Northwest Arkansas Therapy

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Northwest Arkansas Therapy You are uniquely yourself to be yourself. Welcome to Northwest Arkansas Therapy, formally, Northwest Arkansas Therapy: Hope, Growth Discovery.

I put your family’s health and well being first. If you live in the Northwest Arkansas metro area, you can call to make an appointment. Stop by the office for a consultation. I am centrally located just off 49 on Business 71 in Lowell. I provide mental healthcare information for families like yours. I strive to offer the best service to keep you and your family as healthy and safe as possible. I provide individual and family therapy. I provide therapy for children, adolescents, adults, and families who are struggling with a variety of issues including anxiety, depression, anger, family conflicts, divorce, adoption adjustments, and multiculturalism.

https://www.additudemag.com/slideshows/jobs-for-people-with-adhd/
06/08/2025

https://www.additudemag.com/slideshows/jobs-for-people-with-adhd/

What's a good job for a person with ADHD? The answer almost always hinges on the individual's passions. That said, the creative, engaging, interactive professions on this list make the most of ADD attributes like empathy, energy, enthusiasm, and hyperfocus under pressure.

30/07/2025

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16/07/2025

EMOTIONS class 101

😀= happy.
🥲= sad
😩= very sad
😡= mad

By Monica YearwoodWhy do successful women attract narcissist or manipulative personalities? Narcissists and manipulative...
16/07/2025

By Monica Yearwood

Why do successful women attract narcissist or manipulative personalities? Narcissists and manipulative personalities are predatorial and target people based on what they have and what the narcissist wants from them. A narcissist is motivated to obtain what they want. They may want your status, contacts, or to maintain a certain image of partnering with you. There are some narcissists who enjoy conquering, and destroying a strong woman. So why they target you as largely based on what they want from you, and what they want from you can be different based on the narcissist and who they’re targeting. They may target different people for different reasons. Successful high achieving women have shared traits, such as ambition, success, status, influence. There may be some individualized characteristics between high achieving women, such as their motives for success, and their insecurities. Most people do you have insecurities, regardless of their success levels which are narcissist, will study and learn to exploit. unfortunately, be too many women who were successful, and lost most of it because of the relationship with a narcissist . I also speak to a lot of women who get into another relationship with a narcissist after her first one. This is because of the way that trauma affects a person, especially when it is not resolved and how it reduces your self-esteem and causes nervous system dysregulation. It can also be because if she’s a woman who is reached a certain level of power or exposure to narcissists will also increase, and if she doesn’t learn the tactics of many narcissists, and her own traits (most of them positive) she may not know what to look for when dating. whether it’s your first time in a relationship with a narcissist or your third, the need for healing cannot be under emphasized .

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16/07/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/16qv4in782/?mibextid=wwXIfr

They didn’t discard you because you weren’t enough

They discarded you because you wouldn't play their game anymore, because you stopped giving them what they needed, and you started standing up for yourself against their disrespectful behaviours.

When you finally saw through them, and when you stopped falling for their manipulation, you threatened their entire delusion of who they thought they were.

When you started to set boundaries to protect your own wellbeing, they saw that as a betrayal and an attack on them.

When you stopped feeding their ego and their insatiable need for validation; they needed to find someone else to applaud them.

Chances are they already had a new supply; because they wouldn’t have left if they didn’t have someone else to turn to.

And when they knew that you finally saw the truth about who they really were and what they had really been doing to you, you were no longer useful to them.

So after you gave them your love, time, money, and energy, and once they had drained you of everything you had, they moved on.

Their discard wasn’t about you or your worth, it was about their addiction to control and taking whatever they could in order to feel powerful and validated without having to be held accountable for it.

Their discard and the way they handled you was a reflection of who they really are, and not a rejection of you.

~ Mark Smith
The Super Powered Mind

21/04/2025

Back in the 1960s, Harvard graduate student Jean Briggs made an astonishing discovery about the nature of human anger. At the age of 34, she lived for 17 months above the Arctic Circle, in the harsh tundra, with an Inuit family who agreed to "adopt" her so she could observe their way of life.

With no roads, no heating systems, and no stores nearby, Briggs was immersed in a culture radically different from her own. One of the first things she noticed? Inuit adults never got angry.

Not when someone spilled boiling water inside an igloo.
Not when a fishing line—handwoven for days—broke on its first use.
No yelling. No frustration. Just quiet acceptance and action.

🧠 And Briggs? She felt like an emotional toddler.

Despite her best efforts, she was more reactive, impulsive, and emotional. Which raised a critical question: How do the Inuit raise children to be so emotionally composed?

👶 The Stone Game That Teaches Empathy

One day, Briggs witnessed a young Inuit mother interacting with her angry two-year-old son. The boy was furious. Instead of scolding him, the mother handed him a stone and said gently:
"Hit me with it. Come on, hit me again. Harder."

When the child threw the stone, the mother covered her face and pretended to cry:
"Oww! That really hurt!"

To outsiders, it may seem strange. But in Inuit culture, this is a profound teaching moment. These play-acted consequences are a gentle way to teach children empathy and the impact of their actions — without shame or punishment.

🧸 The Golden Rule: Never Yell at a Small Child

Inuit parents believe yelling at a young child is both ineffective and humiliating—for the adult. It teaches the child that anger is the solution to frustration.

Instead, they model calmness and emotional regulation. When a child misbehaves, hits, or throws a tantrum, there's no punishment. The parent waits until the child is calm — then acts out the situation later in a playful skit, asking questions like:
"Why didn’t you hit me harder?"
"Did it feel good to make me cry?"

🧠 Why it works?
Because kids learn best through play and observation. They mirror our behavior. And when we react with patience, they internalize that response — literally shaping their developing brains.

⚖️ These theatrical roleplays give kids tools to manage big emotions — long before they need them. It's emotional training when they’re calm… so they’re ready when they’re not.

👁️‍🗨️ What we do in those small moments forms how our children will handle their biggest ones.

Even as adults, controlling anger is difficult. But if we practice emotional control when we're calm, we're far more likely to succeed in stressful situations. And the best time to start teaching that skill? In childhood.

So maybe we don’t need timeouts, threats, or yelling.
Maybe we just need to tell a story, play a part, and hold space for our children to grow into themselves — with gentleness, empathy, and example.

08/04/2025
31/03/2025

Address

AR

Opening Hours

Monday 10:00 - 19:00
Tuesday 10:00 - 19:00
Wednesday 10:00 - 19:00
Thursday 10:00 - 19:00

Telephone

+14793667920

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