You did not sign up to be a full-time loudspeaker. Yet so many days end with the same taste in your mouth: too many reminders, too many raised voices, not enough actual connection. This book asks a different question: what if the problem is not your patience, but the way the house is set up? Here, low-noise parenting is treated as a design project, not a test of willpower. You will learn how to run a friction audit, build visual routines for kids, and create family chore systems that live on the walls, not in your throat. Instead of one more lecture about self-control, you will discover connected home routines that quietly cue what needs doing, from morning rushes to bedtime. Along the way, you will explore tech hygiene for families, design a sibling conflict playbook, and experiment with task batching for parents so you are less depleted before the day even starts. This is a book for tired but thoughtful caregivers who are done with firefighting and ready to rebuild the foundations. If you have ever longed for low noise parenting or dreamt of parenting without yelling, these pages offer practical, forgiving tools. Weekly family huddles, a gentle weekly family review, and small environmental tweaks help everyone feel more capable and less criticised. The promise is simple: a calmer home where the space does more of the talking, leaving your voice free for guidance, jokes and genuine listening.
Low-Noise Parenting
SKU: 9789375367376
$24.99 Regular Price
$19.51Sale Price
- Reema Sanzari writes from the messy, hopeful middle of family life. As a parent of two and a long-time facilitator of small-group conversations with mothers, fathers, and carers, she has spent years listening to what really happens between school runs, work deadlines, and bedtime battles. Her work is rooted in the belief that ordinary homes can be training grounds for courage, kindness, and clear thinking, without turning parents into full-time entertainers or drill sergeants. Growing up in a crowded, multigenerational flat, Reema watched chores, stories, and humour hold several generations together through change and uncertainty. That early experience of shared responsibility and informal rites of passage shapes her insistence that character is caught, not simply taught. Today she designs simple tools and frameworks that fit around real lives: family values charters scribbled on scrap paper, pocket-money jars on kitchen counters, and five-minute reflection routines that children actually enjoy. When she is not writing or leading community workshops, you will usually find her on a park bench, taking field notes on how families really talk when they think no one is listening.


















