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The Five Love Languages of Children | 
enlarge | Author: Gary Chapman Creator: Chris Fabry Publisher: Oasis Audio Category: Book
List Price: $19.99 Buy New: $12.81 You Save: $7.18 (36%)
New (11) Used (2) from $12.81
Rating: 58 reviews Sales Rank: 85682
Format: Audiobook, Cd Media: Audio CD Edition: Unabridged Number Of Items: 5 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 6.5 x 5.4 x 0.7
ISBN: 1598593943 Dewey Decimal Number: 649.1 EAN: 9781598593945 ASIN: 1598593943
Publication Date: May 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new Book, ALL days Low Price !
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Product Description
Two Christian parenting educators describe five ways we can connect with our children: physical touch, quality time, words of affirmation, gifts, and acts of service. These initiatives, when geared to the preferences of each child, make them feel loved and, thus, more receptive to guidance and redirection when needed. The authors are inspiring writers whose examples and quotes from children and parents are instructive. Gary Chapman's uplifting reading makes the effort that some of these approaches will require seem natural and right. This is a program that helps listeners make their children central in their lives and that provides them with specific tools to stay connected.
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| Customer Reviews:
very helpful and simple to use November 14, 2008 Michelle Walton (Maui, HI) In some ways, we people are different, but in other ways we share a few common denominators. Our ways as human beings begin with five basic things we find important. We each hold them in a particular order of importance and live out our lives proving it. Very insightful and helpful to parents and their children, everyone should know these basic truths. Communications both ways open up between our kids and ourselves with this marvelous help.
Great September 1, 2008 Disappointed Shopper Great book. I highly recommend it. One of the best parenting books out there. A must read for all parents. It is a very short, quick read.
Great advice on how to fill up your child's love tank. August 28, 2008 Sonya O. Mounts (Norfolk, VA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book is a follow up to the best seller book for couples, The Five Love Languages, that is awesome and I like to give as a wedding gift. Anyway, it talks about filling a child's love tank by understanding how they like love expressed to them, whether by words of affirmation, physical touch, quality time, gifts, or acts of service. They say that it really isn't possible to detect your child's primary love language until they are about five--so express love in all these ways while they're young and until you find out which way is most meaningful to them. One way to determine their primary love language is just to ask them how they know you (the parent) love them and see whether they describe presents, time together, things you've done for them, etc.
I'll admit I was skeptical June 13, 2008 M. Heiss (USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Ordinarily, the follow-on books are kind of flat. The Elizabeth George "After God's Own Heart" books seemed this way, although the first one, "A Woman After God's Own Heart" was excellent. I was expecting the same sort of flatness from this book. I found a lot to apply in the original Love Languages book, and I'm still sneaking it into my marriage. It's one thing to tell your Quality-Time husband that you are a TOUCH wife, and a whole different thing to gently convince him to touch touch touch touch touch touch. It has brought me to a whole new level of positive reinforcement. So I figured this one for kids would be a couple of hundred pages of telling parents that kids need *every* love language. And indeed, there was some of that. But the book was full of clues for how to recognize your child's love language, how it may change over time, and how to communicate. The book offered a lot. I thought the chapters on conflict were very worthwhile, and even on how to discipline in the different love languages. My kids are so different that I needed all the pointers I could get. And surprise -- thinking about love languages across generations has helped me communicate better with my parents, too -- off to a good start, anyway. I read this 6 months ago. My eldest started talking more, to me and to other people, NOTICEABLY more, and it's bringing me some relief from one of my biggest parenting worries -- how remote this child has been. That has been the biggest and most immediate change in our family recently, and I can trace it to this book. I would recommend you read the first Love Languages book first, and then this one to think specifically about your kids. Oh, and for moms, definitely read A Woman After God's Own Heart by Elizabeth George. It's family-enhancing.
wonderful June 1, 2008 Snappy Stuff (MA United States) A terrific book for all families. You will use this info again and again, not only with your children, but your spouse, family, and yourself. Very good basic info on how to read your child (or anyone really) and provide the love they need. I love this book and refer to it often.
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