Description
Bea asks herself questions like, "What if my friends don't like the games?" Her stomach flip-flops and she feels shaky. She tries to run away from the thoughts in the worry tree, but it doesn't work! Bea uses deep-breathing exercises and visualization techniques to calm herself down.
Includes a Note to Parents and Caregivers by Ara Schmitt, PhD about the ways in which kids can respond to their anxious thoughts.
About the Author
Gail Silver is the founder of Yoga Child and The School Mindfulness Project Inc., is a contributing writer to Lion's Roar Magazine, a screenwriter of the animated film Planting Seeds of Mindfulness, and author of the award winning Anh's Anger children's book trilogy. Gail travels nationally and internationally to facilitate yoga and mindfulness based education. She lives in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Visit gailsilver.com.
Franziska Hollbacher is a children's book illustrator who is studying multimedia art in Salzburg, Austria. Visit @franzi_illustrates on Instagram, @franzi_illus on Twitter, and franzi-illustrates.com.
Reviews
The latest gem from award-winning author, Gail Silver...This book is able to take a tough topic like anxiety and discuss the issue in an accessible fashion. * BookTrib *
Worry is sometimes inevitable, Silver suggests, but learning relaxation techniques... can go a long way toward empowering readers." * Publishers Weekly *
Addresses anxiety with mindfulness....brought to life in the watercolor-and-ink illustrations as long fronds of a malevolent willow tree that leave poor Bea in tangles....informative for parents. * Kirkus Reviews *
Children who struggle with anxiety will be able to relate to Bea and find some of the strategies helpful. It can help a child realize they are not alone and that others have the same worrying thoughts. * Oregon Coast Youth Book Preview Center *
Book Information
ISBN 9781433829543
Author Gail Silver
Format Hardback
Page Count 32
Imprint Magination Press, (American Psychological Association)
Publisher American Psychological Association