Tag Archives: Setting boundaries with children

Should You Be Concerned If Your Child Calls You Mate or Bruv?

I can’t remember which came first, Mate or Bruv or when mate became routine. Or when mum and dad went out the window.

FORCING Your Child to Follow YOUR Dreams Not Theirs?

I can remember thinking don’t be that parent that picks them up on everything. Let it go and they’ll get bored of it. We’ll like most parenting decisions that didn’t work as exactly planned.

A parent learning how to create a strong bond with their child

 

This question i asked myself is it such a bad thing if they do call me mate?

For some parents, hearing this familiar term of endearment directed at them feels perfectly natural. For others, it sparks an immediate concern: Am I losing my authority? Are they being disrespectful? i think i was in the latter camp.  For transparency being called bruv or mate was something that didn’t work for me but my children are getting older.

It Takes a Village to Raise a Child – but who supports you? – Cosychats

Is ‘mate’ just casual language and not disrespectful?

Is the term mate just an example of a friendly, and informal family dynamic. More a sign of a strong bond, not a worrying trend. Where my children growing up and just adapting their language to suit a more level relationship?  Were they just expressing themselves in language they were more familiar with?

I prefer to be called dad.

My Child Has Started Vaping What Should I Do?

I’ll be honest If they’d have asked me (which they didn’t) I’d have said i preferred dad to mate and bruv.  It may be traditional and possibly more formal but it’s what i am.  I am their dad, not their mate or bruv. Although when i thought about it i wanted to be more than their dad.  I did want a strong and open bond between us.  I want them to be able to talk to me about anything.  If something is going on in their lives i want them to ask me and not some chat bot or AI. If the price of them being more open was being called mate or bruv every so often then i could cope with it.

Parents helping parents

 

This was reinforced by a research

‘When a child calls you “mate,” it often symbolizes this kind of dynamic. It implies:

  • Closeness: They feel comfortable enough to use informal language.

  • Trust: They see you as someone they can confide in, not just an authority figure.

  • Affection: The term, in its common use, is affectionate and warm.

The word can be a sweet indicator that your efforts to build a strong, friendly bond are working.’



I don’t agree 100% with this.  I think the words mate and bruv have developed and spread. Is there a distinction between my children calling friends mate and bruv and them calling me the same.  It doesn’t feel like it. It feels disrespectful but may be its not as disrespectful as i originally thought.



Whats more important the word or the tone and context.
Like everything parenting the answer isn’t straight forward. I think  the intent behind the word is far more important than the word itself.
‘Hey mate, can we play a game?’—doesn’t feel disrespectful.  The tone is casual and friendly.



However, any word can be used disrespectfully if delivered with the right attitude. If children rolls their eyes, slams their bedroom door, and yells, “Leave me alone, mate!”, the issue isn’t the word “mate.” The issue is the disrespectful tone, the boundary-testing behavior, and the underlying anger.



In this scenario, you would address the disrespectful behavior and tone, not the specific vocabulary used. The conversation would be about communication boundaries in your house, not about the appropriateness of the word “mate.”



Replace dad with mate in the above scenario and i think the outcome is the same.  So context and delivery does matter.



 

Setting Boundaries

Boundaries are their to be tested and sometimes boundaries no longer apply.  As your children grow they they can do many more things and you adjust your behaviour and expectation accordingly.  Your relationship adapts but i think if you personally feel uncomfortable being called “mate,”  or ‘bruv’ finding it too informal or feeling it undermines your parental role, you are completely within your rights to ask your child to stop.

Keeping calm and communicating clearly.
The key is to communicate this clearly and calmly, without making them feel that their affection was misplaced.
You might say:
“I know you mean it in a friendly way, and I love that we have a close relationship. But I prefer to be called ‘Mom’/’Dad’. Can you try to remember that?”
For younger children, gentle correction is key: “I’m not your mate, I’m your Daddy.”
If you’re okay with it most of the time but want formal titles in public or around grandparents, you can set those situational boundaries. The most important thing is consistency in your expectations.



