Middle School Friends

Parents Support
& Fellowship

The Middle School Friends program invites parents to meet for support and fellowship at Friday night sessions when they come to drop child(ren) off at gatherings this year. The Parents support group will be facilitated by Danielle Beauvais, who is a colleague of Harriet Heath's. Planning for the session will be in conjunction with Harriet Heath, who has facilitated the Parent support group in the past (see bio below). Sessions will provide an opportunity to discuss the role parents play through their children’s adolescence, to share concerns and insights and to explore how Quaker Faith can be a key support when nurturing older children.


Friday December 8th, Fallsington Friends Meeting, Fallsington, PA, 7:30 - 9:00 PM

For more information, please contact Elizabeth Walmsley at 215-241-7171 or 1-800-2200-PYM ( 1-800-220-0796 )  extension 7171 or by e-mail: elizabethw@pym.org

 

"Can-do" and "Hands-on" Are More than Cliches with Harriet Heath


She’s old enough to remember the Great Depression and the Nazis taking over Germany, but there’s nothing to indicate that Harriet Heath is ready to retire. In fact, when you hear the intensity in this psychologist’s voice, you’re convinced she’s just gotten her second wind.
A Methodist minister’s daughter who began her career as a school teacher, Dr. Heath has spent years as a counselor and parent educator. Today her commitment is to values: to helping parents identify their values and teach those values to their kids. The author of Using Your Values to Raise Your Child to Be an Adult You Admire, Dr. Heath is impatient with those who try to dictate what others’ values should be. She’s almost as frustrated with those who don’t give you the skills you need to implement your values. Wanting to do something is not good enough, Dr. Heath insists; you have to know how to do it as well.

When you listen to Harriet Heath’s life story, you understand her "can-do" mind set. Her parents lived their values and dreams, exuding confidence despite a modest minister’s salary and the privations of the 1930s.

That faith extended far past providing the basics of food and shelter. In the middle of the Depression, when many Europeans were espousing socialism and the Nazis were taking over Germany, Dr. Heath's adventurous parents emptied their savings account, borrowed against their life insurance, drove from the Midwest to the East Coast and loaded their car and two young children on a ship for a five-month visit to Europe. This was more a study tour than a vacation. Dr. Heath’s father took every opportunity to research the cooperative movement that was popular in Scandinavia, questioning whether that was a possible solution to the US's social problems. The psychologist’s parents also asked the people they met about the hints of war and oppression. Decades later, Dr. Heath still remembers the tension when her parents met with Quakers in Berlin, who were fearful of providing more than cryptic responses to questions about Jewish refugee projects.

When you hear Dr. Heath's stories about her early career and marriage, you'll also understand why she's impatient with our society's focus on short-term gratification. Charmed with the Maine coast during their honeymoon, Heath and her husband were determined to build a summer retreat there for their future family. While still newlyweds, they bought a rocky waterfront lot. By the time Dr. Heath was pregnant with their first child, she and her college professor husband were breaking ground for a cabin -- living in a tent-trailer in weather so foul the trailer's tires had rotted by summer’s end. But the commitment and vision paid off: today the cottage is a favorite gathering spot for three generations of Heaths.

Like her parents, Dr. Heath and her husband weren’t afraid to venture abroad with young children. In fact, when Douglas Heath won a Fulbright grant, the Heaths relocated for 15 months with three children, one of them just a preschooler. They traveled as far north as Bergen, Norway, and as far south as Morocco, camping for months at a time. A decade later, the Heaths returned to Europe for six months; while her husband wrote. Dr. Heath interrupted her own work to help her daughters pursue their passions. The eighth-grader immersed herself in French, and the 18-year-old spent months (and 6,000 miles) retracing the paths of the Plantagenet kings of 12th and 13th century England.

For Harriet Heath, the adventure continues. She teaches parenting programs close to home -- and far a field: she’s carried curricula west to Eskimo villages and east to Moscow and lectured in New Delhi, Tel Aviv, Rome, Lima and Caracas. She’s even shepherded nursing mothers and pregnant women into a bar’s back room when no other classroom space was available.

" I’m flexible, just like other parent educators," Dr. Heath chuckles about the unusual work settings. "Sometimes we’re on a stage with a mike, sometimes we’re working over noise -- but usually, it’s the noise from babies and toddlers!"

From an article on-line

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This page updated on Wednesday, November 1, 2006
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