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OverviewThe child who falls apart at every transition. The one who shrinks from challenge, convinced they are not ready. The one who has already seen too much-family stress, illness, loss-and carries a weight no child should hold. The one who seems fine on the surface but lacks the deep roots to weather what comes next. What if the answer has been growing in plain sight all along? In the crack of a sidewalk, through asphalt and compacted earth, the dandelion does something remarkable: it thrives where nothing should grow. It does not ask permission to bloom. It does not wait for ideal conditions. It builds roots that hold, releases what it cannot control, and transforms bare ground into living meadow-one plant at a time, until a field emerges. The Dandelion Child is the third book in a groundbreaking series that uses this ordinary plant as an extraordinary teacher for childhood resilience. Drawing on decades of research in developmental psychology, attachment theory, neuroscience, and education, this book offers parents, educators, and therapists a radically different framework: resilience is not a character trait children either have or lack. It is an ecological capacity-shaped by relationships, environments, and the stories we help children tell about their own lives. Across six interconnected lessons, you will discover how to: Help children embrace change by building the narrative and relational structures that make transition navigable rather than traumatic Cultivate deep emotional grounding through secure attachment, core values, and autonomic regulation-the invisible architecture that sustains children when surface conditions deteriorate Guide children to bloom in difficult circumstances without romanticizing their struggle or accepting injustice as inevitable Teach kids to shine before they feel ""ready"" by dismantling perfectionism and creating environments where imperfect expression is valued Turn setbacks into hope and new beginnings through rituals of release, pathways thinking, and the active reconstruction of meaning Raise children who lift others by cultivating empathy, community contribution, and the understanding that resilience is stronger when shared Each chapter combines rigorous research with practical application: nature-based activities, conversation starters, and field-tested exercises that translate insight into daily practice. Whether you are parenting a anxious preschooler, teaching a classroom of adolescents, or supporting a child through trauma, these lessons adapt to your specific child and circumstance. The dandelion has no nervous system, no consciousness, no willpower. It simply possesses structures that function well in disturbed environments. Children are the same. Their capacity for resilience is already present, waiting for the conditions that allow it to grow. This book shows you how to create those conditions. Open the cover. Find the crack. Watch what grows. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Barret J MorsePublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.268kg ISBN: 9798195661786Pages: 196 Publication Date: 05 May 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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