My boundaries
I’m their dad.  Thats my title and its pretty unique i think.  I want the recognoition and respect i think dad brings.  In my life as a parent so much is eroded and disappears but i’m still their dad and while it can be argued that its just a word and being their dad dosn’t change just because theycall me mate, for me it makes a diofference and i asked them to call me dad.




 

The Cultural Context: More Than Just a Slang Term
The interpretation of the word “mate” is deeply rooted in geography. What is considered informal in one country is the norm in another.
In the United States, for example, addressing a parent with anything other than “Mom” or “Dad” (or a formal variation like “Mother” or “Father”) might be seen as cheeky or impertinent. The parent-child dynamic in many American households often emphasizes a more defined hierarchical structure.



In contrast, within the UK, Australia, and New Zealand, “mate” is a staple of everyday language. It’s a versatile word used between friends, colleagues, and even strangers as a polite, friendly address. It is a term of endearment, fellowship, and equality.
In these cultures, it’s incredibly common for parents to refer to their children as “mate” from a very young age: “Come on, mate, time for your bath.” When a child then reciprocates this term, they are simply mimicking the language of affection and familiarity they hear every day. They are not trying to demote you from ‘parent’ to ‘peer’; they are just using the vocabulary of your shared household.

 

CosyChats is a personalised parent support Service that can provide support to parents across a wide range of parenting issues including how to bring up happy and well round children. how to allow children to follow their dreams and be happy.
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Thank you for reading this blog ‘Are my children being disrespectful?’

Good or bad parent

Am I a Good or Bad Parent?

Am I a good or bad parent? How many times have you asked yourself this? A 1,000 times or more?

CosyChats is a parenting community and this is a question parents ask themselves. We’re parents to and we’ve asked it ourselves far too many times.  At CosyChats we know parents can be hard on themselves and this creates self doubt, fear and lack of confidence, often unnecessarily.

I dislike the term bad parent. Parenting is hard and demanding. Describing someone as a bad parent feels harsh but bad parents do exist though and we need to recognise this.  If we don’t we don’t give those parents a chance to change their lives.

Why are parents so hard on themselves?

Often parents are harder on themselves than they need to be. The probability is that as your concerned enough to ask if your a good or bad parent you at least want to improve being a parent. Most likely your not a bad parent. Your also not a perfect parent but probably do suffer periods of self doubt and feeling out of your depth. I think this is more common that we think.  Parents seem to be hard on themselves because being a parent is a really important job with lots of responsibility. We don’t want to get it wrong.

help for parents

Being a parent isn’t easy and parents can be too hard on themselves not celebrating enough themselves and what we get right as parents. We know this because we’re parent too. At Cosychats we host a range of parents who want to help and support you.

It is because were parents we understand and want to help, to share our experience and knowledge in a supportive and non judgmental way. Were not perfect parents nor do we know all the answers but were here to help.

There are no perfect parents.

Now more than ever the desire to be the perfect exists and parenting is no different.  Social media drives a lot of this with influence’rs posting their perfections and not their reality.

Don’t fall into comparison or judgement trap. Don’t create a race you cannot win.  Perfect parents do not exist.  At CosyChats we interact with lots of parents and we’ve never found a perfect parent but some of the most grounded and accepting (of themselves) parents are ones who learn to accept their mistakes, learn and move on. Parenting doesn’t always allow you time to think in the moment but once those seeds of doubt have been planted they will grow.

Talking to another parent helps you to ground your ability and expectations. One of our parents sums it up as ‘most parents are just winging it anyway’. On Cosychats you’ll find lots of helpful and supportive parents who want to help and help and support you however they can.

Taking the pressure off ourselves as parents.

There is enough pressure on parents without us adding more ourselves but that’s what we do.  We set expectations and judge ourselves harshly. As parents we should look for ways to reduce stress and pressure on ourselves.  Step back and think about where your pressure comes from, friends, social media, family?  Find it and do your best to stop it.

This doesn’t mean isolating yourself its learning to manage and deal with people around you that don’t add to more pressure and expectation to your life.  Cosychats.com is a parenting community and we host parent who you can book a session with, parents who can listen and help you create your own safe space to reduce pressure.

