By Peg Streep — 2020
Looking at the collateral damage we rarely talk about.
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CLEAR ALL
Offering you two breakthrough guides in one, Mothering and Daughtering was created to help you find and protect the unique treasure that is your relationship.
Congratulations! You’re the mother of a teenage daughter! Welcome to the world of door slams, boy craziness, glass-shattering screams, and eye rolls bigger than the earth’s rotation around the sun.
Looking past the “scare” stories to those that enlighten parents and enable them to empower girls, JoAnn Deak draws from the latest brain research on girls to illustrate the exciting new ways in which we can help our daughters learn and thrive.
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Do you worry about your 13-year-old daughter’s health as she approaches puberty? These 10 useful tips from a noted gynecologist will help her have a healthy and happy adolescence.
“If I should have a daughter, instead of Mom, she’s gonna call me Point B ...” began spoken word poet Sarah Kay, in a talk that inspired two standing ovations at TED2011.
In this talk Colleen O’Grady provides 3 ways to improve the relationship between moms and their teen daughters. Colleen O’Grady is changing what’s possible for mother and teenage daughter relationships around the world.
Janelle is the Queensland and Northern Territory President of the not for profit organisation, The National Association of Women in Construction as well as a partner in one of the largest specialist construction and infrastructure practices in Queensland. She sits in a small 17.
In this TED talk, Caroline Paul explores bravery in girls and how language and the way we speak to our girls versus the way we speak to our boys, makes such a difference.
We’re raising our girls to be perfect, and we’re raising our boys to be brave, says Reshma Saujani, the founder of Girls Who Code. Saujani has taken up the charge to socialize young girls to take risks and learn to program—two skills they need to move society forward.
Once upon a time, mean girls primarily existed in high school, while elementary school-aged girls spent hours at play and enjoyed friendships without much drama.