How To Deal

Attachment Nerd
How To Deal
Nieuwste aflevering

13 afleveringen

  • How To Deal

    How to Deal with Clutter & Be a More Present Parent | With Katy Wells

    15-03-2026 | 36 Min.
    How to Deal with Clutter (ft. Katy Joy Wells)
    Episode Summary
    Feeling overwhelmed by your home — and how it's affecting your ability to show up for your kids? In this episode, Eli welcomes holistic decluttering expert and author Katy Joy Wells to explore the surprising connection between a cluttered home and your capacity to be a present, secure parent. Katy breaks down the four types of clutter, explains why popular decluttering methods keep failing, and gives you two practical habits you can start today — no weekend overhaul required.
    Key Takeaways
    Clutter isn't just about stuff. It steals your time, energy, and ability to connect with your kids — and there's real science behind it.
    There are 4 types of clutter — superficial, scarcity, sentimental, and identity — and each requires a different strategy. Applying the wrong tool to the wrong type is why most methods fail.
    We don't just buy things — we buy stories, emotions, and beliefs about ourselves. Understanding what's driving your accumulation is the key to stopping the cycle.
    The "good enough home" (inspired by D.W. Winnicott's attachment concept) gives you permission to release shame and focus on what actually matters.
    Mess is expected. Clutter is optional. Neither says anything about your worth as a parent.
    Start with two habits: Set up a permanent donation station, and practice daily "clutter audits" built into your existing routine.
    Action creates motivation — not the other way around. You don't need to feel motivated to start; you just need to start.

    About the Guest
    Katy Joy Wells is a holistic decluttering expert, host of The Maximized Minimalist Podcast (5M+ listens, Top 50 globally), and author of Making Home Your Happy Place: A Real-Life Guide to Decluttering Without the Overwhelm. Through her online programs and podcast, she has helped hundreds of thousands of families transform chaotic homes into calm, clutter-free spaces by getting to the emotional root of the problem.
    🌐 Website: katyjoywells.com
    📺 YouTube: youtube.com/@katyjoywells
    📸 Instagram: @katyjoywells

    Resources Mentioned
    📖 Making Home Your Happy Place by Katy Joy Wells — Available everywhere books are sold
    🎙️ The Maximized Minimalist Podcast — Katy's podcast with 350+ episodes
    🧠 UCLA Clutter & Cortisol Study (PubMed) — Research showing women in cluttered homes have elevated cortisol levels and adverse health profiles
    📚 D.W. Winnicott's "Good Enough Mother" concept — The attachment theory concept referenced in episode
    🏠 Katy's Free Declutter Guide — Get started simplifying today

    Learn more about secure parenting:
    https://www.attachmentnerd.com/secure-parenting-program
    Connect with Eli:
    Website: https://www.attachmentnerd.com/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/attachmentnerd/
    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@attachmentnerd

    Music by Gold Child: https://www.goldchildmusic.com/
    Mentioned in this episode:
    009 - Intro
  • How To Deal

    How To Prepare Your Kids for a World Full of Cults | With NXIVM Whistleblowers Sarah & Nippy

    06-03-2026 | 39 Min.
    How to Prepare Your Kids for a World Full of Cults
    Episode Summary
    In this powerful episode, host Eli welcomes NXIVM whistleblowers and A Little Bit Culty podcast hosts Sarah Edmondson and Anthony "Nippy" Ames to talk about what cultic abuse actually looks like — and more importantly, what parents can do to help protect their children from it. Together, they explore the psychology of manipulation, the red flags every parent should know, and how raising kids who can question authority may be one of the greatest protective gifts we can give them.
    Key Takeaways
    Cults start with inspiration, not coercion. The first step into a high-control group almost always feels meaningful — like joining a movement or community that's changing the world.
    It can happen to anyone. Cults often recruit high-achieving, charismatic individuals — not just vulnerable or uneducated people. Intelligence is not a shield.
    The real red flag isn't the group — it's the behavior. Look for: inability to question authority, isolation from family/friends, love bombing, "us vs. them" thinking, and a "one true way" belief system.
    Teach kids to spot tricky behaviors, not tricky people. Abusers are often well-respected members of society — coaches, pastors, teachers. Teach kids that it's the behavior that's the warning sign, not the person.
    Secrets vs. surprises. A great framework for kids: surprises feel light and exciting; secrets feel heavy. Secrets are not good for our hearts.
    Love bombing + future faking = a manipulation pattern. Excessive praise, special treatment, and promises that never come true are a recognizable sequence used by predators.
    Raising empowered kids is inconvenient — and worth it. Children who are allowed to question authority, express preferences, and push back learn to recognize when something feels wrong.
    If you're worried about a group, don't go to the leader. Seek out former members, look on Reddit, and find outside voices before confronting the situation from inside.

