
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
Teaching doesn’t require superhero energy; it requires humane rhythms, clear anchors, and courage to pivot. We sit down to unpack the real weight of lesson planning during a busy season, how we manage exhaustion without guilt, and why lowering the pressure can raise the music. From the “sacred 45” minutes that protect our focus to the 15-minute pauses that keep us present, we share small rituals that sustain big care.
We also tackle neurodivergent-friendly strategies with honesty and warmth. When plans flop, we don’t panic—we adapt. Along the way, we invite your questions for a crowd-sourced Q&A in January and share details about our upcoming teacher chat on Zoom.
If you’re craving practical ideas for piano pedagogy, neurodiversity-aware teaching, and low-stress recital planning, you’ll feel right at home here. Press play, save your favorite tips, and tell us what you’ll try next. If this conversation helped, subscribe, share it with a colleague, and leave a quick review so more teachers can find it.
Support the show
Find the full transcript here of this episode and all past episodes!
📚 Join the waitlist for the next Piano Teachers Book Club Session!
Subscribe to Elizabeth's email list here so you won’t miss future courses, freebies, teacher events and more.
Let's stay in touch!
On the website/blog
Follow on Facebook
Follow on Instagram
Follow on YouTube
You can find all of Elizabeth's favorite repertoire and teaching tools on the Amazon Storefront (affiliate link)
Questions or suggestions? Send Elizabeth an email:
[email protected]
As an Amazon Affiliate, we may receive a small commission at no additional cost to you if you purchase through our links. Thank you for helping support the podcast!
By Elizabeth Davis-Everhart5
44 ratings
Send us a text
Teaching doesn’t require superhero energy; it requires humane rhythms, clear anchors, and courage to pivot. We sit down to unpack the real weight of lesson planning during a busy season, how we manage exhaustion without guilt, and why lowering the pressure can raise the music. From the “sacred 45” minutes that protect our focus to the 15-minute pauses that keep us present, we share small rituals that sustain big care.
We also tackle neurodivergent-friendly strategies with honesty and warmth. When plans flop, we don’t panic—we adapt. Along the way, we invite your questions for a crowd-sourced Q&A in January and share details about our upcoming teacher chat on Zoom.
If you’re craving practical ideas for piano pedagogy, neurodiversity-aware teaching, and low-stress recital planning, you’ll feel right at home here. Press play, save your favorite tips, and tell us what you’ll try next. If this conversation helped, subscribe, share it with a colleague, and leave a quick review so more teachers can find it.
Support the show
Find the full transcript here of this episode and all past episodes!
📚 Join the waitlist for the next Piano Teachers Book Club Session!
Subscribe to Elizabeth's email list here so you won’t miss future courses, freebies, teacher events and more.
Let's stay in touch!
On the website/blog
Follow on Facebook
Follow on Instagram
Follow on YouTube
You can find all of Elizabeth's favorite repertoire and teaching tools on the Amazon Storefront (affiliate link)
Questions or suggestions? Send Elizabeth an email:
[email protected]
As an Amazon Affiliate, we may receive a small commission at no additional cost to you if you purchase through our links. Thank you for helping support the podcast!

38,919 Listeners

526 Listeners

131 Listeners

39 Listeners

64 Listeners

20 Listeners

47 Listeners

758 Listeners

8 Listeners

7 Listeners

41 Listeners

17 Listeners

132 Listeners