
“The complex is simple and the simple is complex”
Welcome to The Parenting Well Podcast. I'm Dr. Shelly Mahon, your host, and today's conversation is with Mark Talaga. Mark hosts the podcast Hopelessly Gifted, a deeply personal and thought-provoking exploration of intelligence, identity, achievement, and emotional well-being. Through candid storytelling and hard-earned insight, Mark examines what it means to grow up labeled as “gifted” and the pressures, expectations, and emotional complexities that often come with that label.
Drawing from his own experiences, Mark challenges the assumption that gifted children naturally thrive. Instead, he highlights the hidden struggles many high-achieving kids face, including perfectionism, anxiety, isolation, burnout, and the difficulty of developing resilience when achievement becomes tied to self-worth.
Mark’s work resonates with parents, educators, and anyone raising children in achievement-oriented environments. His perspective offers a compassionate reminder that emotional health, curiosity, character, and connection matter just as much as academic success.
#resilience #positiveyouthdevelopment #braindevelopment #practicaltips
In this podcast, we talk about:
The impact of labeling kids
Understanding where children are either ahead or behind developmentally so you can address gaps
Ways in which gifted children are misunderstood
The impact of giftedness on perfectionism, anxiety, identity development, and resilience
Early signs of giftedness
Behaviors kids exhibit when they need additional support
A systemic approach to helping children thrive
The difference between skill development and psychology
Aligning with larger systems like schools to advocate for your child
The importance of curiosity, connection, and play
Resources
Podcast: Hopelessly Gifted
LinkedIn
Center for Identity Potential
May 18
26 min

“There are many ways to show up in the world, so pick the one that feels good” Dr. Darla Bishop
I'm Dr. Shelly Mahon, your host, and today's conversation is about raising money smart kids with Dr. Darla Bishop.
Dr. Bishop- known as the “FinanSis”- is a mother, a former high school educator/bilingual elementary school reading coach, children’s book author, and passionate entrepreneur who founded Finansis LLC. Inspired by her challenging childhood in Detroit, she is passionate about helping families build strong financial foundations and empowering children to develop a positive money mindset early in life. Dr. Darla is all too aware of the correlation between low credit scores and short lifespan, her mission is to change that narrative.
Blending humor, insight, and tough love, Dr. Darla works to transform how communities think about wealth, believing financial literacy is key to creating resilient futures. With over 15 years in public health leadership, she also serves as a consultant, professor, mentor, and real estate investor.
Among her proudest achievements are co-authoring Madeline’s Money Adventure with her daughter and helping young bilingual students succeed in reading.
In this episode, we talk about:
Making money fun
Strategies for building money conversations into daily life
Teaching how to make responsible choices with money
School curriculums for financial literacy
How to think about and build credit
Staying curious when it comes to perceptions of money
Additional Resources:
Dr. Darla's Book: How to Afford Everything
Madeline's Money Adventure by Madeline Bishop and Dr. Darla Bishop
America's Awesome Kids
May 12
24 min