    About the Guests
    Sarah Edmondson is a Canadian actress and podcaster who spent 12 years inside NXIVM before blowing the whistle and helping bring down cult leader Keith Raniere. She is featured in HBO's The Vow documentary series and is the author of the memoir Scarred. She co-hosts A Little Bit Culty podcast with her husband Nippy.
    🌐 Website: alittlebitculty.com
    📸 Instagram: @sarahedmondson
    🐦 Twitter/X: @sarahjedmondson

    Anthony "Nippy" Ames is a former NXIVM member turned whistleblower, featured prominently in HBO's The Vow. He is the Executive Producer of A Little Bit Culty podcast.
    🌐 Website: alittlebitculty.com
    📸 Instagram: @anthonyames11
    🐦 Twitter/X: @nippyames

    Resources Mentioned
    📺 The Vow (HBO Documentary Series) — Watch on Max
    📚 Scarred by Sarah Edmondson — Amazon | Publisher (Chronicle Books)
    🎙️ A Little Bit Culty Podcast — alittlebitculty.com
    📖 Sarah & Nippy's Upcoming Book — Pre-order at sarahedmondson.com/book
    🕷️ Spot a Spider (Dr. Amy Saltzman's child safety program) — spotaspider.com
    🧠 Dr. Ramani Durvasula on Future Faking & Narcissism — doctor-ramani.com
    📖 I'm Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy — Amazon

    Learn more about secure parenting:
    https://www.attachmentnerd.com/secure-parenting-program
    Connect with Eli:
    Website: https://www.attachmentnerd.com/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/attachmentnerd/
    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@attachmentnerd

    Music by Gold Child: https://www.goldchildmusic.com/
  • How To Deal

    How to Teach Young Kids About Body Safety & Consent | With Jayneen Sanders

    27-02-2026 | 35 Min.
    How to Deal with Teaching Kids Body Safety & Consent | Jayneen Sanders
    Episode Summary
    In this deeply important conversation, Eli sits down with internationally acclaimed children's book author and publisher Jayneen Sanders to explore how parents can teach body safety, consent, and boundaries to children of all ages — from infancy through the teen years. Together they discuss why body autonomy is one of the most powerful tools we can give our kids, how grooming actually works, and what we can do to raise children who trust their instincts and feel safe coming to us.
    Key Takeaways
    Start from birth. You can begin narrating body care to infants — "I'm moving your arm to put your jacket on" — planting the seeds of body autonomy from day one.
    Use the word 'consent' with young children. Teaching kids that no one can enter their personal space without permission — and that they must ask too — is the foundation of body safety.
    Be a warrior parent. When grandparents or other adults override your child's physical boundaries (the forced hug), speak up. Protecting body autonomy in the moment is not rude — it's essential.
    Teach the four-step boundary response: Name the boundary that was crossed → Share how it made you feel → State what you want them to do → Know your next step (tell a trusted adult).
    Teach body warning signs. Kids' bodies give them signals — a sick stomach, shakiness, or an "icky" feeling — when something is wrong. Empower children to act on those signals immediately.
    Build a safety network of 3–5 trusted adults, including at least one outside the immediate family, so children always have someone to turn to.
    Check in regularly, not anxiously. Monthly low-pressure check-ins ("Has anyone made you uncomfortable lately?") keep communication open without creating fear.
    Prevention is far easier than treatment. A child who discloses abuse and is believed experiences significantly less long-term trauma than one who cannot tell anyone.
    Read books together and keep the conversation going. Books give children visual anchors and open the door to ongoing dialogue — which is where the real protection lives.
    It takes a village. Ask your child's school and childcare center about their safety policies and background check procedures.

