Muslim Kids: Sexpressured

Muslim Kids: Sexpressured

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Resolutions & Reparations

🥳🥳🥳Happy New Year!2025 was hard for me. I'm so grateful for a new year, new slate and I pray yours is even better than I pray for you all.There's a short "episode" today. Big kudos to @faizifortexas running for Texas Comptroller. Do BIG things, y'all, even if you have to do th ...  Show more

Lessons from the Life of Sawdah bint Zama'a (RA)

I'm baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaack. Not the end of a horror film, but the end of a troubling journey of work, life and love lost with a happy ending. Don't be scared.I owe you the completion of the Sahabiya Series, so here's this week's episode on Sawdah bint Zam’a (RA), the second wife of ...  Show more

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Are British Schools Hostile to Muslim children? with Dr Amina Shareef
The Thinking Muslim

Dr Amina Shareef is Assistant Professor in Education at Goldsmiths, University of London. Her research seeks to understand how Muslim people are unmade as tawhidic subjects—subjects forged in relation to tawhidic worldview in which there is no god but God—and remade as liberal su ...  Show more

Using Connection with Neurodiverse Children with Guest Bea Moise
Peace and Parenting: How to Parent without Punishments

Often people ask me if Parenting without Punishments and using connection is for all children. In this episode, Bea Moise and I reassure you that parenting this way is effective for kids who are neurodiverse and children who are neurotypical. 

Bea Moise is a parent of a ...

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Masculine Modesty
Fierce Marriage

Last week we talked about modesty and women, this week it's the men's turn.To learn more about becoming a Christian, visit: https://thenewsisgood.comGood news! You can now find FULL video episodes on our YouTube channel, The Fierce Family. Visit https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC ...  Show more

How to Talk to Your Kids About Sex, Drugs and Reproduction with Dr. Dolly
Peace and Parenting: How to Parent without Punishments

Beginning to speak to your children about all things adolescence  begins much younger than you might imagine. Many children enter puberty as early as 8. There doesn't necessarily need to be a formal "talk" but rather many conversations which build over time. 

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