20
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
📍 Noticed
Hunt, Gather, Parent: What Ancient Cultures Can Teach Us About Raising Children
by Michaeleen Doucleff
Sponsored
Synopsis
When Dr. Michaeleen Doucleff becomes a mother, she examines the studies behind modern parenting guidance and finds the evidence frustratingly limited and the conclusions often ineffective. Curious to learn about more effective parenting approaches, she visits a Maya village in the Yucatán ...
When Dr. Michaeleen Doucleff becomes a mother, she examines the studies behind modern parenting guidance and finds the evidence frustratingly limited and the conclusions often ineffective. Curious to learn about more effective parenting approaches, she visits a Maya village in the Yucatán Peninsula. There she encounters moms and dads who parent in a totally different way than we do—and raise extraordinarily kind, generous, and helpful children without yelling, nagging, or issuing timeouts. What else, Doucleff wonders, are Western parents missing out on?
In Hunt, Gather, Parent, Doucleff sets out with her three-year-old daughter in tow to learn and practice parenting strategies from families in three of the world’s most venerable communities: Maya families in Mexico, Inuit families above the Arctic Circle, and Hadzabe families in Tanzania. She sees that these cultures don’t have the same problems with children that Western parents do. Most strikingly, parents build a relationship with young children that is vastly different from the one many Western parents develop—it’s built on cooperation instead of control, trust instead of fear, and personalized needs instead of standardized development milestones.
Maya parents are masters at raising cooperative children. Without resorting to bribes, threats, or chore charts, Maya parents rear loyal helpers by including kids in household tasks from the time they can walk. Inuit parents have developed a remarkably effective approach for teaching children emotional intelligence. When kids cry, hit, or act out, Inuit parents respond with a calm, gentle demeanor that teaches children how to settle themselves down and think before acting. Hadzabe parents are world experts on raising confident, self-driven kids with a simple tool that protects children from stress and anxiety, so common now among American kids.
Not only does Doucleff live with families and observe their techniques firsthand, she also applies them with her own daughter, with striking results. She learns to discipline without yelling. She talks to psychologists, neuroscientists, anthropologists, and sociologists and explains how these strategies can impact children’s mental health and development. Filled with practical takeaways that parents can implement immediately, Hunt, Gather, Parent helps us rethink the ways we relate to our children, and reveals a universal parenting paradigm adapted for American families.
You May Also Like
Christmas at the North Pole: Five Holiday Stories of Magic, Laughter & Holiday Wonder for Ages 5-8
Uncle Amon
NOVASTAR (The Lost Space Treasure, Book 6): A Space Adventure For Teens (The Lost Space Treasure Series)
Rae Knightly
American History for Beginners: The Ultimate 3-in-1 Guide to United States History, Major Events, and Key Figures That Shaped America’s Future
Matt Clayton
Swimmy
Leo Lionni
Farming Life in Another World Volume 1
Kinosuke Naito
Sign Here
Claudia Lux
Classics Picks
View All
Challenger: A True Story of Heroism and Disaster on the Edge of Space
Adam Higginbotham
Empire of AI: Dreams and Nightmares in Sam Altman's OpenAI
Karen Hao
The Typewriter and the Guillotine: An American Journalist, a German Serial Killer, and Paris on the Eve of WWII
Mark Braude
Fear and Fury: The Reagan Eighties, the Bernie Goetz Shootings, and the Rebirth of White Rage
Heather Ann Thompson
The Postcard
Anne Berest
Is a River Alive?
Robert Macfarlane