
Struggling with reactive parenting? "Raising Good Humans" has transformed 200,000+ families with mindfulness techniques endorsed by Tara Brach. What if breaking generational patterns takes just minutes daily? Discover why this 4.7-rated guide is revolutionizing how we raise confident, kind children.
Hunter Clarke-Fields is the bestselling author of Raising Good Humans: A Mindful Guide to Breaking the Cycle of Reactive Parenting and Raising Kind, Confident Kids and a prominent mindfulness mentor specializing in conscious parenting. A certified mindfulness and yoga practitioner with over two decades of experience, Clarke-Fields combines cognitive behavioral therapy, meditation, and positive discipline strategies to help parents cultivate calm and cooperation. Her work stems from her own journey as a self-described former "parenting yeller" and mother of two, offering relatable, science-backed tools to break generational patterns of reactivity.
She hosts the top-rated Mindful Mama Podcast, shares practical insights through her Mindful Parenting Roadmap free guide, and created the Mindful Parenting online course. Her follow-up book, Raising Good Humans Every Day, expands on her foundational methods with actionable daily practices.
Clarke-Fields’ expertise has reached thousands globally, with Raising Good Humans recognized as an international bestseller praised for bridging mindfulness rigor with real-world parenting challenges. The book has been adopted by parenting communities and professionals as a trusted resource for fostering emotional resilience in families.
Raising Good Humans by Hunter Clarke-Fields offers mindful parenting strategies to break reactive habits, foster emotional intelligence, and raise empathetic children. It combines mindfulness exercises with communication techniques to help parents model calmness, resolve conflicts peacefully, and disrupt generational patterns of yelling or impatience.
This book is ideal for parents seeking calmer households, educators needing conflict-resolution tools, and caregivers aiming to replace authoritarian methods with mutual respect. It’s particularly valuable for those wanting to address their emotional triggers while nurturing kindness in children.
Yes—readers praise its actionable advice for transforming parent-child dynamics through mindfulness. Reviewers highlight its science-backed frameworks for self-regulation, breaking generational cycles, and fostering cooperation without power struggles.
Key principles include:
Mindfulness helps parents pause before reacting, allowing thoughtful responses instead of impulsive yelling. Practices like breathwork and self-compassion build emotional resilience, which children mirror, creating a “beautiful cycle” of calm interactions.
Yes. Clarke-Fields guides readers to identify and disrupt harmful cycles (e.g., authoritarianism or dismissiveness) by replacing them with mindful communication. This break fosters kinder intergenerational dynamics.
It encourages acknowledging feelings without judgment, using techniques like “S.T.O.P.” (Stop, Take a breath, Observe, Proceed) to create space for calm decisions. Self-care rituals and journaling are also recommended to prevent burnout.
Absolutely. The book teaches “R.A.P.” (Respectful, Authentic, Patient) communication, active listening, and “I-statements” to replace blame. These methods build trust and reduce conflicts over time.
Clarke-Fields compares stressed parents to a “squeezed fruit”—what’s inside (patience or anger) comes out under pressure. This metaphor underscores the importance of internal calmness to model kindness.
Yes, including:
By emphasizing that kindness is caught, not taught. Parents must consistently model empathy—even when setting boundaries—to help children internalize it. Shared activities like gratitude practices reinforce this value.
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If you're not under control, you can't be in charge.
The pursuit of parenting perfection is not just unrealistic-it's harmful.
Children learn more from how we handle our mistakes than from our successes.
That's what I sound like.
Self-criticism is parenting's silent saboteur.
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Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco
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Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco

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Your toddler throws a tantrum in the grocery store. Your jaw clenches. Your voice rises. And suddenly, you hear it - your mother's sharp tone coming from your own mouth. That moment of recognition can feel like ice water down your spine. Despite every promise you made to parent differently, the patterns you inherited have surfaced anyway. This universal experience reveals a profound truth about parenting: the greatest challenge isn't managing our children's behavior - it's managing our own. Children are masterful imitators. They don't follow what we say - they follow what we do. One mother heard her older daughter harshly ordering her younger sister around and suddenly recognized her own tone reflected back. This mirror effect reveals both the challenge and opportunity in parenting. When you shout "Be quiet!" you're modeling the opposite of what you're requesting. When you demand your child calm down while visibly agitated, you send contradictory messages. The way you speak to yourself becomes their inner voice. Your relationship with your partner becomes their template for future relationships. Your approach to mistakes becomes their blueprint for handling failure. Each triggering moment with your children becomes an invitation to heal your own wounds and develop greater emotional intelligence. When your child's defiance sparks rage disproportionate to the situation, that's valuable information. What childhood wound is being activated? What unmet need is surfacing? Breaking free from generational cycles requires something radical: turning inward before we can effectively guide outward. The path forward isn't found in more discipline strategies or behavioral charts, but in cultivating mindful presence and self-compassion that transforms both parent and child.