As January comes to a close, I wanted to pause and check in with you.
How has this month truly felt in your home, your body, and your relationships?
I’m especially curious how parenting or caregiving has been unfolding for you lately. This includes parents raising young children, teens, or adult children, as well as grandparents, babysitters, caregivers, and anyone who plays a meaningful role in a child’s life.

For many families, January isn’t a fresh start. It’s a reentry. As the pace shifts and the noise of the holidays fades, what was held together through December often begins to ask for attention. This can show up in ways that feel unsettling or hard to interpret.
Some common experiences families notice in January include:
- Increased exhaustion or emotional fatigue
- Bigger emotions in children or adults
- Shorter patience and more reactive moments
- A sense of disconnection that feels confusing or discouraging
If you’ve been noticing any of this, you’re not doing anything wrong.
What often looks like defiance, moodiness, or resistance is usually a nervous system finding its way back to balance. Children feel it. Adults feel it. And the relationship sits right in the middle.
January invites us to pause and notice rather than push forward.
You might reflect on:
- What felt hardest this month
- Which moments felt especially tender
- What seemed to ask for support rather than correction
If January felt heavier than expected, I recently shared a conversation on Daily Flash that may offer clarity and reassurance.

In this segment, we explore the “January emotional hangover” and why emotional fatigue, disrupted schedules, and overwhelm often peak at the start of the year. I also share compassionate, practical strategies to help parents understand children’s behavior, regulate emotions, and gently reintroduce structure without escalating stress or conflict.
As we step into February, I’ll continue sharing reflections and tools to support families in moving forward with more steadiness, connection, and ease.
For now, noticing is enough.
You’re not behind.
You’re exactly where this season begins.




