STEVE BIDDULPH is one of the world’s best-known parenting authors, with books in four million homes and thirty-one languages. He was a family psychologist for more than thirty years, and teaches at The Cairnmillar Institute in Melbourne. He lives in Tasmania, Australia.
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Descripción Softcover. Condición: new. Product DescriptionA practical guidebook and passionate call-to-arms for parents of girls that empowers them to raise confident, well-rounded daughters in an exploitative world, from the author of the international bestseller Raising Boys.Raising a happy, healthy, well-adjusted daughter from babyhood to womanhood can be a challenge. Girls need to be strong, and in this warm-hearted book, best-selling parenting author Steve Biddulph brings together the finest thinking from around the world on how to raise daughters who are self-assured, know they are loved, and can stand up for themselves and others. With gentle humor and proven wisdom backed by decades of experience as a family psychologist and father, Biddulph shows parents of girls how to navigate the obstacles of growing up in a world that seems bent on poisoning their confidence. Biddulph also discusses: The five stages of girlhood, and how to help them go smoothly. How to deal with bullying, mean girls, and social media. Ways to ease the transition into the teen years. What you need to know about healthy body image, food, and eating disorders. The importance of girls friendships and how to support them. How to help girls happily and confidently relate to boys.With unforgettable success stories of girls growing up wise and warm, Raising Girls is fierce and tender; loving and concerned. It is both a detailed guidebook and a passionate call-to-arms to defend and empower girls everywhere.About the AuthorSTEVE BIDDULPH is one of the worlds best-known parenting authors, with books in four million homes and thirty-one languages. He was a family psychologist for more than thirty years, and teaches at The Cairnmillar Institute in Melbourne. He lives in Tasmania, Australia.Excerpt. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.A Letter from SteveDear Reader,Its amazing what you learn about yourself. Twenty years ago, when we were expecting our second child, friends naturally asked what we were hoping for, a boy or a girl? I always said I didnt mind, and I really believed that was true. We already had a boy of seven, and we were very eager simply to have another child.We had planned on having a homebirth, but it ended as an emergency caesarian-thats what we do every time in our family! So I found myself standing in the operating room, trying my best not to faint. Then from Shaarons belly the medical team pulled a slippery bundle, and somebody said, Well done, youve got a little girl! Suddenly I was crying. And laughing. And jumping around. I was, in short, incredibly happy. I hadnt realized how much I wanted a daughter. I was holding her and looking at her for hours afterward, just amazed. That was all those years ago, and the feeling hasnt gone away.Daughters evoke such strong feelings in us-protectiveness, awe, hope, and fear, but mostly just a fierce love and a wish to give them the best possible life.* * *For more than twenty years, I had a specialty in boys and men. It wasnt a choice so much as a mission-back then, boys were a disaster zone, and urgently in need of help. I wrote the worlds top-selling book on raising boys, with a simple message that they needed to be strongly loved and firmly taught how to be good men, that they needed positive role models, and that their energy wasnt a bad thing.Back then, girls were doing fine. Then, in the mid-2000s, that started to change. We began to see a sudden and marked plunge in girls mental health, first in the United States but quickly spreading across the world. Problems such as eating disorders and self-harm, which had once been extremely rare, were now happening in every school and on almost every street. But more than this, the average girl, everygirl, was stressed and depressed in a way we hadnt seen before.Girls arent born hating their own bodies. They arent born angry at life. Something was happening in the culture that was poisoning girls spirits. It seemed to come on a. Nº de ref. del artículo: DADAX1607745755
Descripción Paperback. Condición: new. Paperback. A practical guidebook and passionate call-to-arms for parents of girls that empowers them to raise confident, well-rounded daughters in an exploitative world, from the author of the international bestseller Raising Boys.Raising a happy, healthy, well-adjusted daughter from babyhood to womanhood can be a challenge. Girls need to be strong, and in this warm-hearted book, best-selling parenting author Steve Biddulph brings together the finest thinking from around the world on how to raise daughters who are self-assured, know they are loved, and can stand up for themselves and others. With gentle humor and proven wisdom backed by decades of experience as a family psychologist and father, Biddulph shows parents of girls how to navigate the obstacles of growing up in a world that seems bent on poisoning their confidence. Biddulph also discusses: The five stages of girlhood, and how to help them go smoothly. How to deal with bullying, mean girls, and social media. Ways to ease the transition into the teen years. What you need to know about healthy body image, food, and eating disorders. The importance of girls friendships and how to support them. How to help girls happily and confidently relate to boys. With unforgettable success stories of girls growing up wise and warm, Raising Girls is fierce and tender; loving and concerned. It is both a detailed guidebook and a passionate call-to-arms to defend and empower girls everywhere. Originally published: HarperCollins, 2013. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Nº de ref. del artículo: 9781607745754
Descripción Softcover. Condición: New. NO-VALUE. Product DescriptionA practical guidebook and passionate call-to-arms for parents of girls that empowers them to raise confident, well-rounded daughters in an exploitative world, from the author of the international bestseller Raising Boys.Raising a happy, healthy, well-adjusted daughter from babyhood to womanhood can be a challenge. Girls need to be strong, and in this warm-hearted book, best-selling parenting author Steve Biddulph brings together the finest thinking from around the world on how to raise daughters who are self-assured, know they are loved, and can stand up for themselves and others. With gentle humor and proven wisdom backed by decades of experience as a family psychologist and father, Biddulph shows parents of girls how to navigate the obstacles of growing up in a world that seems bent on poisoning their confidence. Biddulph also discusses: The five stages of girlhood, and how to help them go smoothly. How to deal with bullying, mean girls, and social media. Ways to ease the transition into the teen years. What you need to know about healthy body image, food, and eating disorders. The importance of girls friendships and how to support them. How to help girls happily and confidently relate to boys.With unforgettable success stories of girls growing up wise and warm, Raising Girls is fierce and tender; loving and concerned. It is both a detailed guidebook and a passionate call-to-arms to defend and empower girls everywhere.About the AuthorSTEVE BIDDULPH is one of the worlds best-known parenting authors, with books in four million homes and thirty-one languages. He was a family psychologist for more than thirty years, and teaches at The Cairnmillar Institute in Melbourne. He lives in Tasmania, Australia.Excerpt. