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Posts Tagged ‘The Will’

Too Many Choices Create Mini Tyrants

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

I’m working this summer from home in the mornings and I did feel so organized and blessed to have a mother’s helper until her schedule changed and I had to come up with Plan B.  Plan B is shaky and interesting.  It involves my 7 year old keeping my 4 year old busy with crafts and stories and snacks!  Today was day one of Plan B.

My daughter was wonderful. She had stories planned, a lovely art activity, …  She felt secure in creating her own rhythm for her brother.  Unfortunately, the rhythm didn’t feel secure enough for my 4 year old and I could tell that he was overwhelmed by choices and the feeling that I was unavailable, despite my physical presence in the same room.

It’s so common for parents to believe that we are respecting our young children by providing them with choices and freedom and decision-making, when, in fact, the power we are bestowing upon them is such a burden to them, can be the reason for tantrums and defiance, and ultimately, if continued over time, can develop a little one into the family bully or tyrant.

Developmentally, young children under age 7 need us to be the benevolent Kings and Queens of the home. We provide structure and predictability and a solid knowing of what will happen next.  It is clear that my little boy needs Plan B to have more structure, more emotional availability from me to him.  So tomorrow I will be guiding them both through the morning.  “You may have outdoor play for a little while on the trampoline and then it will be time for some drawing inside.”  A little structure and guidance will open a window for him to feel more creative later in the morning when he might get bored, and as in those brilliant boredom moments of the past, create a game by himself or with his sister.

I think more parents in our generation believe that our children should have choices throughout the day -  about what they want to do and where they want to go.  There are times when a small choice is appropriate.  However, developmentally, it provides greater security and more cooperation in the child when parents take the lead, act confidently, have clear boundaries, make requests and ensure their child follows-through.

It is so tempting to allow our little ones, with their emotions and their tantrums, to make decisions. It’s amazing how bossy a 4 year old can become and how easily we can let ourselves give into their demands, if we aren’t careful.  You must teach a child how you want to be treated. Parent out of knowing what is right, not out of fear of your child’s tantrums.

Just yesterday my daughter was frustrated with her brother and hit him. He said nothing and ran to me, “She hit me!”  I told him, “Don’t ever let anyone hit you.  Go back to her and tell her, “You may not ever hit me.”"

When my 4 year old gets frustrated with me and starts to yell, “I want to go now!”  I recognize that it is my job to teach him how I want to be treated.  “You may not yell at me.  We don’t talk to each other like that in our family.”

Are you giving your little one too many choices?

Are you teaching him or her how to treat you and others?

Effective benevolent Kings and Queens do not allow their princes and princesses to rule the kingdom.  Developmentally, our princes and princesses are happier when we confidently and wisely take the lead.

Tags: Children Under Age 7, choices, discipline, feelings, imitation, motherhood, tantrums, The Will, working mom
Posted in discipline | No Comments »

How to Handle the Tears & Tantrums Without a Mommy Meltdown

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

It’s hot here in North Carolina and my 4 year old has been wearing his flannel pajamas. It was timely to get some summer pajamas on sale.  He picked out a short and t-shirt set with sharks on it.  It was one of the bright spots in his day; there was a lot going on for him emotionally – may be due to lack of sleep or a build up of stress.  Little things were setting him off into tears.

I share a lot of assistance to mamas about yelling, anger, and generally “losing it” because I speak from experience.  Tears and tantrums are a hot button for me and I have to be intentional to respond calmly.  I’m a mama who likes to feel I’m in control of things – including my children’s emotions.  Intellectually I understand that children are not mature emotionally and that they express their stress through tears.

In the past few weeks I’ve been thoroughly enjoying Naomi Aldort’s book, Raising Our Children, Raising Ourselves.  She has a wonderful technique she calls S.A.L.V.E. that help a parent like myself respond effectively to my emotional child.

At bedtime my little guy was psyched to get into his new summer jammies. After his bath he dried off and we pulled up the shorts – but they fell down to his ankles as soon as I let them go around his waist.  Uh – Oh.  I peeked at the size and instead of a “4″ I see “7.”  Not a good thing with a little guy on the edge.

