Ta-dah!!


November 2025

Dear Reader,

We launched our new website! Please take a look—we'd love to know what you think!

In these turbulent times, we know many families are facing great challenges. We offer parents affirmation as they spend time together with their children, information about science and resources, and advocacy for all families. As we continue to edit and reorganize our website, we keep the focus of Family and Home Network on parents' experiences as they spend generous amounts of time together with their children.

Parents create people! And time together is a critical component of the parent/child relationship.

Time together can nurture each adult and child's emotional wellbeing. As we approach the holidays, it may be the most important thing to be thankful for!

Please visit the new site (same URL): familyandhome.org

(If you're looking for something and can't find it, please let me know.)

In addition to a new color palette, some new graphics and display tools, we are re-organizing some of the content. For over 40 years, we've been on the lookout for resources for parents and we share the ones we think are most helpful. And we are always learning more about how our culture impacts parents and learning more about developmental science. Now, our Resource page is organized in these sections:

  • The Evolved Nest - for meeting essential human needs
  • Time, Culture and Politics
  • Parents' Experiences and Challenges

We curate information and resources from around the world. Many parents have told us they appreciate discovering how developmental science aligns with their instincts and intuition (please read more about the science of the Evolved Nest below). In Time, Culture and Politics we examine some big picture issues that impact all of us, and some of the wonderful efforts toward positive change. And in Parents' Experiences and Challenges, we list books, people and organizations that offer help for many circumstances.

Parents shape the world: from nurturing moments with our children to learning more about big picture issues, from doing unpaid caregiving to working for change in our communities and governments.

It all begins with the time we spend together. As renowned social systems scientist Riane Eisler says: Peace Begins at Home!

Thank you for subscribing and reading, for your feedback and support. If you'd like to join our team of volunteers, please let me know!

All the best to you and your families,

Cathy

P.S. Please forward this newsletter to family and friends. Sharing is a big help to us!

Read on for more info and resources....

My path to the Evolved Nest

by Cathy Myers

In the mid-1980s, when I first volunteered with Mothers at Home (the original name of our organization), we were often challenged: "Why does it matter if you're home? Children do just fine in child care. Responding to questions like this, we focused on simple statements such as: "I think this is best for my children" or "My spouse and I decided this is the way we want to care for our children."

We also faced questions about ourselves. The three mothers who co-founded the organization used one of these questions as the title of their book: What's a Smart Woman Like YOU Doing at Home?

In the ensuing decades, we've paid close attention to the science of human development, to the researchers and clinicians who illuminate the critical importance of human connection and nurturing relationships. The well-being of humans of all ages is impacted by their family, by friends and community members, by media, by educators and policymakers (local, state and national). In 2012, I earned a Bachelor of Individualized Studies degree in Human Development, Parenting and Policy at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. Drawing on my academic studies and information our organization had collected over the years, I wrote an article for our website: Children's Needs.

In September 2014 I attended the Child Flourishing Symposium at the University of Notre Dame, organized by Dr. Darcia Narvaez. One of the featured speakers, Bruce D. Perry, M.D., Ph.D, founder of the Child Trauma Academy, emphasized the critical importance of nurturing care and connection and the life-long impact of our experiences in the earliest months of life. (Click on the following image to watch his presentation.)

Also in 2014, Dr. Narvaez provided cross-disciplinary, scientific evidence of the components needed for human thriving and well-being in her book Neurobiology and the Development of Human Morality: Evolution, Culture and Wisdom. The book won prestigious awards and Dr. Narvaez was elected a fellow to the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

A few years later, Dr. Narvaez collaborated with Lisa Reagan, renowned activist and publisher, founder of Kindred World. They co-founded The Evolved Nest Initiative, offering educational outreach projects designed to make our "evolutionary pathway to well-being" available to all with short films, monthly discussions, and online learning."

"The Evolved Nest is a breakthrough concept that integrates findings across fields that bear on child development, child raising and adult behavior. The Evolved Nest promotes optimal health and wellbeing, cooperation, and receptive and sociomoral intelligences. Societal moves away from providing the Evolved Nest have contributed to the ill being and dysregulation we see in one another and society." (Evolved Nest website)

For 99% of human history, the cultural systems that enabled humans to survive featured cooperation between people and with the natural world. In the modern world, cycles of competition and detachment from the natural world are all too common. Many babies do not receive the nurturing and companionship they were born expecting. The following graphic compares a cooperative (or Kinship) cycle to the cycle of competitive detachment.

The foundation of how humans think and organize their societies is their worldview. Unfortunately, the current prevailing worldview is "Competitive Detachment" or "Domination." This makes it harder for individual families to meet their children's needs. Recognizing how societal attitudes and practices are out of alignment with what humans need for wellbeing can be discouraging. Yet some individuals, families and communities are determined in pursuing wellbeing. And fortunately, there are visionaries who explore the path to a better way forward, a return to our ancestral wisdom of "Cooperative Companionship" or "Partnership"—the Kinship worldview. For more, sign up for Kindred World's email newsletter and explore the wealth of information on their website.

This summer, I was immersed in an invitation-only 12-week training, a deep dive into the components of The Evolved Nest and the Kinship mindset that accompanies it. Each week, after reading and watching a wealth of information focused on a component of the Evolved Nest, we met together online. It was fascinating and inspiring to meet other people from around the world, to hear their reflections and learn about their work. I'm grateful to Darcia and Lisa for this opportunity, and I'm now a Certified Nesting Ambassador!

Peace Begins at Home

A transformative thinker, systems scientist, author and more, Dr. Riane Eisler is the founder of the Center for Partnership Systems. Learn more about how Partnerism and the Evolved Nest complement each other: read an excerpt from Dr. Eisler's most recent book and watch her fascinating conversation with Dr. Darcia Narvaez.

Playful Heart Parenting

Mia Wisinski has a simple mission: "to help families create more joyful, meaningful moments through laughter — even on the busiest days and in the hardest seasons."

Mia has experience as a theater educator, performer and songwriter. She says: "I’m deeply passionate about play, creativity, and laughter. As a naturally silly person, I was surprised by how quickly I lost touch with that part of myself after becoming a parent. Bit by bit, I found my way back — and saw just how powerfully play could shift the whole energy of our home."

Mia offers parents ideas and resources: a weekly email newsletter, apps with prompts inspired by improv games, and the Activate Play Mode course and workshops.

Thanksgiving Myths & Stereotypes

There is great information, including suggested children's books, in this guide from the Smithsonian Museum of the American Indian.

Rethinking Thanksgiving Celebrations: Native Perspectives on Thanksgiving

Family and Home Network focuses on a critical aspect of well-being: parent-child time together. We offer affirmation, information and advocacy to parents who spend generous amounts of time together with their children. And we join with other advocates in speaking up for equitable, just policies that offer support to all families. We want parents to have information about the irreducible needs of children. And we want all families to be equitably supported as they care for their children, whether they provide care by using child care services or have an at-home mother or father provide care (or any combination / variation of care).

Forward this email, please! Help us reach more families with affirmation, information and advocacy! Or copy and share this link, where people can read our newsletters and sign up: https://family-and-home-network.kit.com/

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Family and Home Network

National nonprofit organization offering affirmation, information and advocacy to parents, with a focus on at-home parents and those who spend (or want to spend) generous amounts of time with their children. Advocating for Inclusive Family Policies.

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