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"No amount of 'parenting skills' can make up for the lack of a close parent-child relationship. Kids accept our guidance because of who we are to them. Without that relationship, it’s very hard to parent. A close bond not only makes our kids want to please us, it gives us access to our natural parenting know-how. Welcome to the work of parenting. But it's where the rewards are, too." -- Dr. Laura Markham
We've almost completed the ten steps of Heal Our Ability to Love Unconditionally. Step Eight is:
Deepen your connection to your child so you always see things from his or her point of view. Your unconditional love will flower.
Loving our kids unconditionally means we accept and appreciate our child -- this separate, increasingly autonomous, immature, sometimes challenging person -- without needing to make him into someone other than who he is. It means we SEE who he is, and love him in the way that he can best feel our love -- which is different for every child.
To do that, we need to see things from our child's point of view. But to meet his long-term needs rather than just his immediate wants, we also have to provide appropriate parental leadership. How do we do both?
1. Cultivate deep connection. If you stay deeply connected to your child, you'll automatically see things from her point of view. Then all this becomes natural. Instead of having to bite your tongue when your daughter is rude, you'll feel her pain and know that something must be very wrong for her to be rude to you like this. You'll know that your child doesn't take in your love when you say it in words, but feels deeply loved when you cuddle or hold her.
2. Stay connected when your child is upset. Instead of giving your child the message that her strong emotions are too scary for you to handle by sending her away "to calm down," stay with her, and stay connected. Let her rage or grieve. Empathize and validate her feelings without adding to the drama by losing your own calm. We don't help our child by having a meltdown along with him. Our job is to empathize but provide a steady shore, not to flail in the water alongside him.
3. Make sure your child knows you're on his side. That doesn't mean giving him everything he wants. It means saying Yes whenever you can, and validating his feelings of unhappiness when you have to say No. Children can accept not getting what they want in a given moment if they get something better -- complete acceptance and appreciation of who they are, including those sometimes difficult, messy emotions and desires.
Being close to your child takes work. But it's your child's emotional foundation. It's also the foundation of the close relationship you're hoping for once he's an adult. The rewards, at every step along the way, come from connection.
Loving unconditionally means it's not all about us. It's all about love.
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Xantara commented on 29-Aug-2011 03:24 AM Hide Older Comments



