How to Calm an Overstimulated Child at Home (What Actually Works)

How to Calm an Overstimulated Child at Home (What Actually Works)

If your child won’t calm down at home, it’s often not a behavior issue—it could simply be overstimulation. When a child’s nervous system is overloaded, their body stays in a heightened state. That’s why typical calming strategies can feel ineffective or even make things worse. Below are the most common questions parents ask about how…

Why Your Child’s Nervous System Isn’t Calming Down (And What It Actually Needs)
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Why Your Child’s Nervous System Isn’t Calming Down (And What It Actually Needs)

If your child can’t sit still, won’t calm down, or seems to get more worked up the more you try to help — this isn’t a behavior problem. It’s a nervous system problem. In this post, you’ll learn:• Why kids don’t just “calm down” on command• The different types of sensory input their bodies are…

Why Snowfall Calms Kids: The Science Behind Slow Visuals and Emotional Regulation

Why Snowfall Calms Kids: The Science Behind Slow Visuals and Emotional Regulation

You know that moment when a kid spots the first snowfall and suddenly…everything slows down? The fidgeting stops, the breathing evens out, and they just watch. Snow has that effect—it quietly settles the whole system. As it turns out, that calm isn’t just a feeling. It’s rooted in how the brain responds. Today, we’re digging…

My No-Prep Mindfulness Routine for the Last 5 Minutes of Class
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My No-Prep Mindfulness Routine for the Last 5 Minutes of Class

Here’s a universal truth: The last five minutes of class are dangerous. The lesson is done, pencils are half-sharpened, someone is already hovering near the door like it’s Black Friday at Best Buy, and you can feel the chaos creeping in. For years, I let those minutes slip away. I let them fill with chatter,…

Your Child’s New Calm-Down Routine: An Animal Meditation That Actually Works 🐢🦉
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Your Child’s New Calm-Down Routine: An Animal Meditation That Actually Works 🐢🦉

Let’s be honest: when kids are wound up after recess or sugar visits the bloodstream, it can feel like herding caffeinated squirrels. You’ve tried deep breaths, time-outs, a certain look that means business—and sometimes, nothing works. But there’s one small, repeatable tool that surprisingly does: a guided meditation for kids—especially one involving animal pals. Why…