days
    • encouragement to share the message with another parent

    Thank you for spending this time with me today. And if this episode reminded you that you're doing better than you think, share it with another parent who might need that same encouragement.
    Please leave a review. That helps other parents find us.
    And if you have friends who also have children and could use some parenting tips, feel free to share this.
    You know, I'd love to hear from you, so you can always find me on my socials.

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    11 分
  • Why Kids Don't Listen and How to Fix It
    2025/09/30

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    We tackle one of the most common parenting frustrations—children who don't listen—by identifying three root causes and providing a simple three-step solution that transforms parent-child communication. This practical approach helps parents break free from the cycle of repetition and yelling while teaching children the important skill of listening effectively.

    • Children don't listen for three key reasons: they can't (developmental limitations), they won't (testing boundaries), or they don't know how (missing skills)
    • Young children (2-6 years) often get hyperfocused on activities and literally tune out everything else around them
    • Repeating instructions teaches children they don't need to listen the first time
    • Getting your child's attention first is crucial—move to their level, make eye contact, and gently touch their arm
    • Keep instructions clear, calm, and direct—avoid long explanations that cause children to tune out
    • Consistent follow-through is essential—set clear consequences and actually implement them when needed
    • Games like Simon Says can help teach listening skills in a fun, engaging way
    • Remember that good listening isn't just about obedience but about connection
    • Consequences differ from punishment—they're logical reactions to choices children make

    Find me on social media for more common sense parenting tips, and please leave a review if you enjoyed this episode. Share with friends who could use some parenting guidance!


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    11 分
  • School's Back: Navigating Teacher Respect and Bullying
    2025/09/16

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    Back-to-school season brings familiar challenges for parents navigating the complex dynamics between children, teachers, and peers. Drawing from personal experience and professional expertise, I tackle two fundamental issues that shape our children's educational journey and character development.

    First, we explore the critical importance of teaching children to respect their teachers. This isn't just about classroom management—it's about preparing kids for future relationships with authority figures throughout their lives. When teachers reach out about behavior issues, they're not doing it lightly. They're signaling genuine concerns that deserve our attention as parents. Rather than automatically defending our children or questioning teacher motives, we should first ask "What did my child do?" and approach the situation as team members working toward the same goal: our child's success.

    The second half addresses my straightforward philosophy on bullying: walk away from verbal attacks, but defend yourself against physical ones. I tell my children that if someone throws the first punch, they have my full permission to protect themselves. Some might disagree with this approach, but I believe children must learn that physical aggression has consequences. Equally important is how I would respond if my own child was the bully—with serious home consequences, required apologies, and deep conversations about the underlying causes of their behavior. Because ultimately, hurt people hurt people, and addressing the root causes of aggression is as important as stopping the behavior itself.

    Whether you agree with my perspectives or not, I invite you to follow my upcoming "What Would Pam Do" series on social media, where I'll tackle common parenting scenarios with the same straightforward, common-sense approach. Parenting doesn't come with a manual, but together we can share strategies that help raise resilient, respectful, and responsible children who thrive both in and out of school.

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    9 分
  • Disrespect to Respect: Transforming How Your Kids Talk to You
    2025/07/15

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    Disrespect from children isn't just about bad manners—it's often about children struggling with big emotions, lacking skills to express themselves, or testing boundaries. When children talk back or roll their eyes, our response determines whether the behavior becomes a pattern or remains a passing moment.

    • Children often show disrespect due to frustration, feeling powerless, or lacking tools to express themselves
    • Kids model behavior they've seen from adults, siblings, or media
    • Testing limits is part of children's development at every age
    • Matching their tone or attitude only reinforces disrespectful behavior
    • Lecturing during emotional moments is ineffective; save teachable moments for later
    • Simple, clear responses work best: "I don't speak to you that way and expect the same from you"
    • Give children a chance to try again with respect
    • The "mom look" or silence can be more powerful than words
    • Walking away shows you won't engage with disrespect
    • Model respectful speech even when frustrated
    • Praise respectful behavior when you see it
    • Role-play scenarios to practice respectful disagreement
    • Create and post family rules around tone and language
    • Use natural consequences rather than punishment
    • Always circle back when everyone is calm to discuss better approaches

    Check out my show on YouTube called the Pam Show on my channel, Pamela Palanza, and visit my website pamelapalanza.com for more parenting resources.


