#Windowoftolerance

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#Windowoftolerance Reel by @occupied.ot.mom - If you're in a season where the days feel long…

The transitions feel hard, and the meltdowns feel like they come out of nowhere… I hope this lands on
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@occupied.ot.mom
If you’re in a season where the days feel long… The transitions feel hard, and the meltdowns feel like they come out of nowhere… I hope this lands on your feed at exactly the right time. I’ve been there too, trying to get shoes on, or move toward bedtime, or leave the house without everything spiraling. It can feel like you’re doing all the things and still hitting the same wall. Here’s the truth I wish more parents heard: Your child isn’t giving you a hard time… they’re having a hard time. And once we support their nervous system, everything else starts falling into place. A few regulation strategies that work beautifully when things feel intense: • Drop your voice instead of raising it, it helps co-regulate their system instantly • Use the “come sit close” invitation, secure connection lowers overwhelm • Shift the demand, offer a “you can choose” instead of a “you need to” • Add sensory input before transitions, just 30–60 seconds can change the whole tone Small changes. Big relief. Smoother evenings, calmer mornings, and way fewer meltdowns. If you want more practical ways to support your child through the hard moments, comment REGULATE and I’ll send you my free guide that makes regulation feel clear, doable, and actually effective in real life. 🤍 #pedsot #emotionalregulation #parenting #occupationaltherapy #preschooler
#Windowoftolerance Reel by @occupied.ot.mom - If you're in a season where the days feel long…

The transitions feel hard, and the meltdowns feel like they come out of nowhere… I hope this lands on
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OC
@occupied.ot.mom
If you’re in a season where the days feel long… The transitions feel hard, and the meltdowns feel like they come out of nowhere… I hope this lands on your feed at exactly the right time. I’ve been there too, trying to get shoes on, or move toward bedtime, or leave the house without everything spiraling. It can feel like you’re doing all the things and still hitting the same wall. Here’s the truth I wish more parents heard: Your child isn’t giving you a hard time… they’re having a hard time. And once we support their nervous system, everything else starts falling into place. A few regulation strategies that work beautifully when things feel intense: • Drop your voice instead of raising it, it helps co-regulate their system instantly • Use the “come sit close” invitation, secure connection lowers overwhelm • Shift the demand, offer a “you can choose” instead of a “you need to” • Add sensory input before transitions, just 30–60 seconds can change the whole tone Small changes. Big relief. Smoother evenings, calmer mornings, and way fewer meltdowns. If you want more practical ways to support your child through the hard moments, comment REGULATE and I’ll send you my free guide that makes regulation feel clear, doable, and actually effective in real life. 🤍 #pedsot #emotionalregulation #parenting #occupationaltherapy #preschooler
#Windowoftolerance Reel by @cocoon_to_bloom (verified account) - If your toddler holds it together all day at school, daycare, in public, or around other people…

bedtime is often the first moment their nervous syst
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@cocoon_to_bloom
If your toddler holds it together all day at school, daycare, in public, or around other people… bedtime is often the first moment their nervous system has had to slow down. During the day, movement, noise, play, and social interaction keep stress hormones like cortisol circulating so they can stay alert and cope. But when the lights go off and the room gets quiet, the body shifts out of “doing” mode. And that’s when the stored tension from the day can finally show up. So the requests start. The tears come out. They suddenly need you again. Not because they’re avoiding sleep or being manipulative, but because their system is looking for co-regulation to settle before rest. Try adding 2 ish minutes of quiet connection before lights out tonight: sit with them rub their back read one calm book breathe together and notice what changes. If you’re trying to understand what’s underneath the meltdown instead of just stopping it, you’re in the right place. Follow along for more nervous system based support for babies, toddlers, and kids. You can also comment “ready” for more tips at home ✨
#Windowoftolerance Reel by @msarbara - The research is clear: comfort builds calm. Co-regulation teaches self-regulation. Early soothing isn't indulgent - it's developmental support.
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@msarbara
The research is clear: comfort builds calm. Co-regulation teaches self-regulation. Early soothing isn’t indulgent — it’s developmental support.
#Windowoftolerance Reel by @therestfulpath.ca - You wish that gentler approaches worked for your toddler's sleep issues.

