Overcoming Toxic Parenting

How to Be a Good Parent When Yours Wasn't

Nonfiction, Family & Relationships, Family Relationships, Parenting, Religion & Spirituality, Christianity, Christian Life
Cover of the book Overcoming Toxic Parenting by Rick Johnson, Baker Publishing Group
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Author: Rick Johnson ISBN: 9781493405251
Publisher: Baker Publishing Group Publication: October 18, 2016
Imprint: Revell Language: English
Author: Rick Johnson
ISBN: 9781493405251
Publisher: Baker Publishing Group
Publication: October 18, 2016
Imprint: Revell
Language: English

Advice for Parents on How to Break the Cycle of Neglect, Abuse, or Absentee Parenting

Parenting is hard enough when you had good role models in your own parents. But what if your parents were absent, neglectful, or abusive? Are you doomed to repeat their mistakes with your own children? As a parenting expert and someone who experienced negative parenting, Rick Johnson answers that question with an emphatic "No!"

Anyone can be a good parent, even if they didn't have one. Johnson shows anxious readers how to identify the ways in which their past experiences affect their own parenting choices. Then he walks them through the process of healing the emotional and spiritual wounds toxic parenting has left behind. Finally, he outlines healthy habits and practices to take the place of the negative ones that may have been modeled for them.

Any parent who worries about whether they can break the cycle of abuse, neglect, or absenteeism will find in Rick a sympathetic companion on the road to creating a positive family environment now and for the future.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Advice for Parents on How to Break the Cycle of Neglect, Abuse, or Absentee Parenting

Parenting is hard enough when you had good role models in your own parents. But what if your parents were absent, neglectful, or abusive? Are you doomed to repeat their mistakes with your own children? As a parenting expert and someone who experienced negative parenting, Rick Johnson answers that question with an emphatic "No!"

Anyone can be a good parent, even if they didn't have one. Johnson shows anxious readers how to identify the ways in which their past experiences affect their own parenting choices. Then he walks them through the process of healing the emotional and spiritual wounds toxic parenting has left behind. Finally, he outlines healthy habits and practices to take the place of the negative ones that may have been modeled for them.

Any parent who worries about whether they can break the cycle of abuse, neglect, or absenteeism will find in Rick a sympathetic companion on the road to creating a positive family environment now and for the future.

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