"Love Yourself First because that's who you'll spend the rest of your life with"

Sanskaar Conscious Parenting Program

Conscious Parenting is the need of our modern world. The conscious Parenting Sanskar should be downloaded to the couple before they decide to have a child. When a new life starts breathing in the mother's womb, a new journey begins for the child and parents. Whatever be the preparation of parents to welcome their newborn baby, the moment he/she enters this physical realm, everything seems difficult.
Conscious parenting is a term or method used by various psychologists and healers to describe a style of parenting that mostly focuses on the parent and how consciousness and rationality can drive the various parenting choices. Conscious parenting is rooted in Eastern philosophy (Mainly Indian subcontinent) and Western psychology. It includes meditation, self-awareness from philosophy, and self-reflection from psychology.
Conscious parenting mostly focused on parents rather than children. Conscious parenting is about parent’s inner journey and fixing their energy and heal them in a certain way so that they can impart greater virtues which they can transfer to their children. Conscious parenting views children as grater beings who can teach parents to become more self-aware and virtuous over time. We all know about Charles Darwin's dogma, ``Survival to the fittest.`` Usually, we are being taught to be on survival mode rather than following or pursuing our passion.

Sanskaar Program for Conscious Parenting Covers Various Doubts As

  • What bothers a parent most and why?
  • Why children are a burden for some people?
  • Why some parents try to put their children in a certain frame of their own beliefs?
  • Why do we feel that children should behave in a particular manner according to our convenience and perception?
  • Why don’t we allow them to grow as an individual?
  • Why do we face so much struggle with special children?
  • Why is there always a struggle for social acceptance of special children?
  • Why don’t we accept our children for who they are?