Every parents makes mistakes and has bad days.

Children don’t come with a manual. What works one day fails the next. What works for one child may not work for another. Being a parent is a complex and challenging job and we can interpret lots of things as making us bad parents when they are just part of being a parent.

Things that don’t make us bad parents.

Bad parents do exist though.  We know that but lets not tarnish ourselves as bad parents just yet.  Lets go through things we might think make us bad parents but actually don’t.

Getting the work life balance wrong.

We provide for our families. That’s what families do and going to work can be demanding. The work life balance is unlikely to always be level and often swings but that doesn’t make us bad parents.  It makes us busy and committed parents.  However busy you are make even a small window of time for your children.  They’ll love and appreciate you for it. Read Get Your Work Life Balance Right

Not being rich.

Money does not improve us as parents.  Money can add security and pay for nice things but it never replaces time spent with children.  Forget thinking money will make you a better parent.  Quality time with your children is free.

Being inexperienced parents

Every parent has to start off somewhere and all the reading and preparation can’t compare you for the moment you become a parent.  So many parents and grandparents say they learn something new every day.  Being a parent is accepting you don’t know everything and are still learning. Children are a puzzle that changes with a new challenge every day. Learning is part of it.  Cosychats is a parenting community where the most experienced and knowledgeable parents freely admit they can still be surprised and learn new things every day.  That’s just parenting. Read Stop feelings of isolation being a parent

Making mistakes

Following on from inexperience comes learning.  Learning through making mistakes. So much of parenting is trial and error.  Finding out what works and what doesn’t.  There is no pause button and sometimes you just have to go with what you think is best and hope for the best.  Its not perfect but its how parenting works for so many families.this doesn’t make you bad parent’s.

Not being able to cope.

There is a sense of failure at not being able to cope as a parent but so many parents we speak to, including ourselves have periods of not being able to cope as a parent.  There it is, sometimes its just too much.  We want to walk outside and scream or curl up in a ball in a warm dark place.  Fade into the background.  Not be pestered.  Not have responsibility for your children.  Sometimes its just too much and we shouldn’t apologise for that.  That’s just the way it is.  Recognise your own limitations and try as best as you can to stay within them.  Not always possible but step beyond your own limitations and you put more pressure on yourself. Your not superhuman and eventually all that pressure will weight down on you.

Addictions.

Being a parent does not shield you from addictions.  Life unfortunately is not that simple.  Good parents can have addictions and addictions can be strong.  Like any addiction the solution is to get help especially when that addiction starts to impact the welfare of your children.

Recognising you own addictions.

Before you skip past this section take a moment to recognise your own addictions.  Drugs, gambling and alcohol are the obvious ones but so many addictions lie in the background unnoticed.  Recognising and being honest about your own addictions, really helps. Most people can’t let go of their phones and some spend time on their phone over time with their children.  This doesn’t necessarily make you a bad parent but it does make you a distracted one and to some degree a neglectful one.  Build time off your phone and with your family.  Be a good role model.

Read Is PHONE ADDICTION Ruining Your Family Bonding?

Being a poor role model.

Do what i say not what i do is seen through and children recognise and copy your behaviours. Bad habits can repeat through generations.  Take time to think about this and change your behaviours.  Your can’t protect your children from life but you can change or alter your behaviours to set a good example to your children.  This is in your control.

Read How a Role Model Can Empower Kids

Not getting on with your children.

Just because you don’t get on with your children doesn’t make you a bad parent. In fact the opposite may be true.  Setting guidelines and making rules isn’t going to make you popular.  Being a parent isn’t about being your child’s best friend, although if you can get  that balance right, great for you.

Read How to Create a Strong Relationship With Your Children – Cosychats

Your children don’t turn out the way you wanted.

Allowing your children space and giving them tools to choose and succeed on their own path is part of your job as  parent.  They may change career paths and i’m sure make mistakes along the way but allowing them freedom to decide and find happiness seems the right thing to do. This is a big topic and some parents disagree. Read FORCING Your Child to Follow YOUR Dreams Not Theirs?

