SMARTT Parenting

SMARTT Parenting Dr. Natasha Khazanov is a coach and clinical psychologist with the expertise in brain development. Located in San Francisco. Easier said than done.

You are visiting her parenting coaching program page, called SMARTT Parenting. Hi I'm Dr. Natasha Khazanov, parenting coach and clinical psychologist. I am coaching parents, particularly moms, on how to raise their emotional intelligence, so that they can pass down these traits to their children. SMARTT parenting program includes building up a growth mindset, resilience, creativity, critical thinking, and emotional intelligence in parents and in their kids. SMARTT Parenting is designed to help loving and attuned mothers avoid making parenting mistakes by incorporating evidence-based techniques informed by neuroscience, as well as ancient contemplative practices and meditation techniques. Mothers learn how to shape their children’s minds for resilience, competence, success and happiness. In parenting it is important to understand that our kids are born with a very underdeveloped brain (it takes the human brain about 20-25 years to mature). Babies don’t know how to think - they only know how to feel. One of the most important factors in parenting is parenting by modeling. Being a parent myself I know how hard it is to be relaxed when you are challenged and unsure how to handle emotionally charged situations. It is hard to model being calm and happy when you are pushed into so many different directions. When I was a young mother in the 70-ies there was very little help available. There was no such thing as parenting coaching, and very little was known about the brain and the mind. Starting in the 80-ies with the advent of new brain imaging technologies neuroscience experienced a revolution, and today the field of psychology and child development has many answers to the questions that many parents may be asking. I find it empowering to know what the brain does, how the mind is developing, and I greatly enjoy helping good mothers be great by incorporating this knowledge into effective parenting practices. Using research in the field of interpersonal neurobiology, we now know that we can affect another’s mind and brain. Our brain is equipped and biologically wired to pick up other people’s feelings. When the mother is in the “green zone” or relaxed state, the child is more likely to feel relaxed. When the mother is stressed out, the child picks this up as well. Evolution has wired our brains to be in two kind of states, reactive (fight or flight response) or receptive (relaxation response). When the brain is in a reactive state, the "red zone," often we feel overwhelmed by our feelings, and it is very hard to think clearly and make good decisions. The brain is in the "fight, flight, freeze, or faint" state, making reasoning abilities hard to exercise. When the brain is in a receptive state, the "green zone," one is feeling calm, relaxed and resourceful. Would it be nice to learn to be in the "green zone" most of the time? What evolution did not teach our brains is how to "pause and plan," or be in the "yellow zone." Pausing and planning is a sophisticated function that the brain is highly capable of learning due to the prefrontal cortex. Learning to be in the "yellow zone" by following the SMARTT Checklist, mothers learn how to integrate all three parts of the brain, achieving a "whole brain state" and bringing themselves into the "green zone". As a result, mothers will feel more resilient, competent, and trusting of themselves and model the SMARTT way to their children. The SMARTT Parenting Model lays out the steps mothers can follow to learn to parent from the inside out.

12/22/2022

I know the gift all children want most — we all want it — but it’s a hard one to remember. I’ve forgotten it for days, even weeks at a time. Sometimes it takes a desperate situation to remind me. Once, I remembered it when my independent ten-year-old went through a phase in which she … Con...

12/11/2022

Absolutely, and particularly if you are giving your energy to caring for young children. Thanks again, Nedra Tawwab 💚

Profound and true
10/02/2022

Profound and true

YESSSSSSSS!! 💥💥💥

Adam Grant

09/15/2022

The words we use with our children matter, especially in trying moments. They convey perceptions about our child and the situation at hand. For example, if our infant or toddler tests us by hitting and we say, “I won’t let you hit” (with all the calm and confidence we can muster), while gently...

We all need a shot of resilience in our arms. Here is a free source
03/28/2022

We all need a shot of resilience in our arms. Here is a free source

Resilience For These Challenging Times

From Hardship to Hope - it was my honor to be a part of this great panel.
01/14/2022

From Hardship to Hope - it was my honor to be a part of this great panel.

Today is and we invite you to watch this amazing webinar Elsa Chahin and Pia Dögl had with experts Dr. Holly Elissa Bruno Dr. Natasha Khazanov about trauma and how to grow beyond hardships.

Click on this link to watch: https://www.facebook.com/piklerusa/videos/2633445986968465

Amazing neuroscience supporting what SMARTT moms know: the profound love connection.
05/07/2021

Amazing neuroscience supporting what SMARTT moms know: the profound love connection.

An infant's brain and a mother's love are both remarkable enough phenomena, without the need for embellishment.

Very SMARTT
04/27/2021

Very SMARTT

In the twenty years that I’ve facilitated parent-toddler groups, I’ve known a handful of toddlers that I’d consider to be socially gifted. These children seem to have an innate knack for engaging with peers effectively and appropriately from the get-go. For the majority of toddlers, however, m...

SMARTT curated and approved
04/20/2021

SMARTT curated and approved

In this episode: The mother of a 3-year-old feels she has very little control over some of her son’s unpleasant behavior, and she’s struggling to come up with appropriate responses. In her email to Janet, she cites examples like screaming, running away when she’s trying to dress him, and throw...

02/27/2021

Early childhood experts and Pikler® Professional candidates share their voices with Elsa Chahin on why they keep coming back to learn more. Filmed in the gar...

Helpful insights worth sharing.
02/27/2021

Helpful insights worth sharing.

From the outside looking in, roughhousing appears, well—rough! But kids experience many benefits that come from rough play. Follow these 5 tips to ensure the roughhousing stays playful, fun, and harmless!

02/17/2021

Today is Trivia Tuesday. We want to ask you: What is Respectful Parenting?

"Respectful Parenting is a way of raising children with respect, love, and kindness.

When we decide to parent with respect, we choose to live a lifestyle that transforms and that demands a lot of presence and effort from us.

Respectful Parenting implies that we change on a personal level. It transforms the way we see and live life. It changes the way we share and communicate with those around us. It involves reflecting, questioning ourselves, and sometimes realizing that we must live with compassion and self-love.

Raising with respect does not ensure that children will behave according to our expectations; it means that they will feel loved, respected, validated and that they will be able to make wise decisions. We model what it means to live with respect and for that, respecting ourselves is vital.

Parenting with respect means pausing to listen to what children need and what they think. It means accompanying them to reflect and sometimes to be silent so they can explore and play.”

—Sary Montero, Administrative Attaché Pikler/Lóczy USA, Founder of Peaceful Parenting Consulting

We would love to read your answers, so please leave them in the comment section. There is no right or wrong answer; on Tuesdays, we play, connect and share.

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