Greenhouse Effect Wellness
"The GreenHouse Effect"-Beauty, Health, & Wellness ...Heal Thy Self
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🌿 BLACK SEED OIL BENEFITS 🌿
| www.greenhouseeffectwellness.com
If you’re not using Black Seed Oil yet… you’re missing out on one of nature’s most powerful wellness allies! 💧✨
🖤 Known as the “seed of blessing,” black seed oil (Nigella Sativa) has been used for centuries to heal the body from the inside out. Here’s why we love it:
✅ Parasite Removal – Naturally supports detoxification and helps cleanse the body of harmful intestinal parasites.
✅ Brain Health – Supports memory, focus, and mood by reducing brain inflammation and oxidative stress. Great for anxiety and cognitive clarity.
✅ Immune Boost – High in thymoquinone to power up your defenses.
✅ Anti-Inflammatory – Soothes inflammation from head to toe.
✅ Gut Healing – Aids digestion, balances microbiome, and soothes the gut lining.
✅ Skin + Hair Health – Clears acne, fades scars, and promotes strong hair growth.
✅ Respiratory Relief – Helps ease asthma and allergy symptoms.
✅ Balances Blood Sugar + Cholesterol – Natural support for metabolic wellness.
🧠🧘🏾♀️ Whether you’re looking to detox, protect your brain, or elevate your everyday wellness — black seed oil is a whole-body healer.
✨ At Greenhouse Effect Wellness, we believe in returning to the Earth’s apothecary for true balance and vitality.
➡️ One teaspoon a day can shift everything. Give your body what it needs to thrive.
✨ If your oppression has been compounded, so will your blessing and reward. 🌿
Sometimes the pressure feels nonstop—layered pain, setbacks, and silent battles. But know this: every tear, every test, every trial is seen… and it’s not in vain. There is divine compensation for compounded suffering.
🌙 Hold on a little longer. Your healing and your reward are on the way.
At https://lnkd.in/eEAxwC33, we honor your resilience. We’re here to support your mental, physical, and spiritual wellness—because you deserve to thrive, not just survive.
🖤🌿 Honoring Juneteenth with Healing & Liberation 🌿❤️💚
At Greenhouse Effect Wellness, we recognize that wellness is a form of resistance.
On this Juneteenth, we celebrate not only the freedom of our ancestors but the ongoing journey of healing, restoration, and self-determination for Black communities.
🕯️ Freedom is more than a moment—it’s a lifestyle.
Wellness means reclaiming our bodies, minds, and spirits from systems that were never built for our thriving.
Today, we honor Black joy.
We nurture rest as resistance.
We choose food as medicine.
We practice self-love as revolution.
Happy Juneteenth from Greenhouse Effect Wellness.
Let’s continue to grow, heal, and rise—together. 🌱
There are many environmental factors and stimuli that may assist or impede the resolution of the psychosocial crisis in toddlers.
The emotional intelligence and overall mood of the caregivers around the toddler are crucial to the toddler’s developmental conditioning. An adult's ability to empathize with the seemingly irrational impulses of a toddler, along with their capacity to maintain patience under stressful conditions, can positively affect a toddler's self-esteem and their ability to resolve crises.
On the other hand, short-tempered caregivers may grow impatient with this age group, and their inability to demonstrate compassion and patience may impede a toddler's ability to handle crises and complex emotions, such as anxiety, while inducing feelings of inadequacy. As Newman and Newman (2017) note,
"At the beginning of this stage, the toddler may have established a strong, positive, and trusting relationship with the caregiver. Now the child is expected to function more independently, to take care of some basic needs, and exercise new levels of self-control. These expectations for new levels of autonomy may be accompanied by new experiences of shame" (p. 64).
In terms of the psychosocial crisis of "autonomy vs. shame or doubt," I believe it is important that parents and caregivers create an environment that encourages autonomy rather than one that induces shame. I have strived to do this in my parenting style by allowing my son to explore his environment and interests from infancy to the present, even with the risk of failure or the potential for harm. Living in an individualistic society here in the West, where individuals are expected to be independent, autonomous, and self-responsible, it is my goal to prepare my son for such a world.