So am I a good parent or a bad parent?

What is a bad parent really?

I think most of us find it easier to understand what a good parent is but what is a bad parent really? We thought about this a lot and think at the core of that question is the basics.

Being a bad parent is, intentionally or neglectfully;

-neglect your children’s needs,

-don’t feed or care for your children,

-don’t keep your family safe, .

-harm or neglect your children.

Conclusion – So am I a bad parent?

This blog is to re assure most parents that there not bad parents.  They’re human and full of self doubt that makes them vulnerable.  Parents make mistakes, doing a difficult job. They have occasional bad behaviours but are still good parents. Parenting can be isolating and this allows fears and doubts to grow. Taking time to talk to other parents help you recognise the imperfections in other parents and realise your own strengths and strengths as a parent.

Sure your not the perfect parent but who is? Recognising your not a bad parent really helped us move on as parents. To accept our parenting imperfections and worry less about them and spend more time with our children.

If you still consider yourself a bad parent.

There is no blame here. If you are unable to care and protect your children, you and your children need help. If this is you then please reach out and seek help. A good starting point we found is your local GP or NHS Service. 

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CosyChats.com is a community of parents. We host experienced parents who can provide Personalised Parent Support including sharing parenting knowledge and experience including parenting mistakes and mishaps. Parents who can chat, listen and be there for you. Parents who understand how difficult parenting can be.

A parenting safe space free from judgement and shame where no question is too small and not issue to big.

Why Parents Should use the CosyChats parent support service.

🛟1-2-1 Personalised Parent Support Sessions

🧷Safe Parent Support Spaces Free From Judgement and Shame

👍🏼Where No Parenting Problem Is Too Big and No Parenting Question Too Small

👩‍👦Parents Supporting Parents Offering Compassion and Understanding

🆘Practical Parenting Support Created by UK Parents

🧑🏼‍🦱Parent Mentoring from Parents with Real Lived Parenting Knowledge & Experience

💻Online Parenting Support from the comfort of your own home.

Top 10 Benefits of the CosyChats parent support service.

👍🏼Access to a wealth of Parenting Experience and Knowledge.

👍🏼A Personal Parenting Mentor for you

👍🏼Parent support via phone, Text or On-Line.

👍🏼Support Groups for key development stages

👍🏼Flexible parenting support sessions.

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Thank you for reading the blog  (am-i-a-good-or-bad-parent). We hope we have offered you re-assurance and given the confidence to make mistakes and move on without being too hard on yourself.

About the author.

This blog was written by a parent of three adopted children who does have occasional bad  behaviours and plenty of parenting self doubts but is a good parent and recognises this.

Part of adoption for us is not being able to share pictures or information on ourselves to protect our children childhood.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A scared parent being threatened by a violent child and needing parenting support

Being hit and beaten by your children – Support for Parents

Domestic violence was never part of your family. Your family home used to be a place of love, playful laughter and happiness.

Now it’s a place of fear, raised voices and you dread being hurt by your own children.

What do we mean by hitting and domestic violence?

Domestic violence sounds harsh and serious words.  Sometimes parents will say they just hits me when he or she is angry. We used the term (domestic) violence in this blog because that’s what it is and its important to recognise violence and violent behaviour and not apologise or cover it up.

Support for parents of teenagers

 

How did violence become a routine part of your life?

As a parent the moment your newborn child is placed in your arms you feel their vulnerability. In their tiny size you feel they are dependent on you in every moment, and you know that from now on, you will do whatever it takes to protect them.

Inevitably your relationship with your child becomes different at each stage of their life and eventually you will have conflict with your child.

Of course this is normal, especially during the teenage stage, but what happens when it goes from raised voices and slammed doors to pushing, shoving, bruises or worse, Violence against you? Violent children.

When you are faced with domestic violence and the only thing you want is the best outcome for your children it can be hard not to be paralysed by fear and shame. Who would want to admit they are scared of their own child? Who would want to admit their child uses violence against them? 

