
Come Back to Care
Podcast de Nat Vikitsreth
No se necesita tarjeta de crédito
Are you looking for ways to practice social justice in your daily parenting and nurture your child’s development while re-parenting your inner child? You’re in the right place. I'm Nat Nadha Vikitsreth, a decolonized and licensed clinical psychotherapist, somatic abolitionist, and founder of Come Back to Care. I created this podcast for you because I deeply honor your commitment to raising your child with intention and integrity. In this podcast, we explore how social justice, child development sciences, parenting, and inner child re-parenting intersect with one another. In each episode, we turn down the volume of oppressive social norms and outdated family patterns so that we can hear our inner voice and raise our children by our own values too. Please visit https://www.comebacktocare.com/podcast to view the episode show notes and transcripts. Let's re-imagine parenting to be deeply decolonized and intentionally intergenerational. I'm wholeheartedly grateful that you're here.
Disfruta 14 días gratis
No se necesita tarjeta de crédito
Todos los episodios
67 episodios![episode [BONUS] 10 Roles to Play with Our Children in Collective Care with Deepa Iyer artwork](https://cdn.podimo.com/images/115e6e09-a758-4db4-8e62-66ba2435f64a_400x400.png)
In this bonus episode, Deepa Iyer shares her wisdom on staying engaged in social change when you’re a caregiver. You’ll explore the roles you can play in liberation and make your advocacy “sustainable and effective.” --------------------------- Get full show notes and more information at: comebacktocare.com/podcast [https://my.captivate.fm/comebacktocare.com/podcast] For more BTS of this podcast, follow @comebacktocare [https://www.instagram.com/comebacktocare/] on Instagram! Sign up for our weekly Care Collective Newslette [https://www.comebacktocare.com/newsletter]r for information and inspiration on topics like decolonized parenting, embodied, body-based centering practices for you and your children, intergenerational family healing, and more. I invite you to join me in a virtual gathering once a month for you to digest the information in the podcast with other Social Justice Curious listeners. We'll put awareness into action together with group accountability at www.patreon.com/comebacktocare [https://www.patreon.com/comebacktocare] If you enjoy the Come Back to Care podcast, we could use your support! Please consider leaving a 5-star rating and review, and share with someone who needs to hear this! The Come Back to Care podcast explores how social justice, child development science, parenting, and family systems intersect—hosted by Nat Vikitsreth, a decolonized, licensed clinical psychotherapist, somatics, and social justice practitioner, and founder of Come Back to Care [https://my.captivate.fm/www.comebacktocare.com].

In this episode, you and I are going to roll up our sleeves and dig into how to build a parenting support system. We’ll explore what social justice actions like pod mapping can teach us about how to build a parenting support system that’s based on trust, reciprocity, and interdependence. We’ll also unpack how inner child wounds can sometimes make this interdependence and community building work so uncomfortable and challenging. --------------------------- Get full show notes and more information at: comebacktocare.com/podcast [https://my.captivate.fm/comebacktocare.com/podcast] For more BTS of this podcast, follow @comebacktocare [https://www.instagram.com/comebacktocare/] on Instagram! Sign up for our weekly Care Collective Newslette [https://www.comebacktocare.com/newsletter]r for information and inspiration on topics like decolonized parenting, embodied, body-based centering practices for you and your children, intergenerational family healing, and more. I invite you to join me in a virtual gathering once a month for you to digest the information in the podcast with other Social Justice Curious listeners. We'll put awareness into action together with group accountability at www.patreon.com/comebacktocare [https://www.patreon.com/comebacktocare] If you enjoy the Come Back to Care podcast, we could use your support! Please consider leaving a 5-star rating and review, and share with someone who needs to hear this! The Come Back to Care podcast explores how social justice, child development science, parenting, and family systems intersect—hosted by Nat Vikitsreth, a decolonized, licensed clinical psychotherapist, somatics, and social justice practitioner, and founder of Come Back to Care [https://my.captivate.fm/www.comebacktocare.com].