The teenage years can feel like losing your child in slow motion. The pushback, withdrawal, and irritability make it’s easy to assume they need less from us.
But what if adolescence is actually the time they need us most?
I’m Dr. Shelly Mahon, your host, and in this episode of the Parenting Well Podcast, I sit down with Kimberly Bryant to explore how the way we “meet” our teenagers during this massive brain restructuring phase shapes not only our current relationship, but the relationships we may one day have with our grandchildren.
We talk about the powerful shift from manager to mentor, how curiosity calms the nervous system, and why asking “What happened?” instead of “What’s wrong with you?” can change everything. Kimberly reminds us that teens don’t need perfection. They need emotional safety.
Because how we meet them… is what shapes them.
Main Discussion Points
Why adolescence is neurologically similar to toddlerhood — and what that means for parenting
The critical shift from “manager” to “coach” during the teen years
How irritability, defiance, and withdrawal are often stress signals — not character flaws
Why curiosity lowers defenses and judgment raises them
What it actually means to “meet your teen safely”The importance of regulating yourself before engaging with your teen
Balancing boundaries with autonomy — containment without control
Why teens still need structure around sleep, technology, and safety
The role of trusted adults beyond parents
How today’s interactions ripple into adult relationships — and even future generations
Key Takeaways
Adolescence is not a time to step back. It’s a time to lean in differently. Teens need mentorship, not management.
Defiance is often stress in disguise.When we respond to behavior with curiosity instead of correction, we lower threat and increase connection.
“What happened?” builds trust. “What’s wrong with you?” builds walls.
You are their external brain right now. Your calm presence helps them learn to regulate their own emotions.
Connection over correction creates long-term influence.
Boundaries still matter — but partnership matters more.
How you meet your teen today shapes your relationship decades from now.
Resources:
The teenage years can feel like losing your child in slow motion. The pushback, withdrawal, and irritability make it’s easy to assume they need less from us.
But what if adolescence is actually the time they need us most?
I’m Dr. Shelly Mahon, your host, and in this episode of the Parenting Well Podcast, I sit down with Kimberly Bryant to explore how the way we “meet” our teenagers during this massive brain restructuring phase shapes not only our current relationship, but the relationships we may one day have with our grandchildren.
We talk about the powerful shift from manager to mentor, how curiosity calms the nervous system, and why asking “What happened?” instead of “What’s wrong with you?” can change everything. Kimberly reminds us that teens don’t need perfection. They need emotional safety.
Because how we meet them… is what shapes them.
Main Discussion Points
Why adolescence is neurologically similar to toddlerhood — and what that means for parenting
The critical shift from “manager” to “coach” during the teen years
How irritability, defiance, and withdrawal are often stress signals — not character flaws
Why curiosity lowers defenses and judgment raises them
What it actually means to “meet your teen safely”The importance of regulating yourself before engaging with your teen
Balancing boundaries with autonomy — containment without control
Why teens still need structure around sleep, technology, and safety
The role of trusted adults beyond parents
How today’s interactions ripple into adult relationships — and even future generations
Key Takeaways
Adolescence is not a time to step back. It’s a time to lean in differently. Teens need mentorship, not management.
Defiance is often stress in disguise.When we respond to behavior with curiosit
Feb 27
30 min

Anxiety is everywhere right now. It's in our culture, in our homes, and often in our own nervous systems. So how do we raise brave, resilient children without unintentionally reinforcing the fears we’re trying to protect them from?
I’m Dr. Shelly Mahon, your host, and in this episode of the Parenting Well Podcast, I sit down with Dr. Samantha Grigsby, clinical psychologist and founder of Foothills CBT, to break down what every parent needs to understand about how anxiety works and how to interrupt the cycle that keeps it growing.
We explore how to distinguish normal developmental anxiety from anxiety that needs support, and why avoidance, though well-intended, often strengthens fear over time. Dr. Grigsby explains the anxiety cycle in practical terms and shares why Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) are gold-standard treatments for anxiety and OCD.
We also discuss how rescuing, over-accommodating, minimizing stress, or offering constant reassurance can unintentionally perpetuate anxiety, as well as what supportive parenting actually looks like when a child is struggling. Finally, we examine the cultural pressures amplifying stress today and how to keep our own anxiety from shaping the emotional climate of our homes.
Because bravery isn’t the absence of anxiety.It’s feeling it — and moving forward anyway.
Register to hear her talk at the Stress & Anxiety Conference
In this podcast, we talk about:
How to tell when anxiety is normal and when it’s limiting your child
The hidden ways loving parents accidentally reinforce anxiety
Why avoidance and reassurance make anxiety stronger
What actually works (CBT & ERP explained simply)
How to stop passing your stress onto your child
Key Takeaway:
Avoidance might be contributing to your child's anxiety.The very things we do to reduce our child’s distress can quietly make it stronger.
Support and accommodation are not the same thing.One builds resilience. The other builds dependence. Do you see this in your family?
Reassurance feels loving but it can train the brain to doubt itself.What happens when children learn to tolerate uncertainty instead
Bravery doesn’t mean calm.It means moving forward while your nervous system is loud.
Your anxiety shapes the emotional climate of your home.Not because you’re failing but because nervous systems are contagious.
We live in an expectation-amplified world.Unrealistic standards, social comparison, and constant input may be fueling more stress than we realize.
Self-criticism keeps the cycle alive.Self-compassion may be one of the most powerful anxiety interventions for both parent and child.
You don’t have to eliminate anxiety all together to raise a confident child.You may need to look at whether you are protecting them from having uncomfortable feelings.
Resources:
Website
LinkedIn
Self-Compassion.org: Kristin Neff’s website has many exercises, guided meditations, and other resources on mindful self-compassion
Book: Anxious Kids, Anxious Parents: 7 Ways to Stop the Worry Cycle and Raise Courageous & Independent Children. By Reid Wilson and Laura Lyons
Feb 26
37 min

