Grow up Becoming the parent your kids deserve

Gary John Bishop

Book - 2023

"We're never going to measure up to the 'perfect parent' model we've built up in our heads: a Frankenstein version of mom and dad cobbled together from our childhoods, our parents, cultural ideals, social media, and everything in between. We want to be good parents, but our pasts hold us back. If you're thinking: 'I can't be a good parent because I had a shitty childhood, bad parents, or a traumatic experience,' stop! Let go of what came before and start taking action in the present to be the person that nurtures their child from a place of love, forgiveness, and integrity. By doing so, you are modeling and equipping your kids to confidently face the world and thrive"--

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2nd Floor New Shelf 649.1/Bishop (NEW SHELF) Due Jun 20, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Self-help publications
Published
New York, NY : Harper One, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Gary John Bishop (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
159 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780063215566
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Bishop (Unfu*k Yourself) doesn't pull any punches (or stint on colorful language) in this tough-talking guide to working through personal trauma to become a better parent. According to Bishop, "most people get stuck in the backwash of their past traumas and dogmas which then become the framework for how we raise our children"; however, since no one is "a direct product of past," but rather an "expression of what you have come to believe as true about all that past," those frameworks can be changed. Bishop's advice involves taking a long, hard look at one's childhood, letting go of blame ("the catalyst for keeping you tied to what has been"), and offering compassion to one's parents. Elsewhere, he discusses the importance of passing down values of love, forgiveness, and integrity by living them out. Bishop successfully distills his wisdom into incisive and punchy lessons ("Drawing a straight line between the pain of then and the life you have now is over. It has to be or the life you have will always be tainted by the one you believe you had"), and those who don't mind his salty prose ("Dude, someone shit in the electric cooking pot of your life") will learn plenty. Parents seeking a new approach should give this a go. (Sept.)

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