I explained to him that we had gotten the wrong size, knowing that this would send him into tears and upset.  I tried to share with him that we would exchange the clothes the next day – but you know how ridiculous that sounds to a 4 year old!  So, I practiced Naomi’s S.A.L.V.E. instead as I had all day – it is amazing and wonderful.

S – Separate yourself from your child’s behavior and emotions with a Silent Self-talk.

My mind immediately was wanting to put words in my mouth and instead of saying the words, I thought them, allowed them and then recognized them as unhelpful and threw them out as rubbish. I was thinking, “oh no, here we go again. He’s being so unreasonable.  How am I going to get him to just move on?  I’m so done today.”

A – Attention on your child.  When you have silently investigated the conversation inside your head, shift your attention from yourself and your inner monologue to your child.

I looked at my little boy who was so crushed.  I held him while he cried.

L – Listen to what your child is saying or to what his actions may be indicating; then listen some more.

We looked at one another and he said, “I want to wear my new jammies!”  He said this a few times and I nodded my head and stayed close.

V – Validate your child’s feelings and the needs he expresses without dramatizing and without adding your own perception.

“You wanted to wear your new summer jammies and mommy got the wrong size and now you can’t wear them tonight.”  I said this same thing several times in different ways, letting him know that I understood.  He cried harder when he realized I understood and, in a way, giving him permission to be upset.  But the tears began to subside and within just a few minutes he was calm.

E - Empower your child to resolve his own upset by getting out of his way and trusting him.

In this situation, it was best to pull out a t-shirt and some light pants as a replacement for the night.  He was calm while he got dressed and said, “mom, can we get the new jammies afterschool tomorrow?”  “Yep, I think that will work, buddy.”

The entire jammie scene was about 3-5 minutes.  In the past, it may have been a lot worse as I may have tried to reason with him and tell him that I can’t get the jammies right this minute, blah, blah, blah.  He didn’t want reason; he just wanted to be allowed to be disappointed and upset that he couldn’t wear them tonight.  That’s life and it’s okay to have strong feelings – especially when we have the unconditional love of a parent to be there to support us through it.

Tags: Children Under Age 7, discipline, feelings, Naomi Aldort, self-discipline, The Will
Posted in discipline | 3 Comments »

Day 10: Simplifying Discipline

Monday, April 12th, 2010

We’ve reached our last post in this series of how to create a calmer family life. We can’t end without thinking about how we can discipline our children with more ease.

It’s been extremely helpful for me to re-think discipline in our home after listening to The Soul of Discipline by Kim Payne. As a parent coach and educator I’ve participated in numerous parenting workshops and programs.  All these curriculums  led me down a path of setting limits and providing my children opportunities that supposedly helped them learn the wisdom of making good and bad choices.  These common parenting tools include behavior modification and behavior management, systems of consequences – both logical and natural.  You could hear me often say, “We’ll go to the park as soon as the toys are cleaned up.”

It didn’t happen every time, but on occassion, one of my children would “buck this system” and say, “Okay, I’m not cleaning up because I don’t want to go to the park anyway.”

Meanwhile, the other child would start crying because he would be ready to do his part in cleaning so he could be “rewarded” by the trip to the park.

Essentially, I was giving my children the choice to clean up, a chore that is something I expect them to do because it’s just what we do after we are done playing.

Many might say my daughter’s behavior is high-spirited or willful for twisting the situation into something so self-serving and seeing the loop hole to get out of cooperating.

Hmmm…or maybe she just learned the great art of manipulation from a master – her own mother! Isn’t it manipulative to offer a reward “only if you do what I say” kind of choice?

So, obviously, I don’t promote nor do I believe that manipulating my kids is good parenting.

My young children need my guidance, wisdom, and clarity to help them behave appropriately so that one day, they will be able to be self-disciplined enough to make their own healthy decisions.  Essentially what I’ve come to understand is that negotiations, rewards, consequences, and deals have no place in disciplining young children.

My parenting-with-choices-approach was confusing because they really weren’t choices at all.  When I linked cleaning up with a “deal” of rewarding the kids with a trip to the park, I was implying that if the reward wasn’t something they wanted then cleaning up wasn’t something they actually had to do.

So, instead of using “If, Then” parenting, I simply provide my young kids with my expectations and my instructions.  Providing them with skills to complete tasks and having expectations of responsibility, is simply allowing them to see what we’re doing and how we’re doing it.