As Newman and Newman (2017) explain,
"The term psychosocial draws attention to the fact that the crises are, in part, the result of cultural pressures and expectations. Individuals will experience tension because of the culture’s need to socialize and integrate members. The concept acknowledges the dynamic conflicts between individuality and group membership at each period of life" (p. 65).
Giving my son the freedom to be autonomous has fostered a sense of self-esteem and self-awareness in him, which has become a noticeable personality trait to his peers, family, and teachers. Overall, the outcome has been beneficial to his ability to self-soothe, discover, and use logical reasoning. At times, he may be overly confident, but this is something I have no intention of stifling or diminishing. I believe encouraging healthy, autonomous traits in toddlers will facilitate the development of confident adolescents who will carry their high self-esteem into adulthood and the choices they make thereafter.
Reference
Newman, B. M., & Newman, P. R. (2017). Development through life: A psychosocial approach (13th ed.).
06/05/2025
There are many environmental factors and stimuli that may assist or impede the resolution of the psychosocial crisis in toddlers.
The emotional intelligence and overall mood of the caregivers around the toddler are crucial to the toddler’s developmental conditioning. An adult's ability to empathize with the seemingly irrational impulses of a toddler, along with their capacity to maintain patience under stressful conditions, can positively affect a toddler's self-esteem and their ability to resolve crises.
On the other hand, short-tempered caregivers may grow impatient with this age group, and their inability to demonstrate compassion and patience may impede a toddler's ability to handle crises and complex emotions, such as anxiety, while inducing feelings of inadequacy. As Newman and Newman (2017) note,
"At the beginning of this stage, the toddler may have established a strong, positive, and trusting relationship with the caregiver. Now the child is expected to function more independently, to take care of some basic needs, and exercise new levels of self-control. These expectations for new levels of autonomy may be accompanied by new experiences of shame" (p. 64).
In terms of the psychosocial crisis of "autonomy vs. shame or doubt," I believe it is important that parents and caregivers create an environment that encourages autonomy rather than one that induces shame. I have strived to do this in my parenting style by allowing my son to explore his environment and interests from infancy to the present, even with the risk of failure or the potential for harm. Living in an individualistic society here in the West, where individuals are expected to be independent, autonomous, and self-responsible, it is my goal to prepare my son for such a world.
As Newman and Newman (2017) explain,
"The term psychosocial draws attention to the fact that the crises are, in part, the result of cultural pressures and expectations. Individuals will experience tension because of the culture’s need to socialize and integrate members. The concept acknowledges the dynamic conflicts between individuality and group membership at each period of life" (p. 65).
Giving my son the freedom to be autonomous has fostered a sense of self-esteem and self-awareness in him, which has become a noticeable personality trait to his peers, family, and teachers. Overall, the outcome has been beneficial to his ability to self-soothe, discover, and use logical reasoning. At times, he may be overly confident, but this is something I have no intention of stifling or diminishing. I believe encouraging healthy autonomous traits in toddlers will facilitate the development of confident adolescents who will carry their high self-esteem into adulthood and the choices they make thereafter.
Reference
Newman, B. M., & Newman, P. R. (2017). Development through life: A psychosocial approach (13th ed.).
05/09/2025
🌿✨ Wellness isn't just about self-care — it's also about raising emotionally healthy kids in peaceful, loving homes. ✨🌿
Parents — if you're navigating the big feelings, big energy, and those challenging tantrum moments, you're not alone. 😮💨❤️
I found this wonderful YouTube mental health tool for kids that’s perfect for helping children learn to manage their emotions and for giving parents a little more peace during the chaos. 🧠💬
🎥 It’s engaging, child-friendly, and a great way to support emotional growth at home. Because when kids feel seen and supported, the whole family thrives. 🌈💛
Sharing for all the caregivers out there who are doing their best and looking for helpful, heart-centered support. You're doing amazing. 💪✨
Anger Management for Kids | Learn 8 strategies to handle anger | Lesson Boosters Guidance This Anger Management for Kids program titled “8 Ways to Handle Anger” is an engaging elementary guidance video program, "8 Ways to Handle Anger (without hit...
05/01/2025
Part of wellness is protecting your energy.
You don’t have to entertain people, places, or things that drain you.
Your energy has limits—and that’s okay.
Honor your boundaries.
Respect your capacity.
Self-preservation is self-love.
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