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Spring is Here and … Love is in the Air

May 11, 2015

Spring is finally here in many parts of the world. It is a season of new growth, new possibilities, fresh hopes, and, for many species, a mating season! Nature comes alive with the sounds of mating calls, puffed-up chests, colourful plumage meant to attract a mate, hormones and pheromones floating in the air, and battles amongst males for the attentions of the female. In many ways, it is very similar to what might be observed in high school hallways!

What an incredible transition of seasons in a human life — to witness our adolescents shift into that place where their feelings begin to take on new depths and intensities of attraction, romance, and the many colours of love. It can lead to a very preoccupied child who struggles to think of anything else within the potency of their experience! And of course, nothing is ever quite the same anymore. The world has burst open in all new ways, and naturally so.

What does this transition mean in terms of our place as parents? What changes in the parent-child relationship, and what needs to remain the same? Parents can sometimes find this to be an awkward transition of having to now consider their adolescent child as a growing and maturing sexual being! Along come the negotiations around the best age to allow dating, group activities versus alone time, how much alone time is appropriate for a young dating couple, how involved the dating couple should be, and how involved the adult should be in the young relationship. There are many new details to navigate, and each family will be different in terms of their culture, beliefs, philosophies, and customs around this newly emerging place in a young life.

While certain aspects of the parent-child relationship are necessarily evolving, certain aspects need to remain the same. First and foremost, our adolescent child still needs us to be active, involved, and interested in their lives. Sometimes parents will begin to back away from closeness because of the awkwardness that can be part of this relationship transition. In the face of all things changing, it becomes important to remember that our child needs a strong sense of us as an anchoring presence more than ever.

The simple act of listening without reaction or judgment will be extremely important to allow the channels of communication to remain open. Let them tell you about their ups and downs, crushes, worries, fears, jealousies, and hurt feelings without it leading to strong parental reaction or opinion. Sometimes our child will discuss something that reveals troubled waters from our adult perspective: perhaps concerns over a controlling relationship dynamic or worries over what we see as an inevitable heartbreak. It is so important to listen and weigh our advice carefully, if offered at all, lest our child stop talking due to fear of lecture, disapproval, or reaction. When they stop feeling they can safely share what is in their heart and mind, we risk losing our influence in their lives.

Finally, embrace this new season unfolding within your growing child. Take delight in their experience in a way that normalizes it, celebrates it, invites it, and welcomes it. Similar to our spring flowers, these budding feelings of attraction, romance, and love are very new, tender, and vulnerable … our young are just learning how to deal with these emotional experiences. Our loving presence, listening space, and warm involvement, even in the face of all that is changing, will help our growing children continue to take root in strong and healthy ways.

Upcoming Scheduled Classes

Some of our courses are also offered as scheduled classes from time to time with our Faculty providing weekly live special support sessions. If you already have taken the course in its self-paced version, you can enrol in the scheduled class for a fee of only 50 CAD.

Classes Start: September 16, 2026

Wednesdays 10:00AM – 11:00AM PT

Runs for 10 weeks

With Michele Maurer and Lisa Weiner

$350 CAD

Fresh understandings of marriage come from viewing the coupling phenomenon through the lenses of attachment, emotion, and development.

Classes Start: October 1, 2026

Thursdays 9:30 AM PT (6:30 PM CET)

Runs for 5 weeks

Led by Urška Žugelj. Each week she is joined by a faculty member.
With Dr. Neufeld joining for the final session.

$150 CAD

This course unfolds Neufeld's ground-breaking model of attachment — the result of decades of synthesis, inspired by the physical and natural sciences, and built upon the most recent understandings of the brain, emotion and development.

Classes Start: October 9, 2026

Fridays 12:30PM – 01:30PM PT

Runs for 22 weeks

Anchored by Karen Bollman

$650 CAD

Intensive I provides the conceptual foundations of Neufeld's approach. Participants are equipped to use the constructs of attachment, maturation, and vulnerability to view children and their problems three-dimensionally.

Classes Start: October 15, 2026

Thursdays 11:00AM – 12:30PM PT

Runs for 17 weeks

$800 CAD

Building on Intensive I, this course sheds light upon the impact of separation on a child's personality and behaviour. When the developmental antecedents are understood, the path to effective intervention becomes clear.

Classes Start: October 23, 2026

Fridays 10:00 – 11:00 AM PT

Runs for 6 weeks

With Gordon Neufeld and Heather Ferguson

$175 CAD

Aggression problems are deeply rooted in instinct and emotion and are therefore resistant to conventional discipline practices. Dr. Neufeld uncovers these roots and outlines steps to addressing them.

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