Now you can hear me say, “It’s time to clean up, guys.” I know I need to stay close and I show them that we are all in this together as a family, by helping and directing until the task is complete.  Cleaning up is just part of our family chores and there are no deals that need to be created in order to convince them to do it.  I direct them through the process by providing them with small, do-able tasks one at at a time – “Put all the silks in the basket.”

If there is resistance, which there was in the beginning, I merely repeat myself, stay calm, believe in my authority and guidance and insist on compliance without yelling.  “Yes, Keats, this is what we’re doing right now. Let’s get it done.”  It’s about being a good supervisor and knowing that it is my job to guide them.  I’m not worried that my kids don’t like to clean up and that it might make them angry when I insist that they do it.  It’s not about being a bully or a dictator.  It’s about teaching my children responsibility and co-operation.  Confidence and clear expectations really do go a long way.  It’s SO tempting to bribe or threaten when your authority is doubted by a 3 foot being with a loud “No!”  But mama, it is your job to put your experience and wisdom into practice and stand your ground with a gentle firmness.  I really am a rock and without the “deals,” I am seeing the fruits of my clarity – there’s a lot more cooperation happening around here in a lot less time.

Because I recognize teaching my children that they will follow through with each request, I am noticing the following …

  • I make fewer requests – which means I don’t get sick of my own voice as much!
  • The requests I do make are heard and there is 100% follow-through.
  • We spend more time together – since I can’t make a request and walk away – my job is to be there to help them put their shoes on or take their bowl to the sink or get their clothes on in the morning -it may sound exhausting, but I only make the requests that I have the energy to ensure follow-through, if I don’t, then I don’t ask.
  • A lot less power struggles. Since I’m not rewarding the kids with a story or a dessert or an outing…etc. if they complete xyz task, discipline is just easier. I don’t have to make any promises and a story or a dessert or an outing is its own reward and a task is something they do because I requested it.

Mama, there’s a lot here to think about. A lot of this is in my Free Report that you received when you signed up for my Free Tool Box.  If you never received it (be sure that you’ve confirmed your opt-in when you registered – you have to click on your subscription in that first email you receive from me to become confirmed) or if you haven’t read it, be sure to check it out!

Tags: assertiveness, Children Under Age 7, choices, communication, consequences, discipline, intention, listening, self-discipline, simplicity parenting, teaching, The Will
Posted in 10 Days to a Calmer Family | No Comments »

Day 3: Allow Soul Fever to Run Its Course

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

We’ve been exploring the topic of soul fever in this series of creating a calmer family life.  Once we’ve noticed that our child is out-of-sync and we intuitively feel they need some intentional down-time, we can briefly stop the normal routines, and stay close to our little one for support.

We’re so used to filling up our days with a task and to-do list that it can sound almost impossible to take a break from that daily roller coaster.  But, again, think of a soul fever just like you would a physical fever.  You know that pushing a sick child to keep going through the normal paces of life might result in a longer or more severe sickness.  Well, I know how much you want a better sleeper, less picky eater, more cooperative, content child.  What if slowing down and taking some things off your plate would help you achieve that?

It’s tempting to believe that a slow afternoon and a stint of book reading on the couch will break a soul fever and allow you to move back into full throttle once again.  And you never know, a soul fever might end the moment you just notice and pay attention to it with a fresh perspective.  More than likely, however, it will need to just run its course.  This might be a day or two or it might mean examining what you can simplify in one of the 4 areas: environment, routines, schedules, or in-coming information through screens and adult conversation.

For us, it was evident that the soul fever was brought on by a daily school environment that was a mismatch with what we felt our child needed for her spirit to thrive.  Switching schools may not be the answer, but advocating for your child with your child’s teacher might be.  Young children do not need busy work at home.  The homework our kindergartners and 1st graders are expected to complete is not developmentally appropriate.  Most of the time, these worksheets are a repeat of what your child did that same day in school.

Extra-curricular activities like music lessons and team sports can wait, or at least be limited to one per week, per child.  Ideally, team sports are more appropriate for children 9 and older and music lessons don’t need to be pursued until grade school.  Try not to combine all of these activities for your child to do at the same time.  For the fall, if you must, sign your child up for one activity and choose another for the spring, and another for summer.