    About the Guest
    Jayneen Sanders is an experienced educator, author, and publisher who advocates globally for Body Safety, Gender Equality, and Respectful Relationship Education. She founded Educate2Empower Publishing and has written over 100 children's books on critical topics including body safety and consent. Her first body safety book, Some Secrets Should Never Be Kept, was published 15 years ago and is now available in 7 languages.
    Connect with Jayneen:
    🌐 Website: e2epublishing.info
    📸 Instagram: @jayneensandersauthor
    🐦 Twitter/X: @jayneensanders
    💼 LinkedIn: Jayneen Sanders

    Resources Mentioned
    📚 Respect Me, Respect My Boundaries by Jayneen Sanders — Shop at Educate2Empower (Jayneen's newest book, featuring a 4-step boundary-setting process)
    📚 Some Secrets Should Never Be Kept by Jayneen Sanders — Amazon | Educate2Empower
    📚 Body Safety Education: A Parents' Guide by Jayneen Sanders — Amazon
    🏫 All Jayneen's Books & Free Resources — Educate2Empower Publishing Shop
    🌐 Consent Parenting (school safety checklists & resources) — consentparenting.com
    💬 Mr. Rogers quote referenced: "What is mentionable is manageable."

    Learn more about secure parenting: https://www.attachmentnerd.com/secure-parenting-program
    Connect with Eli:
    Website: https://www.attachmentnerd.com/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/attachmentnerd/
    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@attachmentnerd

    Music by Gold Child: https://www.goldchildmusic.com/
  • How To Deal

    How to Deal with Our Highly Sensitive Kids | With Kristin Gallant, co-founder of Big Little Feelings

    20-02-2026 | 40 Min.
    How to Deal with Raising a Highly Sensitive or Neurodivergent Kid
    Episode Summary
    Eli sits down with Kristin Gallant, co-founder of Big Little Feelings, to dig into one of the most misunderstood parenting challenges: raising a child who feels everything — deeply, loudly, and fully. Together they unpack what it really means to have a "big feeler" in your home, why the goal was never to make sensitive kids less sensitive, and the three most powerful things parents can do to help these kids thrive.
    Key Takeaways
    There's a spectrum of sensitivity. Big feelers aren't just one type of kid — some push their feelings outward (intensity, drive), others turn them inward (overwhelm, collapse). Knowing your child's pattern matters.
    First step: rule out or rule in neurodivergence. Many highly sensitive kids are also autistic, have ADHD, or both. Getting clarity on how your child's brain works is one of the most powerful gifts you can give them.
    Believe your child. When the slide feels terrifying or the smell of salami is physically painful, validate it. Children who are believed learn to trust and advocate for themselves.
    Teach the Zones of Regulation. Help your child identify what zone they're in (red, yellow, green) and what they need in that state — this is more powerful than simply validating feelings.
    Diagnosis = understanding, not a verdict. Labels give children language, resources, and permission to stop wondering "what's wrong with me?"
    Your home can be the safe haven the world isn't. You may not be able to change the world for your big feeler, but you can make home a place where they don't have to mask.
    Resilience doesn't come from masking. It comes from authentic connection, belonging, and supported coping — not from teaching kids to suppress who they are.
    Let them bloom on their own timeline. Attuning to your child and meeting their nervous system where it is creates the safety from which real growth — extroversion, advocacy, friendship — can organically emerge.

