Small Business Walking Tour
Join us on a stroll through the city's hidden gems and discover the stories behind the storefronts on the Small Business Walking Tour!
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Location
Overgrown
107 N Walnut St Milford, DE 19963About this event
- Event lasts 1 hour 30 minutes
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Trust Based Relational Intervention or TBRI® was developed by The Karyn Purvis Institute for Child Development at Texas Christian University by child development psychologists Dr. Karyn Purvis and Dr. David Cross, to meet the complex needs of children who have experienced adversity, early harm, toxic stress, and/or trauma. This research also shows that normal development can be compromised in the womb when faced with unhealthy conditions such as a pregnant mother experiencing adversity. This means a difficult birth or, necessary, and life saving medical procedures during infancy and early childhood can all be risk factors for developmental trauma and result in similar damage as intentional harm.
TBRI® combines years of attachment research with the latest advances in neuroscience to not only provide us with reasons why children from hard places behave the way they do but also what to do about it. Because of their histories, it is often difficult for these children to trust the loving adults in their lives, which often results in perplexing behaviors. These behaviors are not readily fixed by typical clinical approaches which rely on age-appropriate verbal and reasoning skills. What we now know is that these children from hard places are functioning at half or less their biological age. TBRI® offers practical tools for parents, caregivers, teachers, or anyone who works with children, to see the “whole child” in their care and help that child reach his highest potential.
Through our four-part TBRI® training, caregivers will learn the three basic principles adults can employ to heal the injuries trauma has inflicted upon the children in their care:
- Connecting Principles: The essence of TBRI®, the Connecting Principles module focuses on practical ways to build healthy relationships and attachment. Through eye contact, healthy touch, and other practical ways to build bonds, caregivers are guided into creating secure attachments that catalyze the healing process.
- Empowering Principles: In this unit, caregivers learn practical strategies to help children feel safe. This module teaches caregivers techniques for being aware of and consistently providing for children’s physiological and environmental needs, such as adequate hydration, sleep, nutrition, exercise, and sensory stimulation.
- Correcting Principles: In this stage, caregivers are taught strategies for imparting self-regulation skills to the children in their care. After taking this module, participants will be better equipped to manage tantrums, aggressive behavior and more.