If you ignore it maybe it just gets even more frequent, violent and maybe they start to do it to someone else.

Try to resist it, maybe you or they get hurt.

If you argue with them, maybe they get more angry and use more violence. Can you reason with violent children.

Help for parents

 

And maybe, reporting it and asking for help labels them as a criminal, and does more harm than good.

All you wanted to do was love them to make them happy but it’s starting to feel like they hate you and everyone is miserable. Violent children need help but how do you provide that help

All you hoped was to keep them safe but now they are just hurting you – mentally, emotionally and even physically.

The parent support dilemma of violent children. 

What to do when your child uses violence against you. 

Statistics are rare on violent children whee children use aggression against their parents but it is known that forty percent of parents do not report it before it becomes more serious. Domestic violence goes un-reported every day. 

Sometimes we can hope it will pass or improve on its own, maybe we feel guilty or ashamed to admit to it and face judgement. You don’t want to be seen as that bad parent after coming so far.

But It’s vital that if you feel you, your family or your child are in danger from aggression or violent children that you seek help, immediately if you need it.

Violence from anyone should not be tolerated including violent children, even if they are your own children. 

Parents frequently don’t report what they are going through or seek help and there can be many reasons for this.  We know parents who are routinely living with violence from their children. Parents who live with the violence because they just don’t know what to do and are ashamed and afraid to ask for help.  

The motives don’t have to be as extreme as the fear of a criminal record for your child or the extreme fear they could be taken away.

There may-be a fear that confronting the problem will make your child angrier or use more violence towards you.

Often it’s as simple as not wanting to taint the relationship with your child for life, the hope is the violence will just resolve itself with the passing time or the fear of judgement from other parents, friends and family members.

As parents we strive to be the best we can be, it’s very hard to put up your hand and admit you are struggling. You might feel so guilty, or become so deeply immersed into denial about how bad things have become – that you are paralysed into inaction.

Admitting your child is using violence against you is often too big an issue to share.

Easier the parent thinks, to put up with it.

Often the best way to help your child is to recognise that you need help, and to realise you aren’t helping them or yourself if you become hurt. Violent children need help

Occasionally an abused parent may hesitate because they worry they won’t be taken seriously, or that there will be no useful help.

Parent Support – Your child becoming violent does not mean you are a bad parent.

Take some reassurance that the problem is way more common in families than may realise, and this does not make you a bad parent.

Violence against parents is reported in at least 3 percent of UK homes, but the figure is probably much higher due to historically low reporting.

Parental abuse happens to people from all walks of life and in many varied circumstances.

Whatever you do as a parent don’t suffer in silence or accept your child’s violence against you. 

There is always hope – with many things that you can do as a parent, and if applied well hopefully we can avoid things getting any more serious.

Another consideration is that parental abuse is frequently varied, complicated and may evolve. There may not be violence in the beginning. Most children aren’t born violent.

It can start with raised voices but may become emotional, coercive, include damaging property, financial, online or other controlling types of abuse – as well as sadly involving violence. 

It might also start with one form and mutate into one or more of the others.
v

Parents maybe be accepting of poor behaviour and sometimes blame themselves for not tackling the behaviour sooner not realising or accepting it is not their fault, and they are not to blame.

The reasons why children use violence and what to do when your child becomes violent. 

Trying to solve the problem of child aggression is like navigating roads without a map, or building furniture without the instructions.

As well as there being multiple reasons why it could be happening, it could also be many of them simultaneously. Being aware of these possible reasons however can only make the issues more relatable and cultivate higher levels of empathy.

Developmental and emotional factors

Teenagers are famous for their moodiness. It’s a period of life full of hormones with a growing struggle for independence. Additionally during this period a teenage brain is still developing (especially the prefrontal cortex) so they may act before they think.

Rules, limits and authority can all be reacted against explosively and unpredictably.

Family and relationship dynamics

Circumstances at home, or with the most important people in their lives, can be another factor in childhood aggression. Changing dynamics, such as family breakdown, arguments and conflict, especially with the child feeling ignored or emotionally unsupported, can also trigger conflict and violence.

