Mantles of Care

Mantles of Care revisit daily health and hygiene practices with the use of plants, natural materials and elements such as colour, texture, sound, tone, touch, rhythm, temperature. They are offered with wonder, reverence and uprightness of the adults providing care, to support the children’s etheric bodies to be nourished and their forces of growth and learning more able to receive and partake in a day.

They are offered in harmony with bodily, daily, seasonal and spiritual rhythms and contribute to hygienic self-care that is age and developmentally appropriate for the human being, with the aim of providing the child with health-giving forces of rhythm, warmth and harmony. Full and vital etheric forces provide the ground for the higher members of the human being to find their place in the bodily constitution.

The work supports healthy sensory development and the awareness of interactions, attention, self-regulation, and daily health and hygiene practices. As well as lesson content, these mantles may assist the digestion of food and social interactions. Students experience restoration, enabling them to settle into their school work more readily.

Establishing Mantles of Care in the Curriculum

Classroom visits & Staff Training

The first step is that we converse with staff and observe class groups to understand the needs of the community.

Working alongside educators, we offer mantles of care to groups of children from early childhood through to high school. All begin with warming and enfolding and then across the years the children and adolescents participate in practices that support:

– healthy sleep and waking into the day
– dressing in clothing to support health across the season
– bathing that supports the health of the skin
– wound care
– and more..

As a consequence the senses are supported towards harmony which results in greater self-regulation and the ability to focus. Students, and adults in the training, are offered ways to participate in such a way that they care for others as well as themselves which supports healthy relationships.

Throughout our visit to the school community we meet with class teachers and assistants to reflect on ourself, the children and the offering to the children through the lens of the foundations to pillars that will support a spirit-led life: Wonder, Positive Social Connections and Virtues. The background reading is an EduCareDo lesson from Spirit-led Education for a Spirit-led Life.

Our visits to the early childhood setting

To have a fresh set of eyes on the children, a visit is arranged to be present in the space to observe unobtrusively during a “class session”. Questions the Educator(s) are carrying regarding the children, space and interactions can be received prior to the observation.

Discussions occur following the session, at a suitable time, to be introduced to mantles of care suggestions that could be continued by the Educator and staff to integrate into their group.  These are usually suggestions that will support the group as a whole whilst at the same time meeting the particular needs of some.

At a point throughout the day, perhaps the initial arrival and free-play time, in a specified mantles of care space/tent, a mantle of care activity that has been determined in consultation with the Educator can be freely offered to interested children.

To begin with it could be a mantle of care activity that welcomes and warms children for helping them to settle through the new transition back to or into their new class. Children’s rest after lunch could also be observed and further mantles of care introduced if needed to support a nourishing digestion time/ rest.


the Care Space

The Care Space within the home or classroom is an area that is set aside for regaining harmony. It is a place where mantles of care supports and equipment can reside so children can work towards developmentally appropriate self-regulation within your community of care culture. The children may come to the care space to care for themselves, their friends or their dolls. They can be further supported by the caregivers with offerings such as warm rose facecloths or footbaths and first aid.

The way that the space is created and respected by the adults supports the children to come towards it with reverence. Beauty and harmonising qualities are offered in a variety of truthful textures, weights, temperatures and other natural sensory experiences.  It provides carefully chosen fabrics and additional warm clothes for children who may require it.

Suggestions can be offered on ways to bolster the etheric environment of “the classroom” and educators to be able to give life to the children. New ways of looking at children’s play, materials to be included for play, layout of the play space, the care space, children’s clothing can be discussed during this consultation.


Caring for the health of the caregiver.

Strengthening the wellbeing of the caregivers supports them in finding a place of uprightness and harmony to hold an environment that can nourish children.

Care & Renewal offerings to caregivers is often well received within the child’s Playgroup, Children’ Group or Kindergarten while the child is being cared for. Modelling care of ourselves and others.

Explore –
Lemon foot baths | Hand baths | Tinkle washing on hands or feet | Dry body brushing | Cool wash | Compress ..all come to a place of completeness with a herb tea and rest.

Mantles of Care Conversation hour

When the caregivers and their children have been a part of the mantles of care and care and renewal, it serves them well to have a conversation circle for questions that could support it being integrated at home in the child’s daily family life.

The conversations are held with the understanding of the incarnating child, and their growth and development from a threefold perspective.

WORKSHOPS

Independent workshops extend the content to better support transitions, preparing a family care basket, practical first aid, supporting sleep, the benefits of wrapping, and perceiving anew the clothes we provide for children. Learn more about workshops →

Lyn Clifton

Community health Social Worker

Lyn is a Community Health Social Worker who combines her anthroposophic wholistic healthcare training to bring home healthcare simply and practically to the daily life of children, parents, carers and teachers.

In the 1980’s Lyn worked with communities and schools across Greater Sydney to provide a range of early childhood formal childcare and support services to families of diverse backgrounds. Lyn was President of the NSW Occasional Child Care Association and an advocate, representative and educator for children’s services policy development and quality Australia wide.

Alongside her own growing family (more than 20 years ago), Lyn took up studies in early childhood at Parsifal College (Sydney Rudolf Steiner College). From this work grew home-based child / parent groups to support young families, and was recognised as complementary to Glenaeon Rudolf Steiner School in Sydney. Lyn also studied EduCareDo’s Foundation Year in Anthroposophy and the complementary Towards Health and Healing workshop series with Lisa Romero, which fortified her individual development and directed her towards Inner Work Path. Lyn’s home healthcare practices were refined through studies with the nurses at Taruna College New Zealand’s course Certificate of Holistic Healthcare, and additional training to qualify in practicing  Rhythmical Einreibung.

Over these past two to three decades Lyn has been a founding member of numerous initiatives including Anthroposophic Care for the Young Child Association in Sydney, Glenaeon Rudolf Steiner Preschool and Developing the Self Developing the World.

Lyn now specialises in what she names the Mantle of Care, to bring home health care to individuals, families and class groups.

Lynette Clifton

Louise Stewart

Homeopath Prescribing Anthroposophic Remedies & Oil Dispersion Bath Practitioner

Louise has been a complementary health practitioner since she was 21. Starting as a remedial masseuse Louise contracted to osteopaths and had a private practice. As well as working from a clinic Louise visited residents in aged care facilities and disability respite homes, and staff at a local university campus.

In her 30’s Louise began studying The Foundations in Anthroposophy with EduCareDo, extended by Lisa Romero with the health practitioner intensives known as Towards Health and Healing. In this decade Louise began to focus on medicinal substances, first applying them in massage and as compresses and then as oral medicines upon becoming a homeopath.

Alongside of this Louise was an actively contributing community member at Milkwood Steiner School in management, on the board and in day-day community participation in the schools founding years.

Louise prescribes anthroposophically prepared medicines and contributes to Mantles of Care to re-member the archetypes of health that are necessary for a human being to sustain an independent dynamic conversation between self and other.

If you are interested for your family or your community.