The Kindness Code

The Kindness Code - Episode 8 - with Sam Gardner

52 min · I går
episode The Kindness Code - Episode 8 - with Sam Gardner cover

Description

"I didn't leave the care system. The care system left me."   Sam Gardner spent 21 years in care. He now delivers transformative talks and training for those supporting care-experienced children -and is one of the most powerful voices in the sector.   His message to anyone working with children in care comes down to one word:   Stay.   Stay when they push you away. Stay when they call you Mum and then never call anyone Mum again. Stay when the seeds you plant won't grow for ten years.   This episode broke me a little. I hope it lands with you too. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

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9 episodes

episode The Kindness Code - Episode 6 - with Andy Baker artwork

The Kindness Code - Episode 6 - with Andy Baker

You know when you buy a new car, and suddenly you see the same car everywhere? The cars haven’t magically multiplied. Your brain has just started noticing what you’ve told it to look for. This came up in this week’s episode of The Kindness Code Podcast with Andy Baker [https://www.linkedin.com/in/andy-baker-673a7744/], author of Targeting the Positive with Behaviours that Challenge - and honestly, it really stopped me. Because if a whole staff team keeps saying, “This young person is aggressive”… What are we training everyone to see? Aggression. Every time. And then even the smaller things, the things we might not have noticed before, start getting pulled into that same story. That is powerful. And it’s dangerous. The answer isn’t just “catch them being good.” That sounds lovely, but it’s far too vague. The real work is identifying the positive incompatible behaviour - the thing the young person can’t do at the same time as the behaviour we’re worried about. So if we’re worried about abusive language, the opposite might be respect. But “respect” on it’s own doesn’t mean much unless we define it properly. What does respect actually look like in this home, on this shift, with this child? It might be speaking kindly. Holding a door. Walking away rather than escalating. Helping someone who is struggling. That’s what we need to train our brains to notice. And as always in care, the work starts with the adults first. Able Training | Training made easy. [https://www.able-training.co.uk/] ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

13. maj 202633 min
episode The Kindness Code - Episode 5 - with Bethaney Dixon artwork

The Kindness Code - Episode 5 - with Bethaney Dixon

More than a label This week on The Kindness Code, we’re joined by Bethaney Dixon [https://www.linkedin.com/in/bethaneydixon/]. From lived experience to building a movement… Bethaney shares how her own journey through the care system led her to create Adelphi – turning lived experience into a growing movement that supports care-experienced people through guidance, community, and partnerships across the UK. Together, we explore what it really means to move beyond stigma and labels - and how awareness, education, and empowerment are key to creating lasting change. Because support shouldn’t stop at independence. Adelphi – Adulting, Together™ | Digital Support for Care Leavers & Organisations [https://www.adelphi-app.co.uk/] ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

6. maj 202649 min
episode The Kindness Code - Episode 4 - Managing disclosures: when a child tells you something big artwork

The Kindness Code - Episode 4 - Managing disclosures: when a child tells you something big

Managing disclosures: when a child tells you something big It rarely happens when you expect it. It happens in the car. At the sink. Mid-cartoon. In the silence after a hard day — when a child finally decides you're the one they're going to tell. What you say in the next ten seconds matters more than almost anything else you'll do in your shift. In this episode, Carmel and Chelsea talk through how to respond when a child discloses something difficult — in a way that protects them, holds the trust they've just handed you, and keeps you steady when your own stomach drops. We cover: * Why disclosures almost never look like disclosures * The two phrases that should be muscle memory for every adult working with children: "I'm really glad you told me." * "I may need to share this to help keep you safe, but I'll support you through it." * Why "promising to keep a secret" is the single most damaging response — and what to say instead * How to manage your own reaction in the moment (because children read your face before they hear your words) * What happens after the disclosure — and why your job isn't done when the conversation ends Because how a child is met in that moment shapes whether they'll ever tell anyone again. * Press play. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

29. apr. 202624 min