Monthly Archives: September 2014

Changing Hands Bookstore – October 22, 2014

Changing Hands BookstoreI’m tickled to have been invited to present at the popular Changing Hands Bookstore in Tempe, AZ this fall.

Join me in the Phoenix, AZ area October 22nd just as students are receiving report cards and parents are looking for assistance.

I’ll give a presentation, facilitate a discussion, and sign books. Sweet treats will be offered too!

Hope to see you then!

Wednesday, October 22, 2014
7:00 PM
Changing Hands Bookstore
6428 S McClintock Dr
Tempe, AZ 85283

For more info, read the post on the Changing Hands website.
Phone: 480.730.0205

Presenter Colorado School Counselor Association Annual Conference

Wednesday, November 5 – Friday, November 7, 2014
Presenter at
Colorado School Counselor Association Annual Conference
Loveland, CO

Colorado School Counselor

Karyn Rashoff will be presenting at the 2014 Colorado School Counselor Association Annual Conference. The CSCA Conference is an exciting annual event that brings together hundreds of school counselors for two and a half days of education, networking and fun! The conference offers the opportunity to reach out to school professionals from across Colorado.

To learn more, visit the organization’s website www.coloradoschoolcounselor.org.

 

Are Your Emotions Contagious?

TIP SHEET #4: Are Your Emotions Contagious?

Dorothy Foltz-Gray and Tony Schwartz
from
Parents in Highschooland: Helping Students Succeed in the Critical Years

1.    Be aware of the temperament and tone of your home. “Emotional contagion” affects all human relationships, from marriage to business to professional sports. Try to under-react to your teen and not match his or her high emotional state. Try to be business-like.

2.    Sometimes, creating distance can be most effective. Step back and think about the reasons for your teen’s distress and the best ways to cope with it. If you know the cause, you’ll have a better idea of what you can do to help, whether it’s leaving her alone for a few hours or making yourself available so she can vent.

3.    We don’t realize we’re being influenced by others’ emotions. Interestingly, negative emotions are usually more catching than positive ones. One of the functions of sadness is to ask for help from others. Try to be tender and more attentive to your teen, even though he might be trying your patience at the end of a long day.

4.    Be your family’s CEO (Chief Energy Officer). Don’t allow yourself to be overly influenced by a destructive kind of energy and then unconsciously communicate that energy to others in your home. Parents are the leaders in the home and impact the family by their moods. Negative emotions spread fast and they’re highly toxic.

5.    We can’t check our emotions at the door when we walk in the house. It pays to be aware of what you’re feeling at any given moment. You can’t change what you don’t notice. You can’t fake “positive” for long, so genuine matters.

6.    Embrace realistic optimism. Have the faith to tell the most hopeful and empowering story possible, but also be willing to confront difficult facts as they arise with your teen and deal with them directly.

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