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The Association of Infant Mental Health in Tennessee
The Association of Infant Mental Health in Tennessee
Accessibility Tools
Home
About
About
Who We Are
Staff
Board of Directors
Advisory Council
Donors
Alliance for the Advancement of Infant Mental Health
Programs
Membership
Endorsement
Sector Programming
IECMH Consultation
Reflective Practice
Emergency Support
Community Engagement
Trainings & Events
Training & Events Calendar
Request a Training
AIMHiTN 2025 Annual Conference
Rooted to Grow Awards
Archived Trainings and Learning Opportunities
Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health Certificates
Resources
AIMHiTN Resource Map
Clinician Directory
Infant & Early Childhood Mental Health Resources
Pregnancy and Early Parenting Resources
Professional Development Resource Library
TN IECMH Echo
TN IECMH Warmline
Contact
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Reflective Practice
Emergency Support
Community Engagement
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AIMHiTN 2025 Annual Conference
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Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health Certificates
Folder: Resources
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Resource Library Mama's Waves
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Mama's Waves

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By: Chandra Ghosh Ippen

Ellie's mom did not come for their visit, and Ellie is stuck in a cloud of sadness and anger as she tries to understand why. Fortunately, Miss K. and Ellie's Uncle Finny are there to help her. Using the metaphor of a wave, they help Ellie talk about and understand her mother's ups and downs, recognize and hold on to loving memories, and know that she is not alone.

Millions of young children live in families with an adult who is struggling due to trauma (ACEs), mental illness (PTSD, depression, bipolar), substance abuse, or other addiction. Mama's Waves was written for any child who has a family member who struggles with emotional waves whether they live together or not.

The story was developed to open doors to conversations that young children need to have. When family members have challenges, young children worry about them and often have many difficult questions.

They need the help of grown-ups within and outside their families

  • To have language for the challenges that their parents face

  • To know that they can talk about tough times and good times

  • To better understand why their parent may not be around

  • And, very importantly, to keep good memories alive because these memories shape their view of themselves as worthy of love

Mama's Waves shows us that these conversations are possible, important, and support healing and connection.

While the book was written specifically for children whose parents have struggled with addiction or mental illness, other children may benefit from having language and dialogue that helps them to empathically understand the challenges that too many families are facing.

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By: Chandra Ghosh Ippen

Ellie's mom did not come for their visit, and Ellie is stuck in a cloud of sadness and anger as she tries to understand why. Fortunately, Miss K. and Ellie's Uncle Finny are there to help her. Using the metaphor of a wave, they help Ellie talk about and understand her mother's ups and downs, recognize and hold on to loving memories, and know that she is not alone.

Millions of young children live in families with an adult who is struggling due to trauma (ACEs), mental illness (PTSD, depression, bipolar), substance abuse, or other addiction. Mama's Waves was written for any child who has a family member who struggles with emotional waves whether they live together or not.

The story was developed to open doors to conversations that young children need to have. When family members have challenges, young children worry about them and often have many difficult questions.

They need the help of grown-ups within and outside their families

  • To have language for the challenges that their parents face

  • To know that they can talk about tough times and good times

  • To better understand why their parent may not be around

  • And, very importantly, to keep good memories alive because these memories shape their view of themselves as worthy of love

Mama's Waves shows us that these conversations are possible, important, and support healing and connection.

While the book was written specifically for children whose parents have struggled with addiction or mental illness, other children may benefit from having language and dialogue that helps them to empathically understand the challenges that too many families are facing.

By: Chandra Ghosh Ippen

Ellie's mom did not come for their visit, and Ellie is stuck in a cloud of sadness and anger as she tries to understand why. Fortunately, Miss K. and Ellie's Uncle Finny are there to help her. Using the metaphor of a wave, they help Ellie talk about and understand her mother's ups and downs, recognize and hold on to loving memories, and know that she is not alone.

Millions of young children live in families with an adult who is struggling due to trauma (ACEs), mental illness (PTSD, depression, bipolar), substance abuse, or other addiction. Mama's Waves was written for any child who has a family member who struggles with emotional waves whether they live together or not.

The story was developed to open doors to conversations that young children need to have. When family members have challenges, young children worry about them and often have many difficult questions.

They need the help of grown-ups within and outside their families

  • To have language for the challenges that their parents face

  • To know that they can talk about tough times and good times

  • To better understand why their parent may not be around

  • And, very importantly, to keep good memories alive because these memories shape their view of themselves as worthy of love

Mama's Waves shows us that these conversations are possible, important, and support healing and connection.

While the book was written specifically for children whose parents have struggled with addiction or mental illness, other children may benefit from having language and dialogue that helps them to empathically understand the challenges that too many families are facing.

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