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September 2016

Treating Young Offenders Like Adults Is Bad Parenting [TheAtlantic.com]

Part of the philosophy for creating a separate juvenile-justice system in the United States is the idea that the state can act as a parent, or parens patriae—protector, caretaker, disciplinarian—when a young person fails to respect the rights of others, commits petty or serious crimes, or shirks age-based societal norms by committing so-called status offenses. But parenting is hard. Even for the state. Sometimes the lessons learned with one generation benefit the next. Sometimes cultural...

Boyer Lectures: Episode 2 – Give every child the best start [TheConversation.com]

The 57th Boyer Lecture Series : Over four lectures and four weeks, the World Medical Association president, professor Sir Michael Marmot, explores the challenges communities face in solving issues of health inequality. In episode two, professor Marmot explains how the good and bad things that happen in early childhood set the stage for health and well-being throughout a person’s life. “Early child development is influenced in part by quality of parenting or caring from others; which in turn...

Parenting: A Cultural Perspective from Dr. Darcia Narvaez and Others

My first foray into the world of social services led me to become involved with what I thought was an under-appreciated aspect of parenting: the role of a father and the problems caused by an absent father. I drew from my own experience growing up. My parents first separated when I was about four-and-a-half years old. There were four children in our family. The youngest was only about six months old when the separation happened. My parents reconciled long enough for a fifth child to be...

Supporting refugee and immigrant children (huffingtonpost.com)

A recent report by Child Trends estimates that more than 127,000 foreign children will enter the U.S. by the end of 2016, up from about 90,000 in 2015. Each of these children has a legal designation. That designation—not their physical or psychological needs, or even the mere fact that they are children—determines the level of support and protection they receive under U.S. law. Child Trends’ researchers found that the overwhelming majority have experienced various forms of trauma. When...

Breathing Love into a Community (karmatube.com)

Brothers Atman and Ali Smith, and their "brother from another mother" Andres Gonzales decided in college that after they graduated, they were going to do something about the suffering they saw in the world, in a holistic way. They moved back into the neighborhood they grew up in, and started an after-school program for the problem children in a school around the corner from their childhood home. Watch what love and compassion can do for children who live in the equivalent of a war zone in...

Meditation + Yoga + Veggie Diet + Massages = Good For Your Health (timesofsandiego.com)

Meditation, yoga, a vegetarian diet and massages are good for your health, according to a study released Friday by the University of California San Diego School of Medicine. In a novel controlled clinical trial, participants in a six-day Ayurvedic-based well-being program experienced measurable decreases in a set of blood-based metabolites associated with inflammation, cardiovascular disease risk and cholesterol regulation. The findings were published in today’s issue of “Scientific...

My father died by suicide this year. His death inspired me to learn how to ‘just be.’ (washingtonpost.com)

Nine months ago, I stood at my father’s burial trying to gather my thoughts before speaking about his life to family and friends. It was particularly difficult because I had arrived at a day I had been trying to prevent, and had feared, for a very long time. My dad had just ended his life. But then, as I was standing there searching for the words, I remembered an article I had read only seven days prior. It was about ways to help yourself feel safe in an insane world . And so I began by...

He’s formerly homeless. Now he makes soaps and donates to charity. And he’s 13. (washingtonpost.com)

Donovan Smith knows what it’s like to be in need: He lived in a New Mexico homeless shelter after his single mother lost her job and their apartment. For six months, the Henderson House in Albuquerque, N.M., was his home. That was about five years ago. Today, Donovan has his own business — an online shop that sells artisanal bath soaps he made himself using aloe vera and goat’s milk. He’s donated hundreds of dollars of his earnings to a nonprofit that helped him and his mother when they were...

She lost the letter her dying mom left her. Then it was found in a secondhand bookshop. (washingtonpost.com)

The owner of a secondhand bookstore in a northern English market town was sorting through a pile of old books when an envelope fell from one. Inside was an undated letter and a faded photo of a woman holding a little girl on her lap. The letter was addressed to “Bethany (My tiny treasure)” and signed “Mam.” It said if Bethany was reading it, it meant the letter’s author had died. Gordon Draper’s eyes welled. These were a dying woman’s last words to her child. He had to find Bethany. He...

Number Of Hungry U.S. Kids Drops To Lowest Level Since Before Great Recession [NPR.org]

It's rare to get good news when it comes to hunger. But the government says there was a big drop last year in the number of people in the country struggling to get enough to eat, especially children. Overall, 15.8 million U.S. households, or 12.7 percent, experienced what the government calls "food insecurity" at some point during 2015. That's compared to about 17.4 million households — or 14 percent — in 2014, according to a new report by the Department of Agriculture's Economic Research...

Trauma-Informed Care focus of programs [WaupacaNow.com]

Community members will have the opportunity to learn about Trauma-Informed Care and be part of a conversation about heroin use and its impacts. Several events related to these topics will take place in Waupaca and area communities next week. They are being sponsored by the Waupaca County Department of Health & Human Services, the Waupaca Community Health Action Team (CHAT) and ThedaCare. “It’s different opportunities at different times so all people can come to at least one event and...

Homelessness, affordable housing addressed during Tuesday Council meeting [MyEdmondNews.com]

The topics of homelessness and affordable housing were common themes during Tuesday night’s Edmonds City Council meeting. The council heard from Lynnwood City Council President M. Christopher Boyer on what Edmonds’ neighbor to the north is doing to address those issues and had a joint discussion with the Edmonds Planning Board about council priorities for housing during the next several years. The Lynnwood City Council formed a task group on homelessness and “we began by listening to city...

We're Ready for October -- Resilience Month in Walla Walla, WA

[Ed. note: This blog is cross-posted from the Walla Walla Valley, WA, group, about how the Children's Resilience Initiative wanted to reach a new audience for their work. This new 15-second video ad they created will be shown before every movie in the local 12-theater complex, for a total of 1,642 times during October. It plays with other ads, such as those from the local hospital.] Effectively communicating a message in 15 seconds can take hours to formulate. After spending weeks, months...

Meditation and vacation effects have an impact on disease-associated molecular phenotypes [Nature.com]

Abstract Meditation is becoming increasingly practiced, especially for stress-related medical conditions. Meditation may improve cellular health; however, studies have not separated out effects of meditation from vacation-like effects in a residential randomized controlled trial. We recruited healthy women non-meditators to live at a resort for 6 days and randomized to either meditation retreat or relaxing on-site, with both groups compared with ‘regular meditators’ already enrolled in the...

How Geography Affects Low-Income Americans [PSMag.com]

In the United States, geography affects everything from economic mobility to lifespan. In a paper published earlier this year , the economist Raj Chetty and a number of co-authors explored the life expectancies of the rich and poor. They found not only a staggering rich-poor life expectancy gap, but also that the life expectancies of the poor vary greatly depending on location, with low-income people in certain cities living approximately five years longer than those in other cities. The...

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