Keep providing a slow, consistent, supportive environment for your child while their soul fever runs its course.  Don’t schedule more play-dates during this time.  Just because you received 2-3 birthday invitations in one weekend doesn’t mean you need to attend all of them!  It’s okay to put limits around your schedule so your children have more free time and can experience boredom at least once each day.  Good, healthy food and plenty of rest are the two most important things you can provide children under 7.  Snacks of fruit, veggies, and protein, dinners that include fiber and greens and an early bed time are going to nurture that spirit back to harmony.

To read more about soul fever, be sure to purchase a copy of Simplicity Parenting by Kim John Payne.

Tags: bedtime, Children Under Age 7, family culture, feelings, Kim John Payne, rhythm, routine, simplicity parenting, sleep, soul fever, The Will
Posted in 10 Days to a Calmer Family | 3 Comments »

“But I don’t wanna go to school!” What To Do When Your Preschooler Clings to Your Leg

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

You know that I could only write this post if it were something that had happened to me, right? Yes, there I was this morning hoping that my 4 year old would have a pleasant attitude and pleasant good-bye for me today when we arrived at his morning preschool.

It’s amazing.  We can go for days, sometimes even weeks with pleasant “good-byes.” I get a big hug and a kiss and he says, “Bye, mom! See you after lunch!”  I walk away so proud and giddy, thinking, “Ah, he’s such a wonderful child, so easy to manage.”

Well, just when I was getting comfortable with parenting and all that I have learned and gained as a parent coach, he decides to declare that he “hates school” and that he “isn’t going.”  Now, I have heard this before.  I have even heard these same lines at home before drop-off only to be followed by the pleasant farewell.  So, I recognize inconsistencies.  I’m nobody’s fool.

While I’m nobody’s fool, I am somebody’s mama and that little somebody can sure do a number on me when he wraps his arms around my waist and his legs wrap around my calf and it feels like I have a boa constrictor inching up my body.  This morning he clung to me and repeated, “I want to go home! I don’t want to go to school today!”

Okay, I had to think about this. He’s had a good night’s sleep (at least 11 hours) and a hearty breakfast (waffle and an egg), and he played for at least an hour this morning with his sister with kindness before we had to depart.  Where was the upset coming from?  I know that he enjoyed school yesterday; he told me about playing that they were aliens and he didn’t eat all of his yogurt because he was having so much fun on their picnic.  Is there anything here I can see as troublesome or a red flag to cause this sudden desire to go home?

Nope. It’s just one of those days in the life with a young child who is learning about and using his will.  I know he is loved and safe in his class and his teacher lovingly guided him to the table of paper and block crayons after my smiling and confident kiss and hug.

It is so tempting to linger and to wait it out and to get them settled, believe me, I know.  But focusing on a consistent farewell routine will allow everyone to move on without a tremendous amount of drama.  If your child is crying or screaming, it can be even more troubling.

Young children feel safe and secure when we are safe and secure. My son’s teachers tell me that as soon as I leave he becomes the 4 year old they know again and plays well and is happy.  Knowing this, it is more difficult and much more traumatic if I allow my own emotions to get involved when he wraps his body around mine begging to take him home.  If I linger and placate and assure him that I love him and wait for him to be settled and happy, I reinforce his own anxiety.  Sweet and clean farewells help you, your child, and your child’s teacher.

I know that my son’s teachers will be loving and kind with him – I wouldn’t have him attend the school if they were otherwise.  I know that he settles better once I am gone.  Trust your preschool teachers (and if you don’t, you need a new preschool!) and trust that your young child will be just fine.  Separations are part of growing up and your reunion will be all the sweeter.

Tags: Children Under Age 7, feelings, preschool, tantrums, The Will, transitions
Posted in crying | 2 Comments »

Develop Your Child’s Strong Will, Really!

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

The Will is the first developmental stage for our young children ages 0-9. This explains why it is so difficult for mamas to reign in these little ones, to guide these “will forces.” It is most important during these early years for your little one to be active.

Helping your young child to be active and in their body is vital to their healthy growth, rather than overwhelming them with more advanced thinking with early reading, spelling, and math tasks and games. I actually find this freeing and helpful in keeping life with little ones much more simple.