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.A Letter from SteveDear Reader,Its amazing what you learn about yourself. Twenty years ago, when we were expecting our second child, friends naturally asked what we were hoping for, a boy or a girl? I always said I didnt mind, and I really believed that was true. We already had a boy of seven, and we were very eager simply to have another child.We had planned on having a homebirth, but it ended as an emergency caesarian-thats what we do every time in our family! So I found myself standing in the operating room, trying my best not to faint. Then from Shaarons belly the medical team pulled a slippery bundle, and somebody said, Well done, youve got a little girl! Suddenly I was crying. And laughing. And jumping around. I was, in short, incredibly happy. I hadnt realized how much I wanted a daughter. I was holding her and looking at her for hours afterward, just amazed. That was all those years ago, and the feeling hasnt gone away.Daughters evoke such strong feelings in us-protectiveness, awe, hope, and fear, but mostly just a fierce love and a wish to give them the best possible life.* * *For more than twenty years, I had a specialty in boys and men. It wasnt a choice so much as a mission-back then, boys were a disaster zone, and urgently in need of help. I wrote the worlds top-selling book on raising boys, with a simple message that they needed to be strongly loved and firmly taught how to be good men, that they needed positive role models, and that their energy wasnt a bad thing.Back then, girls were doing fine. Then, in the mid-2000s, that started to change. We began to see a sudden and marked plunge in girls mental health, first in the United States but quickly spreading across the world. Problems such as eating disorders and self-harm, which had once been extremely rare, were now happening in every school and on almost every street. But more than this, the average girl, everygirl, was stressed and depressed in a way we hadnt seen before.Girls arent born hating their own bodies. They arent born angry at life. Something was happening in the culture that was poisoning girls spirits. It seemed to come on a. Nº de ref. del artículo: BKZN9781607745754
Descripción Condición: New. . Nº de ref. del artículo: 52GZZZ00CRZ5_ns
Descripción paperback. Condición: New. NO-VALUE. Product DescriptionA practical guidebook and passionate call-to-arms for parents of girls that empowers them to raise confident, well-rounded daughters in an exploitative world, from the author of the international bestseller Raising Boys.Raising a happy, healthy, well-adjusted daughter from babyhood to womanhood can be a challenge. Girls need to be strong, and in this warm-hearted book, best-selling parenting author Steve Biddulph brings together the finest thinking from around the world on how to raise daughters who are self-assured, know they are loved, and can stand up for themselves and others. With gentle humor and proven wisdom backed by decades of experience as a family psychologist and father, Biddulph shows parents of girls how to navigate the obstacles of growing up in a world that seems bent on poisoning their confidence. Biddulph also discusses: The five stages of girlhood, and how to help them go smoothly. How to deal with bullying, mean girls, and social media. Ways to ease the transition into the teen years. What you need to know about healthy body image, food, and eating disorders. The importance of girl's friendships and how to support them. How to help girls happily and confidently relate to boys.With unforgettable success stories of girls growing up wise and warm, Raising Girls is fierce and tender; loving and concerned. It is both a detailed guidebook and a passionate call-to-arms to defend and empower girls everywhere.About the AuthorSTEVE BIDDULPH is one of the world's best-known parenting authors, with books in four million homes and thirty-one languages. He was a family psychologist for more than thirty years, and teaches at The Cairnmillar Institute in Melbourne. He lives in Tasmania, Australia.Excerpt. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.A Letter from SteveDear Reader,It's amazing what you learn about yourself. Twenty years ago, when we were expecting our second child, friends naturally asked what we were hoping for, a boy or a girl? I always said I didn't mind, and I really believed that was true. We already had a boy of seven, and we were very eager simply to have another child.We had planned on having a homebirth, but it ended as an emergency caesarian-that's what we do every time in our family! So I found myself standing in the operating room, trying my best not to faint. Then from Shaaron's belly the medical team pulled a slippery bundle, and somebody said, "Well done, you've got a little girl!" Suddenly I was crying. And laughing. And jumping around. I was, in short, incredibly happy. I hadn't realized how much I wanted a daughter. I was holding her and looking at her for hours afterward, just amazed. That was all those years ago, and the feeling hasn't gone away.Daughters evoke such strong feelings in us-protectiveness, awe, hope, and fear, but mostly just a fierce love and a wish to give them the best possible life.* * *For more than twenty years, I had a specialty in boys and men. It wasn't a choice so much as a mission-back then, boys were a disaster zone, and urgently in need of help. I wrote the world's top-selling book on raising boys, with a simple message that they needed to be strongly loved and firmly taught how to be good men, that they needed positive role models, and that their energy wasn't a bad thing.Back then, girls were doing fine. Then, in the mid-2000s, that started to change. We began to see a sudden and marked plunge in girls' mental health, first in the United States but quickly spreading across the world. Problems such as eating disorders and self-harm, which had once been extremely rare, were now happening in every school and on almost every street. But more than this, the average girl, everygirl, was stressed and depressed in a way we hadn't seen before.Girls aren't born hating their own bodies. They aren't born angry at life. Something was happening in the culture that was poisoning girls' spirits. It seemed to come on a. Nº de ref. del artículo: BKZN9781607745754