As they grow, kids need to develop a sense of self. They need to explore, to learn, to master skills. In doing this they move back and forth, first testing themselves, then reconnecting with the security of the trusted parent. Parenting is a balancing act.
Trying new things can mean the children push against their parents’ restrictions. We parents are constantly balancing between encouraging growth and learning, while maintaining safety and good behavior. Parents are the first sounding boards for their children’s ideas and feelings. Eventually the children develop their own judgment.
As every parent knows, different children respond differently. In fact each child responds differently at different times. Nothing always works. Parents need many approaches. Our counselling helps Niagara parents develop options.
Parents can use reflective listening to encourage their children to talk through their problems. Show respect for the child’s ideas by commenting with interest and by asking leading questions. This can be easier said than done. It is only too easy to lapse into giving unwanted advice.
Adolescents often avoid talking in depth with their parents. It is hard to just get a conversation going. Also teens can carry experimentation and confrontation to extremes. At such times parents need considerable self control to remain calm and firm, to act as adult role models. If you can do it, it works.
We all remember ways our own parents raised us. We may copy some of those ways. Or we may decide to do the opposite with our own kids. One day, especially in stressful situations, we may find ourselves sounding just like mom or dad. That may be okay. Or we may want to stop, take a deep breath, and start over. Definitely we want to demonstrate adult behavior.
Above all have some fun with your child. Memories of happy, loving times are the glue that holds the relationship together when differences arise.
RESOURCES
- 1-2-3 Magic: Effective Discipline for Children 2 – 12, by Thomas Phelan
- Between Parent and Child, by Haim Ginott
- Children the Challenge,by Rudolf Dreikurs
- Get Out of My Life. . . , and It’s Not Fair . . . by Anthony Wolf
- How to Talk so Kids Will Listen . . . , by Adele Faber & Elaine Mazlish
- Kids Are Worth It!: Giving Your Child the Gift of Inner Discipline, by Barbara Coloroso
- The Whole-Brain Child, or No-Drama Discipline, by Daniel Siegel and Tina Payne Bryson
- Parent Effectiveness Training, by T. Gordon
- Raising Good Children, by Thomas Lickona
- Still a Family: a Guide to Good Parenting Through Divorce, by Dr. Lisa Rene Reynolds
- The Hyperactive Child Book, by Kennedy, Terdal and Fusetti
- What About the Kids . . . Before, During and After Divorce, by Wallerstein and Blakeslee
- Pathstone Mental Health workshops: workshops-parents-professionals
- Niagara Region Public Health classes for parents: clinics, classes & groups for parents, caregivers and children