karenyoung_heysigmund
Here are 2 of my favourite snaps from the break. The first is outside what is now my favourite pizza place in Melbourne (the world?) @mattonapoletanopizzeria. The vibes were high (thanks fam), the pizza was elite (I do not use that word casually), and the staff were fabulous and made the night properly memorable.
The second pic is on New Year’s Eve. But there’s a story: I had an unexpected, (massive!) project land on me with a deadline that clearly thought 2026 was still a few months off.
Cue late nights, early mornings, and a very professional sideways slide into NYE - deadline met with three hours to spare.
That day, without me asking, my whole family brought everything a woman needs to make a tight deadline and NYE - snacks, tech support, pep talks, jokes, an eleventh-hour dash for an external hard drive (I did ask for that one), a loan of a laptop when mine decided it was done with 2025, and drinks on ice for when that project was done.
My NYE started late, but it was a cracker. I loved it. (Missed you @annacyoung and @pbarnes89 .)
I talk a lot about not rescuing kids from things they can do themselves, and I believe in that deeply.
I also believe in showing up for them on big days, hard days, busy days, and the days they’re already doing enough.
Turns out, they were watching all along.
Sometimes resilience is built by stretching. Sometimes it’s built by being backed.
Because if we want kids who are brave AND kind, generous, and can see what others need through the noise, we have to be that for them first, by showing up for them when they’re already doing enough.
Turns out they were watching all along.
(And before this looks like we always have our sh*t together as a family, we also had a proper family blow-up on the holiday. Because we’re a family. A loving one with an everythingness that is real and beautiful and human and hard some days. One that loves deeply, feels big, and has opinions, histories, tired bodies, full tanks, and needs that crash into each other sometimes. And as loving families also do, then we repaired, reconnected, and found our way back. Because that’s the work of being human together.)♥️
Nat (verified owner) –
A wonderful book for kids to help them understand anxiety and normalise their feelings. Full of wonderful strategies that make sense while being beautifully illustrated and written in a way that is accessible and engaging for young people. My son loves this book and has taken it to school almost daily to share with his class.
Janika (verified owner) –
I am an elementary school counselor and use this book with my students almost weekly. It’s an incredible resource for helping kids gain a better understanding of what’s going on in their head when they feel anxious and how to calm it down. Could not recommend this resource more!
Becca (verified owner) –
A truly wonderful and warm book explaining anxiety beautifully. As a play therapist I’ve had my eye on it for a while but ended up buying for my 7 year old and it was pitched perfectly for him. He loves his amygdala soft toy to go with it, too.
I will definitely be buying another copy for the therapy room!
Christina S (verified owner) –
As a therapist, I love this book and read it often with my adult and child clients. Fantastic explanation of good neuroscience with relatable illustrations.