When there are arguments between adults within a family home, sadly it can become normalised for children and so they may mirror this behaviour at home.

Finally, as much as teenagers love to argue – they actually need structure and boundaries. Inconsistency often just leads to more power struggles.

External pressures

Teenagers, and young people have never had quite so many pressures as nowadays.

Academic stress, social media or peer pressures, cost of living worries and all the usual difficulties that come with becoming an adult – all add to stress and may lead to outbursts of anger and aggression.

Mental health struggles

It’s not always the case that children show they are struggling with their mental health by being withdrawn or tearful. Depression, anxiety, ADHD, or trauma can sometimes show up as irritability and aggression. 

Even if your child is not suffering with mental illness then low self esteem or insecurity can also drive their behaviour.

The outbursts are the warning signs that these problems need addressing.

Useful Techniques

Although you may feel alone and helpless in the moment there are definitely things you can do to hopefully diffuse the situation. Some techniques might work better than others and results might be different day by day.

Safe Space

During incidents move both physically and conversationally away from your child.

Give them the room to vent their emotions and gradually calm down.

Being closer can just be intimidating for both of you and if things do escalate you are within physical reach.

If your child uses violence then have a plan and be near to an exit, while also trying to keep them away from things that can be damaged or things they may do damage with. 

Remove objects that can be harmful.

Safe words

If we can diffuse an incident with space then often we can also with the words we choose.

How do you feel when you are upset about something and the person dismisses you, minimises your feelings or just ignores what you have to say?

Often this just makes us feel worse, if not more angry.

Your child does not have to be factually right for you to listen attentively and acknowledge what they are saying to you.

It is then a learned skill to decide if to tell them politely how you disagree, to let things slowly fade away, or to gently change the subject. Only understanding the situation will let you judge which approach is best.

 

The calm after the storm

Arguments aren’t solved in the heat of the moment, and that’s why it’s always best to wait

Personally, I have had several disagreements with my son when the best thing to do was actually nothing.

Sometimes he would just be over-tired or stressed about something and all that arguing about it would do – is make it more strained.

Waiting hours or even sleeping on it and waiting for the next day invites true calm and lets emotions regulate. Jumping straight into a lecture is rarely productive.

This also gives you the space to think about the words you pick and to carefully pose your body language as one of the hardest parts in diffusing arguments is to not restart the argument or accidentally say something that makes it actually even worse.

Try to use I statements instead of you statements. For example;

“I felt scared when you shouted at me”, 

not blaming – “ You’re always so violent”.

Reflection

Follow this up by asking them to reflect on how they felt as it was happening but explain that their actions were unacceptable and where the boundaries should be.

Hopefully in explaining why they felt so emotional, the root causes, if any, will be revealed. Listen very carefully without jumping to judgement.

Listen carefully to what they have to say to you, carefully not dismissing or patronising them.

If you dismiss them out of hand and don’t actually discuss how they feel or their opinions they will just feel ignored, dismissed or worse, treated as a child – increasing anger and resentment.

Furthermore if you don’t debate their opinions or feelings, how can they ever alter?

Together you can then move forward and respectfully solve these issues together.

Finally, try to pivot into doing something more fun together.

The easy way to think of correcting this aggressive behaviours is:

“Calm first, connect second, correct third.”

If parents jump to punishment too quickly, the teen may shut down or become defensive. But if parents avoid addressing it at all, the aggression can escalate. Balance is key.

Documenting

Writing down the details of incidents, what happened before, and what worked can be a great idea.

It can also be a way for you to realise how serious the problem is, and if it’s getting worse.

Looking outwards.

Share your feelings. Have an outlet to share your emotions and for someone else to be objective. Parents often don’t want to admit behaviours and violence is getting worse. 

This can give you the breathing room to cope, and a new perspective.

Of course this also applies equally to your child, they too many benefit from talking about it to friends, a different relative, support group, or a professional as part of therapy.

It’s also important to look after yourself, emotionally, physically and mentally.