You can’t self-care your way out of burnout, especially when the overload is structural, not personal. In this conversation with Stacey J. Acquavella, we explore how regulation-based parenting helps neurodivergent families move out of survival mode by redesigning environments, reducing demand, and shifting from behavior management to nervous system support.
Feb 25
29 min

Communication is often treated as a skill to master, but in this conversation with Susan Caso, we explore why it is far more complex than scripts and strategies.
When stress and anxiety are high, conversations can quickly become reactive, escalating, or disconnected. But when parents create emotional safety and presence, communication shifts from mechanics to connection.
We talk about what it really means to listen deeply, how to stay present when you feel triggered, and how giving space can de escalate conflict instead of intensifying it. Susan introduces the Cycle of Response and reminds us that connection is the foundation of every healthy relationship. Communication tools simply support that foundation.
Our children do not just need instruction. They need us. The steady presence who can pause, reflect, repair, and experience joy with them.
If you have ever walked away from a conversation wishing you had handled it differently, this episode will offer both hope and practical tools.
Register to participate in her workshop at the Stress & Anxiety Conference
In This Episode, We Explore:
Why communication is more complex than most parenting advice suggests
How stress and anxiety shape family conversations
Becoming a place of respite for your child
Deep listening and staying present when triggered
Managing escalation by giving space
Repairing breakdowns in communication
The difference between the instructional parent role and the connected caregiver self
Simple ways to shift your mood through movement, music, and connection
Key Takeaways:
Communication is about nervous systems, not just words
Emotional safety changes everything
Listening to understand builds trust
Space can prevent escalation
Repair strengthens relationships
Connection is the foundation. Skills are secondary
You are both a parent and a caregiver and children need both.
Resources:
Book: The Parent Teen Connection: How to Build Lifelong Family Relationships
Website
Facebook
Psychology Today
Feb 25
23 min

I am Dr. Shelly Mahon, your host, and in this episode of the Parenting Well Podcast, we’re talking about what truly shapes your child’s emotional health in the earliest years of life.
I’m joined by Emily Fried, LCSW, a specialist in infant, early childhood, and perinatal mental health, to explore what’s really happening beneath toddler behavior — and how attachment, brain development, and parental wellbeing are deeply connected from the very beginning.
We discuss how to create the right conditions for healthy development, how toddlers experience big emotions, the difference between prenatal depression and perinatal anxiety, and practical ways to support regulation in everyday moments.
If you’ve ever wondered whether you’re “doing it right” in these early years, this conversation will both ground you and guide you.
Register to participate in her workshop at the Stress & Anxiety Conference on Feb 28, 2026
In This Episode, We Discuss:
What infant mental health actually is — and why it matters
How early relationships shape the developing brain
The link between developmental milestones and social-emotional growth
The difference between prenatal depression and perinatal anxiety
What secure attachment looks like in everyday parenting
Why toddler behavior makes sense developmentally
Concrete strategies to support co-regulation and emotional resilience
Key Takeaways
Infant mental health is relational. Emotional wellbeing in the early years is built through responsive, connected caregiving.
Attachment grows in everyday moments. Security comes from consistent attunement — not perfection.
Brain development and emotional development are intertwined. Early relational experiences shape stress response and regulation.
Toddler behavior is communication. What looks like defiance is often dysregulation.
Perinatal mental health impacts the whole system. Supporting parents is part of supporting children.
Regulation starts with the adult. Young children borrow calm from their caregivers.
Prevention matters. Early relational support lays the foundation for lifelong emotional health.
Resources:
Website
Boulder Psychological Services
Book: You Go Away by Dorothy Corey
Feb 25
35 min

