| Author/Contributor(s): | Park, Jean K.; Kim, Myung-Eun L. |
| Publisher: | Copper Books |
| Date: | 2/2/2027 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
This is not a manual for managing your child's behavior. It's a guide for understanding your internal world so you can show up as a steadier, more connected parent—free from the pressure to perform and free from the need to make your children perform for you.
Drawing from attachment theory, trauma research, and over twenty years of experience helping families—first as a therapist working with at-risk youth, then as a coach supporting parents and leaders, and most importantly as a mom raising three boys—Jean provides a grace-filled alternative to prescriptive parenting advice. Rather than adding to parental shame, this book meets you exactly where you are—exhausted, frustrated, uncertain—and offers hope through personal transformation.
Through nature-based metaphors and practical tools, Jean shows how:
- Connection comes before correction
- Breaking generational cycles is possible even when other family members don't participate
- Transformed pain becomes composted wisdom
- Influence matters more than control
Each chapter includes a memorable garden tool—a trellis, compost bin, water wheel, acorn, and more—along with reflection exercises designed to move you from knowledge to integration. You'll find practical insight into child development so you know what to expect at each stage, alongside tools for emotional regulation when you feel overwhelmed. Rather than seeing your child as a problem to be fixed, you'll learn to see them as they truly are: a developing person whose behaviors make sense, even when they're hard.
Beautifully illustrated with watercolor art by Myung Eun Kim—Jean's mother—this book itself models the intergenerational healing it teaches. Designed for community engagement, it's best experienced in book clubs or parenting groups where readers process together.
This book is for the parent who's tried everything and is ready to try something different: looking inward to create lasting change. Because when we push back against performance culture, when we say "help" instead of pretending we have it all together, we're not just breaking patterns—we're making our way to revelry. Beautiful Rebellion isn't just a parenting book; it's a guide toward the healing that transforms families