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"You got to accent...uate the positive, elim..inate the negative ...
latch on...to the affirmative..." -- Johnny Mercer
Want to try an experiment that will transform your child’s behavior in
a week? Step one is to accentuate the positive. Acknowledge every
positive thing your child does with as much enthusiasm, appreciation
and specificity as you can. Do this as many times a day as you can
catch your child doing something right, accompanied frequently by an
affectionate hug.
"You and your sister played so happily together this afternoon."
“I’m so pleased with how you picked up all your toys! You must be so proud of yourself!”
“The dog loves it when you feed her. Look how happy she is!”
Step Two? Eliminate the negative! No matter how bad your child’s
negative behavior, keep your emotional response flat as you set limits.
No punishment, just limits. Staying calm is tough, but kids live off
our emotional energy. If they get it only for positive behavior, not
for negatives, they'll repeat the positive behavior. The negative
behavior will diminish and eventually disappear as the child develops a
positive self image.
Fair warning: Intense kids need lots of intense energy, so muster all the enthusiasm you can.
What do you have to lose? READ POST
"If
you entertain thoughts that people are doing things to you -- for
example, that your child (or anyone else) is manipulating you, taking
advantage of you, ignoring you, or disrespecting you -- you will often
feel annoyed, irritated, and angry. However, when instead you think in
terms of the needs that you and your child are trying to meet in every
action taken, then you are more likely to feel compassion and
connection. And you are much more likely to take action that
contributes to your child's well-being as well as your own." -- Sura
Hart & Victoria Kindle-Hodson
We all have
needs -- for food, touch, fun, safety, self-expression, connection with
others. Children are born completely powerless. They're still trying
to figure out how to get their needs met. Once kids are convinced their
needs matter to their parents -- on whom they depend to meet those
needs -- they can relax and listen to their parents' agenda. In other
words, they don't have to fight with us to try to get their needs met.
They feel the way we all feel when our needs are met: comfortable,
happy, open, appreciative. That's when they're ready to cooperate.
When your kids use a dysfunctional strategy to meet their needs, notice
the deeper need they're trying to fill. READ POST
Guest Blog by Jane Nelsen,
(From Positive Discipline in the Classroom)
www.positivediscipline.com READ POST
"The
average parent spends twice as long each day dealing with their email
as they do playing with their child." — British government survey
finding
We all know that feeling of trying to
tear ourselves away from the computer to tend to our kid. Back in the
days when more of our work was manual -- kneading bread dough, darning
socks -- we could at least attend to kids while we accomplished our
tasks. Computers rivet our attention and take us right out of the
room. Our kids feel that.
Of course, dealing with kids can be challenging at the end of a long
day. Most parents say they have to psych themselves up to remain calm
and cheerful through the dinner, bath and bedtime routine. But the
tone of this time together is what creates the fabric of your child's
life.
Can you make your child your priority for these few hours? Can you
resist that urgent need to quickly check your email, and focus instead
on connecting with your kid? Can you stay calm through all the bedtime
testing so the last thing your child feels is safe warmth, rather than
angry threats?
How? READ POST
"Some nights I look in on our sleeping children before I go to bed. I watch their softly tousled heads slumbering on their pillows, and sadness wells up in me. Have I drunk in their smiles and laughter and hugged them, or have I just checked things off my to-do list today? They're growing so quickly. One morning I may wake up and one of my girls will be getting married, and I'll worry: Have I played with them enough? Have I enjoyed the opportunity to be a part of their lives?"
-- Janet Fackrell
Research shows we need five positive interactions to each negative interaction to maintain a healthy, happy relationship.
It's part of our job description to enforce limits with our children, deny their requests, correct their behavior. Sometimes we're skillful enough that our child doesn't even perceive those interactions as "negative" -- but that's rare. More often, they give us the benefit of the doubt because all the other loving, affirming interactions create a positive balance in our relationship account. But when we're short on positive interactions, our relationship balance dips into the red. That's when kids develop attitude, whether they're two or twelve.
What can you do today to refill your relationship account with your child? Write down five things and do at least one each day this week. READ POST




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