Welcome to the Parenting Well podcast with Parent Engagement Network! I am Dr. Shelly Mahon, your host and today’s well source is Melissa Holland.
Melissa Holland is a parenting coach, founder of Inner Wisdom Parenting, and a PEN Ambassador at SHMS who is passionate about helping parents raise emotionally healthy, resilient children, starting with themselves.
Melissa works with parents of young children, particularly ages 5–10, helping them better understand what’s really going on beneath behavior and how to respond with clarity, confidence, and connection. Through her coaching and workshops, she supports parents in tuning into both their child’s inner world and their own, so discipline becomes less about control and more about growth, trust, and relationship.
Grounded, compassionate, and deeply practical, Melissa’s work empowers parents to slow down, listen differently, and parent from a place of intention rather than reactivity. Her approach reminds parents that they already have much of what they need. Sometimes they just need support accessing their inner wisdom.
Melissa will be speaking at PEN's Stress & Anxiety Conference on Feb 28, 2026.
Register Here
In this podcast, we talk about:
Tapping into your inner wisdom
What is taking place developmentally for 5-10 year olds
Neurodevelopment for this age group
Frustration as the gap between our expectations and reality
Key things that cause stress and anxiety during this phase of childhood
Defiance as a symptom of excessive stress without the ability to understand and voice their feelings
Difference between counter-willed and strong-willed
Ways to recognize your child’s triggers and modify your response
Developing the capacity for self-compassion
Resources
Website
App: Insight Timer
Book: Hold On to Your Kids: Why Parents Need to Matter More Than Peers by Gordon Neufeld and Gabor Mate
Book: Self-Compassion for Parents
LinkedIn
Feb 20
40 min

Welcome to the Parenting Well podcast with Parent Engagement Network! I am Dr. Shelly Mahon, your host and today’s well source is Lisa Kaplan. Lisa is a Registered Nurse and Life & Mental Wellness Coach dedicated to supporting families through life’s pivotal transitions. With a background grounded in both healthcare and emotional wellness, Lisa brings a unique blend of clinical insight and compassionate coaching to her work.
She specializes in helping parents navigate the often complex shift from raising children to relating to young adults, a season filled with pride, uncertainty, grief, growth, and opportunity. Through her work, Lisa empowers parents to move from control to collaboration, from directing to guiding, and from parenting to partnership.
At our conference, she will present “From Parenting to Partnership: Navigating the Transition to Adulthood,” offering practical tools and mindset shifts to help families foster independence while preserving connection.
Register Here
In this podcast, we talk about:
How anxiety shows up differently for people
Ways to tap into your innate health
Physical manifestations of anxiety
How thinking creates our reality
The shift in sitting with your feelings long enough to have trust and confidence in your child
Recognizing places to let go of control
Ways the parent-child relationship changes as children move into adulthood
The impact of making deposits and withdrawals in your relationship with your child
Developing agency in your child’s decision-making
Resources:
Book a free discovery call
LinkedIn
Instagram
Feb 19
39 min

Welcome to the Parenting Well podcast with Parent Engagement Network! I am Dr. Shelly Mahon, your host and today’s well source is Marie Nowacki Ford.
Marie is a postpartum doula, new parent educator, and certified Child Passenger Safety Technician based in Boulder, Colorado. She supports families through the emotional and practical transition into parenthood, with a focus on reducing stress, building confidence, and creating sustainable support systems during the postpartum period.
Marie’s work centers on helping parents navigate anxiety, overwhelm, identity shifts, and the often-unspoken challenges of early parenting. Through overnight support, newborn education, and holistic care, she empowers families to feel more grounded, capable, and connected during one of life’s biggest transitions.
Marie also specializes in supporting grandparents as they navigate new roles, boundary setting, and effective communication, which she’ll speak about at the Reducing Stress & Anxiety Conference on February 28th.
Register Here
In this podcast, we talk about:
What it means to be a postpartum doula
Stressors that show up for new parents with their own parents and grandparents
How to set and hold healthy boundaries with parents, grandparents, or even strangers
How postpartum doulas support the family holistically
Myths about being a new parent
The network that is available through a postpartum doula
How to recognize postpartum depression
Resources
Website
Meet your Doula
Instagram
Bornbir
Feb 12
37 min
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