I first shared this episode with you last November and my mailbox got flooded with kind feedback from so many listeners saying how compassionate and concrete the strategy was. So, I’d love to share it with you again today, my dear co-conspirator. In this episode, you and I will explore a framework for strategic communications that a political messaging expert and campaign advisor, Anat Shenker-Osorio [https://asocommunications.com/team/], teaches. Then, you’ll adapt and apply this three-part framework to craft your own statement that you can use to set boundaries and protect your peace with those who judge or critique your parenting choices. I’ll share various examples of what this framework can look like when the critiques range from “you’re too soft” to “you’re gonna let your child do that?” This way you can experiment with this framework, leave what doesn’t feel right, and as always make it your method. --------------------------- Get full show notes and more information at: comebacktocare.com/podcast [https://my.captivate.fm/comebacktocare.com/podcast] For more BTS of this podcast, follow @comebacktocare [https://www.instagram.com/comebacktocare/] on Instagram! Sign up for our weekly Care Collective Newslette [https://www.comebacktocare.com/newsletter]r for information and inspiration on topics like decolonized parenting, embodied, body-based centering practices for you and your children, intergenerational family healing, and more. I invite you to join me in a virtual gathering once a month for you to digest the information in the podcast with other Social Justice Curious listeners. We'll put awareness into action together with group accountability at www.patreon.com/comebacktocare [https://www.patreon.com/comebacktocare] If you enjoy the Come Back to Care podcast, we could use your support! Please consider leaving a 5-star rating and review, and share with someone who needs to hear this! The Come Back to Care podcast explores how social justice, child development science, parenting, and family systems intersect—hosted by Nat Vikitsreth, a decolonized, licensed clinical psychotherapist, somatics, and social justice practitioner, and founder of Come Back to Care [https://my.captivate.fm/www.comebacktocare.com].

Today’s episode invites you to take direct action and practice power-with at our children’s schools through a campaign called Drop the ADL from Schools [https://droptheadlfromschools.org/]. --------------------------- Get full show notes and more information at: comebacktocare.com/podcast [https://my.captivate.fm/comebacktocare.com/podcast] For more BTS of this podcast, follow @comebacktocare [https://www.instagram.com/comebacktocare/] on Instagram! Sign up for our weekly Care Collective Newslette [https://www.comebacktocare.com/newsletter]r for information and inspiration on topics like decolonized parenting, embodied, body-based centering practices for you and your children, intergenerational family healing, and more. I invite you to join me in a virtual gathering once a month for you to digest the information in the podcast with other Social Justice Curious listeners. We'll put awareness into action together with group accountability at www.patreon.com/comebacktocare [https://www.patreon.com/comebacktocare] If you enjoy the Come Back to Care podcast, we could use your support! Please consider leaving a 5-star rating and review, and share with someone who needs to hear this! The Come Back to Care podcast explores how social justice, child development science, parenting, and family systems intersect—hosted by Nat Vikitsreth, a decolonized, licensed clinical psychotherapist, somatics, and social justice practitioner, and founder of Come Back to Care [https://my.captivate.fm/www.comebacktocare.com].

In this episode, you and I are going to explore one action to power-with with your child when they struggle. You’ll also explore the science behind how power-with nurtures your child’s motivation and perseverance. You can prepare your child for the real world using power-with. This way you get to practice what feels aligned with your values and promote your child’s development at the same time. --------------------------- Get full show notes and more information at: comebacktocare.com/podcast [https://my.captivate.fm/comebacktocare.com/podcast] For more BTS of this podcast, follow @comebacktocare [https://www.instagram.com/comebacktocare/] on Instagram! Sign up for our weekly Care Collective Newslette [https://www.comebacktocare.com/newsletter]r for information and inspiration on topics like decolonized parenting, embodied, body-based centering practices for you and your children, intergenerational family healing, and more. I invite you to join me in a virtual gathering once a month for you to digest the information in the podcast with other Social Justice Curious listeners. We'll put awareness into action together with group accountability at www.patreon.com/comebacktocare [https://www.patreon.com/comebacktocare] If you enjoy the Come Back to Care podcast, we could use your support! Please consider leaving a 5-star rating and review, and share with someone who needs to hear this! The Come Back to Care podcast explores how social justice, child development science, parenting, and family systems intersect—hosted by Nat Vikitsreth, a decolonized, licensed clinical psychotherapist, somatics, and social justice practitioner, and founder of Come Back to Care [https://my.captivate.fm/www.comebacktocare.com].
Disfruta 14 días gratis
No se necesita tarjeta de crédito
Podcasts exclusivos
Sin anuncios
Podcast gratuitos
Audiolibros
20 horas / mes