Panorama Wellness Blog
Practical Tools and Tips for Navigating your Health and Wellness
Category
- ADHD 2
- AEDP 1
- Acupuncture 6
- Adult Relationships 2
- Adults 1
- Affairs 1
- Anxiety 12
- Art therapy 1
- Attachment 7
- BPD 1
- Balance 1
- Barriers 1
- Boundaries 4
- Children 8
- Christy de Jaegher 1
- Chronic Illness 1
- Clinical Counselling 2
- Communication 4
- Community Connections 5
- Concussion 1
- Conflict 1
- Coping Tools 7
- Counselling 25
- Counselling for Men 2
- Couple Counselling 9
- Culture 1
- DBT 1
- Danleigh Sokerov 1
- Depression 2
- Direct Billing 1
- EMDR 4
- Effectiveness 1
- Emotions 1
- Family 4
- Fathers Day 3
- Finances 2
- Forgiveness 1
- Friendships 1
- Gender 1
- Getting Started 1
- Grandparents 4
- Grief 2
- Gut Health 1
- Holidays 6
- Holistic Nutrition 14
- Jamie Johnson 1
- Kimberlee Bateman 1
- LGBTQ+ 1
- Mandy Purewal 1
- Marriage Counselling 12
Author
Importance of Early Attachments in Adult Relationships
No human can survive in isolation. Our childhood experiences play a major role in determining the quality of our adult life and the way we connect with others. Find out how the attachment patterns formed as a childshape your future relationships.
Connect with your spouse in the busyness of Fall
One suggestion is to be intentional in planning time together with your partner. This doesn’t have to be daily, and it doesn’t mean taking hours out of your weekly schedule. Planning small pockets of time to sit together, talk (not about work, kids, pets, or schedules) is deeply important. Spending even ten minutes daily sitting quietly together, can be significant. You might want to create a boundary that you only want to know about your partner. Sitting with, listening, touching, and empathizing with your partner (and them with you)…these are almost like micro-moments. Their effect is powerful, however.
How to Recognize Your Child’s Attachment Style
When you think about your parent-self, being curious about your child’s attachment style can be really helpful. Understanding your child’s attachment style can provide some insight – a bit of a window – into how you connect, why you might feel closer to one child than the other(s), or why clashes seem to come out of nowhere.
How Does Anxious Attachment Affect a Marriage?
If you notice that your happiness is often dependent upon your partner’s happiness, you recognize a need to be in communication with them frequently or feel panicked when they don’t return the gesture, or you notice even your behaviour changes when you feel your relationship is in any way unstable, you may have an anxious attachment style.
How Does Avoidant Attachment Affect a Marriage?
You may have found yourself wondering at times why you react the way you do, with your partner. Or conversely! You might wonder at times why your partner reacts or responds to you in ways that you struggle to understand. You know you love one another, so why do you have these “glitches” in your marriage at times?! It could be the attachment styles you each have.
Holiday gatherings can be positive for your mental health
Everyone anticipates, responds and reacts in different ways when it comes to holidays…or really, any social or family gathering. You may chalk it up to a dysfunctional family (everyone has a little dysfunction in there somewhere!) or the pressure that these occasions bring. And yet, these gatherings can be positive for your mental health. Let Ashleigh show you how!
Creating a Healthy Relationship with Your Child(ren) – Attachment Part 3
As a new or even a seasoned parent, you might wonder how to be a perfect parent and make all the right choices for your kiddo. Spoiler alert: you won’t. And that’s okay! You won’t be a perfect parent. Please know, none of us are! The great news is that the research shows that you only need to make the great, wonderful, healthy attachment and relationship choices about 30% of the time, to raise a securely attached child.
Understanding Your Relationships Part 1
Relationships are such interesting things! You need them! You need those individuals you call “your people” or “your tribe”. You have likely shared some of your best wet-your-pants laughter with them. You’ve also probably shared some darker times. Maybe your people are the ones you always go to first. Yet, they may say things or do things at times that make you react in ways that even you find hard to understand about yourself!