Learning Intervention Specialist Natalie Nicholls from PLECS Learning shares how understanding brain development and executive functioning can improve children’s behaviour and create calmer family routines.
January is a great time to take stock of what is working and what isn’t in your life. It gives you a chance to pause and reevaluate, but it doesn’t have to be a complete life do-over.
The New Year will be different…right? Do you have those thoughts at the start of each year, only to have them again 12 months later?
We all need rhythm. We all need a reset from time to time. But is the liturgical calendar essential for Christians?
This year, while everyone around me is setting big goals, I feel a need to slow down into the new year, to take an unhurried approach.
If the passing year leaves you with a sense of disquiet or unhappiness, ask what is needed to make sure this one will be different.
For those in leadership, the summer break is a great chance to ask yourself – how clear are you on your intention for the coming year?
A quick search suggests that most New Years’ Resolutions last about a month – so if you struggle to keep the goals you set you are not alone!
As the year draws to a close and we think towards the year ahead, I want to raise two questions found in the book of Genesis, chapter 16.
As the year draws to a close, it can be worthwhile spending some time to celebrate the year past and all your gains and achievements.