Take time out to relax and shift focus from the issue.

Parent Support – When should you contact the Police?

What can the Police do.?

Cosychats offers a parenting support service that draws upon the experience of other parents.  A parent mentorship to help and support other parents but our service is remote and on-line. We are not with you. We don’t live your life but we know as parents sometimes you need to put yourself first to support your child.  If your child is becoming violent they need help.  Contacting the police can provide that help.

Parents are often reluctant to involve the police for fear of retribution and demonising/criminalising the child. As a parent support group our advice would be to talk to the police, share your concerns and see how the police can help you and your child.

If you are in danger or fearful do not hesitate to contact the police.

Conclusion

Parenting Support – Don’t Suffer in silence, there is always help and people who can help.

Sadly, aggression from children towards their parents is not rare, and a lot of it goes hidden.

It does not make you a failure as a parent  and it happens to all sorts of families from every background.

There are things you can do to work on the problem, but seeking help is a sign of strength not weakness.

If you ever feel in danger it is very important to get help, even if this means contacting the police. Don’t assume that this will always result in the worst outcome for your family. They are there to help.

Doing this is how you protect you and your family and stop things getting worse.

If you want to talk about this or any other parenting issues, feel free to contact CosyChats.

CosyChats is a Parent Support Service for Parents.

We support personalised parent support. CosyChats offers a parenting safe space free from judgement and shame where no question is too small and not issue to big.

Why Parents Should use the CosyChats parent support service.

🛟1-2-1 Personalised Parent Support Sessions

🧷Safe Parent Support Spaces Free From Judgement and Shame

👍🏼Where No Parenting Problem Is Too Big and No Parenting Question Too Small

👩‍👦Parents Supporting Parents Offering Compassion and Understanding

🆘Practical Parenting Support Created by UK Parents

🧑🏼‍🦱Parent Mentoring from Parents with Real Lived Parenting Knowledge & Experience

💻Online Parenting Support from the comfort of your own home.

Top 10 Benefits of the CosyChats parent support service.

👍🏼Access to a wealth of Parenting Experience and Knowledge.

👍🏼A Personal Parenting Mentor for you

👍🏼Parent support via phone, Text or On-Line.

👍🏼Parent Support Groups for key development stages

👍🏼Flexible parenting support sessions.

👍🏼Online parenting support at a reasonable cost.

👍🏼Parent support sessions can be gifted to a parent who needs parental support.

👍🏼Parent to parent support group harness wide parenting experience.

👍🏼Parenting support services are booked in 10 minute slots.

👍🏼Parenting support from real parents who want to help.

Call to action. – Parents supporting parents.

If you hear or see violence see how you can help.
Its far too easy to think everything must be ok, the parent has it all under control but if you have concerns don’t leave them.  Follow up up your concerns.  Offer help and parenting support.  Were all parents and parenting is hard enough. Sometimes we need support but don’t ask for it.

 

If you see someone who needs help. Help them.  That maybe a simple acknowledgement of i’m here if you need me to more practical or direct help but parenting support and help can be so beneficial.

Being parents isn’t easy and there are more and more traps and pitfalls to fall into.  That’s why we set up CosyChats com to help support and guide parents.

CosyChats is a personalised parent support Service that can provide support to parents across a wide range of parenting issues including how to educate your children and give them the best and most effective life skills.

If you need help being a parent.  Raising happy and well rounded children. We’re here for you offering practical and emotional support.  Parenting knowledge and experience, all in a judgment free space.

More Parent Support From CosyChats

The Loneliness of Being a Parent That Nobody Tells You About

Why Do We FIGHT So Much NOW That We Have KIDS?

Is PHONE ADDICTION Ruining Your Family Bonding?

Thank you for reading this blog (Parenting support for parents who are hit by their kids).

CosyChats is a personalised parent support Service that can provide support to parents across a wide range of parenting issues including how to connect with your children and spend quality time together.  How to leave your parenting guilt at the door and build a solid and happy relationship with your children.

https://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/family/children-and-young-people/protecting-children/if-you-report-child-abuse-to-the-police/