Wednesday, November 20, 2019
3 simple rituals that will make you a fantastic parent
3 simple rituals that will make you a fantastic parent 3 simple rituals that will make you a fantastic parent You know how it goes. You want this little person to do the thing and they wonât do the thing and somehow zero-point-two-seconds later youâre in the midst of a tear-filled screaming match in the hair care aisle at CVS.You start thinking about how your real kid may have been switched at birth for this pint-sized tyrant who seems bent on reenacting âThe Omenâ in public. And teenagers make you want to skip right past negotiating and just call an exorcist. Yes, you love them, but kids can drive you crazy.Or⦠maybe weâre just working off a completely boneheaded paradigm when we deal with our children. I will now attempt to illustrate this point with a seemingly absurd scenario:Iâm with my fictional friend Hans. Hans only speaks German.Me: Speak English.Hans: (something in German)Me: ENGLISH!Hans: (something in German)Me: Stop defying my will, Hans!Hans: (shouts in German)And on it goes. Whoâs the idiot here? Me. Why? Iâm acting like heâs willfully resisting me when th e reality is that he simply doesnât have the skills required to comply. No amount of me shouting, threatening or pleading is going to suddenly teach him to speak another language.If I asked you âDo kids have the abilities and self-control of adults?â you would laugh and say, âOf course not.â But we often treat kids - especially during heated moments - like they have the abilities and self-control of adults. Does not compute.This doesnât mean we just let them do whatever they want. But it does mean we need to think a little less of parenting as being a prison warden and more like itâs about teaching.Yeah, sounds nice but easier said than done, right? Well, let me up the ante even moreâ¦What if you could exert discipline and teach your kids better behavior and develop a stronger bond with them, all at the same time? Sound good? But how the heck do you do that?Frankly, I have no idea. But luckily, Ross Greene doesâ¦He was on the faculty at Harvard Medical School for over 20 years. Greene designed a system that has not only been validated by research but has also been successfully used for decades in families, schools, juvenile detention facilities and inpatient psychiatric units. His book is The Explosive Child.Letâs get to it⦠Mad SkillzFor sake of argument, Iâm going to assume your child is not pure evil, malevolently bent on resisting your wishes and focused on spoiling your dreams. Itâs a stretch, but indulge me.Start with the assumption that your kid is lacking skills, not the desire to comply. Work from the idea that kids do well if they are able to. If someone does not have the skills to deal with frustration and rationally problem-solve at a particular moment, they simply cannot do the right thing, no matter how much you shout or threaten.How rational are you when youâre all worked up? Exactly. And taking away Hansâ Xbox will not teach him another language.From The Explosive Child:I encourage you to put aside t he conventional wisdom and strategies and consider the alternate view: that your child is already very motivated to do well and that his challenging episodes reflect a developmental delay in the skills of flexibility, frustration tolerance, and problem solving. The reason reward and punishment strategies havenât helped is because they wonât teach your child the skills heâs lacking or solve the problems that are contributing to challenging episodes. Indeed, youâve probably noticed that punishment actually adds fuel to the fire, and that your child only becomes more frustrated when he doesnât receive an anticipated reward. Your energy can be devoted far more productively to collaborating with your child on solutions to the problems that are causing challenging episodes than in sticking with strategies that may actually have made things worse and havenât led to durable improvement⦠You and your child are going to be allies, not adversaries. Partners, not enemies.What evid ence do you already have for this? That your kid doesnât misbehave 24-7. Iâll bet the majority of the problems you have arenât random. Maybe getting them to do their homework consistently produces a meltdown. Or bedtime is always a battle of epic proportions. There are a handful of situations that are disproportionately responsible for the conflict you two experience.He has âdifficulty with doing chores.â She has âdifficulty with getting up for school.â Thatâs something we can address. Parents often shout âYou do this every time!â but rarely stop to think there might be a real reason it happens so consistently at that particular time. Thereâs what Greene calls an âunsolved problem.âBut instead of thinking about the skill thatâs lacking, we just focus on the bad behavior. If we aim to discover and solve the underlying problem, the behavior goes away on its own.You want him to stop hitting his sister when he gets frustrated. Do you really think for a sec ond his thought process is, âI just love punching my sister. Itâs one of my favorite hobbies.â Of course not. Itâs more like, âIâm frustrated and donât know how to handle my emotions.âIf you just enforce a strict ban on sister-punching, itâs not going to teach him to handle anger any more than me shouting is going to teach Hans a second language. Sister-punching is just going to morph into some new anger-induced bad behavior, leaving you to assume the kid has a lot more problems than he really does. The unaddressed anger issues just create a game of âBad Behavior Whac-A-Moleâ that you will never, ever win.Help them identify the unsolved problem, teach them the lagging skill, and the awful behavior gets replaced by something that will make them a more effective human - and stop you from going prematurely gray.