Yoga & mindfulness based tools for children & adolescents to manage anxiety & navigate stressful situations
Description
When children can't cope, challenges become stressors, and anxiety replaces anticipation. Our kids can't enjoy childhood to the fullest, and their long-term resilience is compromised. This recording offers concrete, easily taught practices to help your clients and students learn to access their inner resources, calm their anxiety, transform their relationship to stress, and thrive even when life is challenging. What anxiety is telling us: Listening to the messages of the body, Our Stress Response and harnessing its power, Agency and Personal Power: Practices to teach our minds how strong we are, Connect activity to gain perspective and orient to the present moment: Five Senses, Practice, Breathe Activity to Soothe the Nervous System: Resistance Breathing, Movement Practices to Enhance Sense of Agency and Strength: Mountain Pose Exploration, Feeling My Strength, Focus Activity to Practice Grounding and Stabilizing: Body Connection Focus Practice, Relaxation Practice to Rest and Repair: Restorative Yoga Poses, Repairing the Mind-Body Communication System: Embodiment and its relationship to anxiety reduction.
Runtime
87 minutes
Subjects
- Yoga (44)
- Anxiety (64)
- Cognitive therapy for teenagers (4)
- Cognitive therapy for children (3)
- Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (26)
Genre
Database
Alexander Street
Direct Link
Similar Films
Journey to health. Stress. Lesson 2
TedEd, How Stress Affects Your Body (Sharon Horesh Bergquist)
Anxious America
Letting Go of Stress. A Guide to Achieving Deep Relaxation
Parents, children and anxiety. Changing the family dance
Newtown Faith Leaders Unite in Tragedy
Chill. Straight talk about stress
Guiding associations
Breathwork practices to regulate energy level and arousal in children & adolescents
Motivating the anxious client. A paradoxical approach
Worried Sick
Journey to health. Stress. Lesson 2
The human dilemma
Selection interview skills. Body language & rapport in interviewing