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    12 分
  • Afraid to Ask, Ashamed to Fight: Breaking the Silence on Special Education
    2025/06/24

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    www.specialneedspro.net

    Afraid to Ask, Ashamed to Fight eBook

    Nancy Perkins, special needs advocate and author, returns to discuss her new ebook "Afraid to Ask, Ashamed to Fight" which provides parents with essential guidance for navigating the special education system. She shares insights from both her professional experience and personal journey as the parent of a son with autism spectrum disorder.

    • Title "Afraid to Ask, Ashamed to Fight" reflects parents' fear of appearing uninformed and intimidation when confronting school systems
    • School administrators sometimes instruct teachers not to inform parents about services their children are entitled to receive
    • "Wait and see" responses from schools often mean waiting for a child to fail before intervention begins
    • Schools withhold information due to lack of knowledge about special education law and financial constraints
    • The Procedural Safeguards Notice (for ages 3-21) is a vital resource for understanding parental rights
    • Bringing lawyers to IEP meetings can create unnecessary hostility—try working with advocates first
    • Children should attend their own IEP meetings starting at age 14-16 for post-high school planning
    • Be alert to informal "suspensions" when schools ask parents to pick up children for non-medical reasons
    • Documentation is critical—record all communications with detailed notes about dates, times and outcomes

    Find Nancy's ebook at www.specialneedspronet.com and click on "ebook" in the dropdown menu. You can preview the first three pages before purchasing.


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    30 分
  • You Are NOT a Bad Parent - You're Just Tired!
    2025/06/10

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    Parenting during times of high expectations and social media perfection can make us feel like failures, but struggling doesn't mean you're failing—it means you're human. Good parents worry about doing it wrong and care about how their actions affect their children, while truly bad parents don't show up, try, or care.

    • Fatigue is the number one issue reported by women in recent surveys
    • Yelling, needing alone time, or relying on screen time doesn't make you a bad parent
    • Lower your expectations and give yourself grace during difficult days
    • Try the "I'm going to rest for 30 minutes then we'll all clean" parenting hack
    • Your presence matters more to your children than perfection
    • Children will remember you showing up, not whether everything was perfect
    • Repeat the mantra "I'm doing the best I can with what I've got today"

    Please leave a review if you enjoyed this episode—it helps other parents find us. If you have friends with children who could use some parenting tips, feel free to share, and you can always find me on my socials. Until then, remember, hug and love your babies.


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    7 分
  • Three Discipline Mistakes That Sabotage Your Parenting (And How To Fix Them)
    2025/06/03

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    Struggling with discipline? You're not alone. Most parents fall into the same three traps without even realizing it - and today I'm pulling back the curtain on these common pitfalls that sabotage our best parenting efforts.

    The first mistake might surprise you: talking too much during corrections. When your child is in a reactive state, all those carefully crafted explanations go in one ear and out the other. I'll share a simple formula that cuts through the noise and gets results without the power struggle. Think fewer words, more clarity, and significantly less frustration for everyone involved.

    Then there's the consistency challenge. We've all been there - making threats we don't follow through on because we're tired, it's inconvenient, or we just want to avoid the meltdown. But this seemingly small slip creates massive problems down the road. I share practical strategies for maintaining boundaries even when it feels impossible, including what to do when one child's behavior threatens to ruin family outings for everyone.

    Finally, we explore the fundamental misunderstanding of what discipline actually means. The word itself comes from "disciple" - to teach, not to punish. I'll show you how to transform correction moments into valuable teaching opportunities that build emotional intelligence rather than just compliance through fear.

    This episode is short, practical, and packed with actionable advice you can implement today. None of us get it right every time (myself included!), but awareness is the first step toward more effective parenting. Try shifting just one of these patterns this week and watch how it transforms your relationship with your children.

    Ready to raise emotionally intelligent children who understand boundaries without endless power struggles? Listen now, and don't forget to subscribe and leave a review if you found these tips helpful. Parenting is hard enough - let's make discipline the straightforward, effective tool it was meant to be.

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    8 分