Toddler and beyond.
Behavior, milestones, sleep regressions, starting school, and not losing your patience — taught by people who’ve done the work long enough to know what matters.

Toddler-years classes to start with.
Toddler Milestones: Typical vs. a Flag
Tantrums: What They Are, What They Aren't
Hitting Biting Throwing
Browse the full list.
Big Feelings Growing Brains
Toddler Milestones: Typical vs. a Flag
Tantrums: What They Are, What They Aren't
Hitting Biting Throwing
Setting Limits Without Breaking Spirit
Time Out Time In
Autonomy Years Why No Is Developmental
Picky Eating The Science
Toddler Eating: What's Normal Intake
Toddler Sleep: What's Normal at This Age
Early Years — Lesson 11
Dropping Naps: Timing and Signs
Night Terrors And Nightmares The Difference
Early Years — Lesson 14
Early Years — Lesson 15
Speech And Language Milestones And When To Worry
Early Years — Lesson 17
Early Years — Lesson 18
Early Years — Lesson 19
Screen Time In The Early Years Aap Guidelines And Reality
Early Years — Lesson 21
Outdoor Play And The Underrated Power Of Risk
Early Years — Lesson 23
Preschool When What How To Choose
Separation Anxiety Typical Vs Struggle
Sibling Rivalry The Long View
Welcoming A Second Baby When There 'S Already A Toddler
Common Toddler Illnesses And What To Do
Early Years — Lesson 29
Toddler Safety The Things That Actually Hurt Kids This Age
Toddler Dental Care
Early Childhood Mental Health: The Screen Most Parents Miss
Specialists who work this stage

Anne Nasson
Pediatric Occupational Therapist, MS, OTR/LPediatric occupational therapist empowering new moms to confidently support their baby’s motor and sensory development with simple, playful routines.

Dr. Quiara Smith
Dr. Quiara Smith, OTD, OTR/L, CEIM, Pediatric Pelvic Health Occupational Therapist
Khyati Desai-Seltzer
ownerGrounded guide, who helps mothers connect to their intuition and their babies through sacred tough.

Lissette Keslinke
Certified Pediatric Sleep ConsultantCertified Pediatric Sleep Consultant based in the Chicago suburbs, helping families worldwide create healthy, independent sleep habits for their little ones.

Meagan O'Neill
Pediatric Physical Therapist and Certified Infant Massage CoachPediatric physical therapist since 2004, supporting children’s growth while guiding and empowering families.
The things people actually Google.
How do I handle toddler tantrums without making them worse?+
Start by lowering your own volume. A tantrum is a nervous system that’s flooded — reasoning, lecturing, and bargaining all add fuel. Keep them safe, stay close without crowding, and wait for the wave to pass before you talk about what happened. The teaching moment is on the other side of the storm, not inside it.
Why is my toddler suddenly waking up at night again?+
Sleep regressions are usually a sign of something developing, not something broken — language, mobility, separation awareness, and nap transitions all shake the bedtime routine. Hold the basics (consistent wind-down, the same room, a calm response), and most regressions resolve within a few weeks. If it stretches past a month or feels like a pattern, a sleep consultant can help.
What do I do about a picky eater?+
Take pressure off the meal and put it on the week. Most toddlers eat a surprisingly balanced diet across seven days even when a single dinner looks like crackers and air. Your job is to decide what’s served and when; their job is to decide whether and how much. Avoid short-order cooking and bring concerning patterns to your pediatrician or a pediatric RDN.
How do I know if my toddler’s development is on track?+
Milestones are ranges, not deadlines. The CDC and AAP publish reasonable windows for motor, language, and social skills, and your pediatrician is your first stop if something feels off. If you’re worried, ask for an early-intervention evaluation — it’s free in most states and the worst case is reassurance. There’s no prize for waiting.
When should I start potty training?+
Look for readiness signs more than ages: staying dry for longer stretches, noticing wet or soiled diapers, showing interest in the toilet, and being able to follow simple two-step instructions. Most kids hit those cues somewhere between 18 months and 3 years. Starting before they’re ready is the fastest way to make it harder for everyone.
How do I prepare a toddler for preschool or daycare?+
Talk about it in plain language a week or two out — what the room looks like, who they’ll see, when you’ll be back. Practice short separations, keep drop-offs brief and warm, and resist the urge to sneak out. Tears at the door don’t mean it’s the wrong school; they usually mean it’s a new one.
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