Children during this stage think in pictures. Their thinking is not logical, intellectual, or abstract. At ages 3 and 4 our children are filled with questions. All that is needed are simple direct answers without too much detail. Questioning and believing are the methods by which they learn. Knowing and understanding come later. Storytelling can replace teaching your child more advanced thinking skills. Telling your child stories allows their brain the opportunity to create pictures and to develop a fertile imagination.

Following the natural development process of our child will allow them to fully flourish at each stage without stress or pressure.

Our young children see the world much differently than we do. Children gain an adult consciousness gradually. This gradual “awakening” can be referred to as “incarnating.” “Incarnating” means coming into the body or into earthly life. Essentially, if a child does not come into their body, he remains childlike. Incarnating occurs naturally and should not be rushed or slowed.

After my weekend of Simplicity Parenting training, I’m understanding the full scope of our good intentions to enrich our children’s lives. Your 3 year old loves ballet or soccer or gymnastics – or your 4 year old is spelling and reading. It takes so much more intention for parents, of our generation, to hold our children back from what our children seem to “want” or what they seemed “gifted” to do. Inadvertently, in hopes of enriching our children’s lives, we are, in fact, pushing our little ones into adult consciousness, rushing them toward incarnating too quickly.

What are the consequences? We may see more behavioral challenges – defiance, biting, hitting, tantrums – or even labeling of ADHD, ADD, etc.  The reason it can manifest in these ways is because being rushed toward adult consciousness, or toward “awakening” is stressful for the spirit.

During childhood, time exists in the moment and the “tasks” of running, swinging, spinning, playing, and imagining are, in this day, being replaced. Due to our own addiction to being busy, we are replacing the dreamy state of childhood with too much screen time, scheduled classes and sports, and unpredictable fast meals and bedtimes.

Our children are born into a dreamy, stream-of-consciousness, a zen-like place – a golden room. Young children have the capacity to be truly in the moment. They are not burdened by the past or the future. They have no concept of a “to-do” list of tasks that need to be completed.

They can’t understand what waiting for 10 minutes actually means nor do they really grasp the concept of “grandpa gets back from his trip in 3 days.” In the dreamy golden room, time is only understood in the “now.”

According to Kim John Payne in his CD The Soul of Discipline, The Will stage of development is about doing, moving, growing, coordinating. Our kids learn things by…

  • repetition: discipline is easier when you recognize that you will repeat rules, instructions, and requests because it is part of this developing stage.
  • doing: if our children are only “told” to do something we will see that this rarely works as well as showing them what we want them to do. They need to move; sitting still for this younger age is not an appropriate expectation; short time of being still can be practiced in order to help them become better at it.
  • imitating: they negotiate, yell at us, and say “no” because they do what they see and hear. When we become more self-disciplined, rhythmical, predictable, and more peaceful, so will they.

I think all of us would agree in this community of intentional mamas, unlike generations in the past once demanded, we aren’t looking for “blind obedience.” We do recognize our children as unique individuals whom we do not want to manipulate nor control. We want our children to make good, healthy choices and we want them to be intrinsically motivated.

Our young children thrive on knowing what we expect, how to make the right choices, and how to behave appropriately in different situations.

I think it’s also safe to say that we want to help our child develop a healthy will. What do I mean by a healthy will?

Before I left on my trip last week to Seattle, I was exercising regularly and my body was accustomed to the daily stretching and resistance; I was able to work harder and harder each day. When I returned after 5 days without exercising and I started my workout the day I got back, I was shocked at how weak and slow I felt. It felt like my muscles weren’t as strong and I had to start at a lower level of activity than I was at before I left. My muscles were weak.

The same can be true of a child in these early years who will not take direction nor comply to a request. This is not the description of a child with a strong will. In fact, this child is exhibiting a weak will, just like my muscles after a spell of not being worked out, this child needs to practice meeting resistance. A parent can be assured that their little one is needing more of their consistent limits and reasonable expectations and rhythmical predictability, not through punishment, but through staying close and helping the child to follow-through with the tasks.

Stay tuned for more insights, mama. This is truly just the beginning!

Tags: Children Under Age 7, communication, discipline, Kim John Payne, listening, rhythm, simplicity parenting, The Will, Waldorf
Posted in discipline | 4 Comments »

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