    About the Guest
    Kristin Gallant is a parent coach and co-founder of Big Little Feelings, one of the most trusted parenting resources on the internet. Alongside her business partner Deena Margolin (a licensed child therapist), Kristin has created research-backed, parent-approved courses used by over 500,000 families. Diagnosed with ADHD at 37, and a mom to an autistic child, Kristin brings both professional expertise and deeply personal experience to her work. Her newest course, the Big Feelers Program, was built specifically for parents of highly sensitive, ADHD, and autistic kids.
    🌐 Website: https://biglittlefeelings.com/
    📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/biglittlefeelings

    Resources Mentioned
    🎓 Big Feelers Program (Big Little Feelings Course) — The course built for parents of highly sensitive, ADHD, and autistic kids: https://biglittlefeelings.com/products/big-feelers
    📘 The Zones of Regulation by Leah Kuypers — The self-regulation curriculum referenced in this episode (red zone, yellow zone, green zone framework): https://www.zonesofregulation.com/ Also on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Zones-Regulation-Leah-Kuypers/dp/B008M7E0G8
    📗 Permission to Feel by Dr. Marc Brackett (Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence) — Referenced when discussing the importance of labeling emotions (mentalizing): https://www.amazon.com/Permission-Feel-Unlocking-Emotions-Ourselves/dp/1250212847 Learn more about Marc's work: https://marcbrackett.com/
    🏫 Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence — Marc Brackett's research center on emotional intelligence: https://medicine.yale.edu/childstudy/communitypartnerships/ycei/

    Learn More About Secure Parenting
    Ready to build a more secure relationship with your child? https://www.attachmentnerd.com/secure-parenting-program
    Connect with Eli:
    Website: https://www.attachmentnerd.com/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/attachmentnerd/
    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@attachmentnerd

    Music by Gold Child: https://www.goldchildmusic.com/
  • How To Deal

    How to Deal with Mom Guilt | With Jessica Tomich Sorci

    13-02-2026 | 30 Min.
    Jessica Tomich Sorci, LMFT and creator of the Mom Parts Method, shares insights on transforming mom guilt and shame using Internal Family Systems therapy. She reveals why these painful feelings aren't signs of failure, but actually pathways to healing both ourselves and our mothering.
    Key Takeaways
    Guilt has purpose: It's a reminder when we've acted outside our values and creates opportunity for repair
    Shame points to old wounds: Shame is a "bookmark for your unmet needs" from childhood that still need healing
    Motherhood activates everything: Kids are like "heat-seeking hovercrafts" for our unresolved issues, making motherhood both triggering and healing
    You're mothering two kids: You're always mothering your actual child plus your inner child who still needs care
    Parts are trying to help: Even our "worst" internal parts are actually trying to protect and help us, they just need updating

    About the Guest
    Jessica Tomich Sorci, LMFT, is a pioneer in maternal mental health who created the Mom Parts method, applying Internal Family Systems therapy to motherhood. As a Level 3 Certified IFS Therapist and Certified Perinatal Mental Health Professional, she brings deep expertise to helping mothers transform difficult emotions into self-compassion.
    Connect with Jessica:
    Website: https://www.jessicatomichsorci.com/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jessicatomichsorci/
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jessica-tomich-sorci-2b577056/

    Resources Mentioned
    When Good Moms Feel Bad - Jessica's book co-authored with Rebecca Geshuri
    Mom Parts Community - Online community and salons for mothers
    Mothercentered Approach Training - Professional training program for therapists
    Internal Family Systems Institute - Founded by Richard Schwartz, creator of IFS therapy
    Introduction to Internal Family Systems by Richard Schwartz

    Learn more about secure parenting: https://www.attachmentnerd.com/secure-parenting-program
    Connect with Eli:
    Website: https://www.attachmentnerd.com/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/attachmentnerd/
    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@attachmentnerd

    Music by Gold Child: https://www.goldchildmusic.com/

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Over How To Deal

How To Deal is the podcast for parents who want to raise emotionally healthy kids in a world full of messy moments. Therapist and bestselling author Eli Harwood (aka The Attachment Nerd) brings you real stories, expert advice, and practical tools to build stronger relationships with your children—and yourself. Attachmentnerd.com
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