You tried the chair method: months of sitting by the bed, moving toward the
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@therestfulpath.ca
You wish that gentler approaches worked for your toddler’s sleep issues. You tried the chair method: months of sitting by the bed, moving toward the door. But your child still can’t handle you leaving. You tried responsive settling: going in every time they cry and soothing them. But they just cried harder. You tried co-sleeping because it seemed most gentle: now you’re waking up multiple times a night and don’t know how to transition out. And it’s still not working. What’s gentle for one child might not be effective for another because the maintaining variables are different. What matters: understanding what’s maintaining YOUR child’s sleep difficulty and designing an intervention that addresses that function, is sustainable, and aligns with your values. If you’ve tried gentle approaches and they haven’t worked, you’re not failing. The goal isn’t following someone else’s definition of “gentle.” The goal is finding an approach that’s effective for your child and sustainable for your family. This is the work I do at The Restful Path. To learn more about our family-centred and science-backed approach, visit therestfulpath.com (link in bio).
#Windowoftolerance Reel by @parenting_foundations - Have you ever noticed that your child's behaviour seems completely different depending on the time of day?

Maybe mornings feel manageable but by late
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@parenting_foundations
Have you ever noticed that your child’s behaviour seems completely different depending on the time of day? Maybe mornings feel manageable but by late afternoon everything starts to fall apart. The meltdowns are bigger. Transitions are harder. Bedtime suddenly becomes a battle. It can feel confusing and sometimes frustrating when behaviour shifts so dramatically. But here is something important to understand. Children’s nervous systems get tired. Throughout the day they experience stimulation, learning, emotions, transitions, noise, expectations, and social demands. By the time evening arrives, their ability to regulate those feelings is often much lower. So what can look like “bad behaviour” is often simply a tired nervous system. This is also why bedtime can become one of the hardest parts of the day. When children are overtired, their brains actually have a harder time settling down to sleep. Instead of assuming behaviour is random or intentional, try observing patterns. • When is behaviour hardest? • What happens just before the meltdown? • How does your child seem to feel? Understanding these patterns can completely change how we respond as parents. It also gives us important clues about sleep, regulation, and routines. Save this post and notice what patterns show up in your home this week. #respectfulparenting #childbehaviour #parentinginsight #sleepandbehaviour #parentingfoundations
#Windowoftolerance Reel by @habits.over.hypeparenting - After 12 hours of playing, exploring, and learning, your toddler's brain is exhausted.

What looks like stubbornness, refusal, or misbehavior is reall
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@habits.over.hypeparenting
After 12 hours of playing, exploring, and learning, your toddler’s brain is exhausted. What looks like stubbornness, refusal, or misbehavior is really just fatigue spilling out. Rushing, scolding, or forcing cooperation adds stress instead of solving anything. A calmer approach works better: Slow the environment, dim the lights, and offer gentle connection. Read a story together. Give a small choice: which pajamas first, which stuffed animal comes along. Talk softly, hug, or let them take a quiet moment to settle. These little actions help their nervous system regulate and signal that the day is over. Bedtime can become a peaceful ending instead of a struggle. Every gentle routine builds trust, safety, and the habit of winding down. Tomorrow, they’ll still play, explore, and learn — and tonight, they rest. #toddlermeltdowns #gentleparenting #toddlerbehavior #parentinghabits #parentingwithawareness
#Windowoftolerance Reel by @rookieparentroadmap - Facing developmental challenges? Here are resources and support for you!

