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​News

Q&A with author, Sue Lawrence, PhD

25/6/2016

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Summertime Publishing's Editor-in-Chief, Jane Dean talks to author Sue Lawrence about her incredible book, Do you still have cleavage with just one breast?
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Do you still have cleavage with just one breast?
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Summertime author receives an honorary mention in the 2016 Purple Dragonfly Award

18/6/2016

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B at Home
Congratulations to Summertime author Valérie Besanceney for receiving an honorary mention for her book, B at Home, Emma Moves Again in the 2016 Purple Dragonfly Awards for children's books.

See press release.
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Top 10 ways to help your students say goodbye

11/6/2016

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During this time of year many of students are faced with a move. For some it is yet another move of many. Teachers and administrators of international schools can help students say goodbye in meaningful ways that help them truly fare well during a transition. Summertime author, Valérie Besanceney, sets out ten points to help with the transition process.
 
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Valérie Besanceney is a quintessential third culture kid (TCK) turned adult. Originally Dutch, Valérie has changed countries a total of 16 times (including five times as a child). Today Valérie has made a home, together with her American husband and their two daughters, in Switzerland. She teaches Year 3 at an international school, where she creates a preparatory Moving Booklet for each student who relocates. The real-life inspiration for the teddy bear character in B at Home today hangs out on Valérie’s bed (although he has since been sewn onto another bear to save what was left of him). If you also feel like home is somewhere in between here and everywhere, or if you would like to learn more about TCKs, please visit Valérie at valeriebesanceney.com.
Valerie Bescaneney
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Wonder why your kids push your buttons?  Here’s why

4/6/2016

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By Summertime author, Douglas W. Ota

Have you ever wondered how your kids know exactly what to do to drive you nuts? As if they know precisely where your ‘buttons’ are, and how to find the ones marked ‘irritate’ or ‘explode’? In my work as a psychologist, I frequently joke with parents about their dismay at not receiving a user manual at each child’s delivery.
 
As with most ailments in life, parents derive assurance from the realization they are not alone in their occasional sense of being utterly, well, lost. Each of us has been there. (Never mind the technicality that, since we were lost, we can’t exactly say where ‘there’ was.)
 
Probe a bit deeper, though, and you realize the sharing of parental woes with other woeing (to coin a new word) parents doesn’t remedy the problem. You see, parental discomfort at feeling utterly lost – when examined more closely – gets trumped by a far more invidious anxiety, namely the vague sense that each of our children did receive a user manual.
 
A manual about us.
As parents.
 
How to Make Mom Mad in Minutes.
Delve for Dad’s Demons to Double His Decibels.
 
A comprehensive survey of the psychological literature has confirmed what I suspected, namely that no parent anywhere in the world has – yet – successfully located a hard copy of the suspected manual. Yet the belief persists that children know exactly how to drive us nuts, and they’re getting their information from somewhere.
 
I have news for you. 
And the news isn’t good.
Brace yourself.
 
Your kids are getting their information directly from you.
 
If you’re a factual, linear type, you’re going to have a very hard time accepting what I’m about to say, because I cannot explain in grams or Newtons exactly how any of these forces get transmitted. Nonetheless, even in your immediate circle of acquaintances, you may have observed:

  • the mother who devotes all her energies to her children, but the children are unruly, rejecting her attempts to help with homework, until she finally explodes and stays in bed with a migraine the next morning;
  • the father who comes home from work late and exhausted, only to feel ignored and unappreciated by his kids, so much so that he feels like staying at work late the next day, too;
  • the two parents who wanted to raise an upbeat and positive family, only to have a child who abuses them verbally and occasionally even physically. 

What do these situations have in common? The kids ‘read’ something that was missing or injured inside their parents, and attack it. What the above hypothetical children ‘read’ and attack in the above hypothetical parents is:

  • the mother’s frustration with her own personal development, which she attempts to avoid by focusing on being an extraordinary parent;
  • the father’s own painful history due to the poverty in his family of origin, which exposed him to deprivations he swore his children would never have to suffer;
  • the parents’ similar histories with alcoholic fathers who were negative and nasty, and their resulting wish to banish negative affect from their own home. 

Parents often experience difficult moments with a child as that child’s willful and even demonic attempt to jab where it hurts most. But children don’t attack these wounded parental places because of a misguided desire to be nasty. (Granted, this is how it can feel.)
 
The real reason children push our buttons is because they long for us to heal. Our children want us to become whole.
 
None of this occurs rationally. But things don’t have to be rational to be true. Rationality is but one star in the gleaming heavens of universal truths. Just put yourself in your children’s shoes to understand why they want you to be whole. Who wouldn’t feel safer in the hands of adults who feel whole? Who wouldn’t prefer a universe that makes sense?
 
Many years ago my first child was an angry young boy. Obstreperous. Indignant. Argumentative. By that time in my early career, I had learned a lot from books, and a little from Life. Even then, I sensed I had the most to learn from my own children. In his angry behavior, I sensed a message addressed from my oldest to me, one that only I could decipher, if I dared.
 
Dad, why are you down? What’s wrong with you? I want you to find out and fix it. I want a father who isn’t depressed. I want a father who sees the joy in me, in himself, in his family, in Life, in everything. Find out what it is, Dad!  AND DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!
 
I heeded that call. I started the journey to heal myself, a long, painful journey that led to a place called Acceptance. It wasn’t easy. And the road hasn’t been straight. But it positioned me to be able to repeat to other parents what my children have repeatedly taught me – and something that books could only allude to.
 
Think of this article the next time your kids push your buttons. And – as strange as this might sound – try to enjoy it. Remember your children are trying to make you whole.


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Doug Ota grew up between cultures. A Japanese father, an English mother, and their divisive divorce started Ota on a career wondering where he – and others – belong.

He studied philosophy at Princeton University, USA, and psychology at the University of Leiden, Netherlands. For many years, he was a counselor in international education. He now works in private practice with children and adolescents, individuals, couples, and families.
 
Doug consults with international organizations on how to build programs to address the challenges and opportunities of mobility (www.safepassage.nl). He is the author of Safe Passage: What Mobility Does to People and What International Schools Should Do About It.
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  • About Us
    • Meet the Team
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    • Terms and Conditions
  • Services and Fees
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    • Selected Services
  • Our Bookshelf
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