If something has been on your mind, start with calm clarity.
Comment GUIDE �
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@rookieparentroadmap
Facing developmental challenges? Here are resources and support for you! If something has been on your mind, start with calm clarity. Comment GUIDE 💛 and I’ll send you my free newborn–6 months handout.
#Windowoftolerance Reel by @sleepreadymethod - Reassurance can't land when a child's nervous system is still in protection mode.�The body has to shift states first.�Then words finally reach them.
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@sleepreadymethod
Reassurance can’t land when a child’s nervous system is still in protection mode.�The body has to shift states first.�Then words finally reach them. #bedtimestruggles�#kidsleep�#nervoussystemregulation�#parentingtips�#gentleparenting
#Windowoftolerance Reel by @sleepybyes - This is the mistake that keeps ruining your child's bedtime.

Starting bedtime when they're already dysregulated.

When kids are overstimulated, overt
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@sleepybyes
This is the mistake that keeps ruining your child’s bedtime. Starting bedtime when they’re already dysregulated. When kids are overstimulated, overtired, or emotionally flooded, their nervous system is in fight-or-flight — not rest mode. And sleep requires safety. What dysregulated looks like: • Silly hyper energy or "zoomies" • Big emotions • Bedtime battles and negotiations • Constantly getting out of bed We think they aren't tired enough but really ir is often a nervous system that needs help settling. Bedtime gets easier when you focus on regulation before settling. Slow the pace. Dim the lights. Lower your voice. Add connection. Calm bodies fall asleep easier 🤍 #dysregulatednervoussystem #connection #bedtimeroutine #gentleparenting #gentlesleep
#Windowoftolerance Reel by @gentlewillow_ - Not behaviour charts. Not reward systems.

These are the DAILY habits that support regulated, resilient, grounded children:

1. Protein + Fat with Eve
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@gentlewillow_
Not behaviour charts. Not reward systems. These are the DAILY habits that support regulated, resilient, grounded children: 1. Protein + Fat with Every Meal Whole foods based. Blood sugar stability = emotional stability. No processed snacks, no sugar crashes, no hangry meltdowns. 2. Outside Time to Decompress & Ground Bare feet on earth. Fresh air. Unstructured movement. Nature regulates the nervous system like nothing else can. 3. Rhythm, Not Routine Predictable flow without rigidity. Children need to know what’s coming, but not be controlled by a clock. Flexibility within structure. 4. Plenty of Cuddles to Co-Regulate Your regulated nervous system helps theirs regulate. Physical connection is regulation. Hug before you correct. 5. Limited Screen Time Screens dysregulate developing brains. Period. They’re not neutral. Protect your child’s nervous system by keeping screens minimal (or eliminated). 6. Connection Before Demands Lock eyes. Check in. “I see you” before “do this.” 5 minutes of presence changes everything. 7. Regular Chiropractic Care Supporting their nervous system to handle stress, integrate development, and regulate emotions. Regular adjustments build resilience from the inside out. These aren’t “nice to do” - they’re the foundation of a regulated child. And the beautiful part? When you prioritize these daily rhythms, the “behaviour problems” often disappear. Because they were never behaviour - they were dysregulation. Which one are you focusing on today? Book your child’s nervous system check - link in bio 💕 #gisbornechiro #macedonrangesmums #regulatedkids #dailyhabits #nervousystemhealth
#Windowoftolerance Reel by @dynamicparents - Babies are not born knowing how to calm themselves. In the early stages of life, the brain is still developing the systems responsible for emotional r
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@dynamicparents
Babies are not born knowing how to calm themselves. In the early stages of life, the brain is still developing the systems responsible for emotional regulation. When a baby cries and is left without support, their stress response activates fully, increasing cortisol, heart rate, and survival signaling in the brain. Over time, a baby may cry less. But that doesn’t always mean they’ve learned to self-soothe. Sometimes it means they’ve adapted by shutting down or conserving energy. The brain isn’t learning calm. It’s learning that support isn’t guaranteed. The shift is co-regulation. When a caregiver responds consistently, the baby’s nervous system uses that external calm to build internal regulation over time. That’s how true independence is formed. Comment GREEN and I’ll send you the Red Flag → Green Flag Parenting Guide with the exact approach to build this the right way.

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