(To learn more about how you and your children can lead a successful life, check out my bestselling book here.)Sounds good, but thereâs a very common resistance to this logic that we need to address⦠âBut Iâm The Parent!âMany parents will respond that the kid should just obey. âTheyâre the child! Iâm the adult!â To this I have a very simple reply:So howâs that working out for you?(Donât bother to reply. I know the answer - because youâre still reading this.)âThe kid should just obeyâ is the old paradigm. Parenting from when TVâs werenât flat and telephones were all attached to a wall. And maybe it forced short-term compliance but it didnât teach Hans another language and so sister-punching just turned into some other bad behavior. And now that kid is an adult and heâs probably breaking into my car right now.The irony of merely imposing your will on a child is that the kids least likely to be able to comply with this method are the ones most likely to receive it. Kid has trouble with emotional control, so we shout and threaten, this causes further emotional overwhelm which the kid doesnât ha ve the ability to handle, and itâs a downward spiral until your living room is a reality show.Most times when you see conflict escalate itâs because of that logic - that itâs a contest of wills, not skills. If a child is upset, threats just make it worse, and if a kid is not upset, threats are an excellent way to get them upset. You have the skills to control your behavior, they donât.Greene sums it up nicely:Hereâs a simple math equation that might suffice. Inflexibility + Inflexibility = Meltdown.Nobodyâs saying you have to cave and give in. But itâs not weak to ask questions. To assume that maybe there is a legitimate reason theyâre struggling, and that itâs something you can help them get better at. Being immediately dismissive of someoneâs feelings is rarely a good idea.Do you want your child to be an adult who just mindlessly obeys? No. We want them to have better self-control, better problem-solving skills, to consider the feelings of others and to neg otiate.From The Explosive Child:If a kid is putting his concerns on the table, taking yours into account, and working collaboratively toward a solution that works for both of you- and if therefore the frequency and intensity of challenging episodes are being reduced- then heâs most assuredly being held accountable and taking responsibility for his actions.Weâre forgetting that parents donât just need to be enforcers - they need to be teachers. Many will say, âHe just wants attentionâ or âShe just wants her own way.â Hereâs the thing: those two sentences are true of every human on this planet. Your kid is just going about it all wrong. They need to learn the skills to do it better.Without them, theyâre not learning a lesson about emotional control or frustration tolerance, theyâre learning that whoever has more power can unilaterally make the rules. Congrats, youâre raising a bully. Start saving bail money and tell him to stop breaking into my car.People with MDâs donât rob banks and they donât buy lottery tickets. They have the skills to make a lot of money in a better way. If your kid knew a better way to get what they want, theyâd do that.(To learn how to deal with out-of-control kids - from hostage negotiators - click here.)Alright, lots of talk about teaching skills and problem-solving⦠but how do we actually do that? CollaborationOkay, so we are no longer responding to child tantrums with the words âRESISTANCE IS FUTILE.â Time for Hans and I to both take some Berlitz classes.The best time to start a good regimen of diet and exercise isnât after your quadruple bypass; itâs 20 years before your heart attack. And the best time to use this system isnât when someone four-feet tall is screaming bloody murder in the vegetable aisle of the supermarket, itâs when things are calm at home. It can work in the midst of an argument, but itâll be more effective and less stressful if youâre proactive.There are thre e steps here and Greene has a Magic Formula for each. This should make things a lot easier for you to execute and, more importantly, should drastically reduce the amount of email I get saying, âBut I donât know what youâre telling me to do, Eric.âStep 1: EmpathyLetâs say that getting them to do homework is always a struggle. But youâre smart, you didnât wait until the next homework deathmatch to have this conversation. Youâre being proactive. Time to address the problem before itâs a nightmare.From The Explosive Child:The Empathy step involves gathering information from your child to understand his concern or perspective about a given unsolved problem.So whatâs the Magic Formula for the Empathy step?âIâve noticed thatâ¦â + (problem) + âWhatâs up?âSo youâd say, âIâve noticed weâve been having some difficulty when itâs time to do your homework. Whatâs up?âBe calm and gentle. This isnât an argument or an interrogation. That said, we do need an answer. And most kids will respond with the dreaded, âI donât knowâ or silence. Thatâs okay.Frankly, the kid probably doesnât know. They probably havenât thought that much about it. Children arenât known for quiet reflection, pondering the difficulties of life while lounging in a smoking jacket with a snifter of brandy. Heck, you donât know why you do half the things you do either. Itâs okay.Be patient. Ask questions. Encourage them to talk. Get them to clarify. And try to find out why this problem occurs at homework time and not during other moments. Beyond that, the important thing to do is shut your big adult mouth. Do not rush to give your side of things or to solve the problem for them.Some parents will say, âBut I do listen! Why are we still dealing with this issue over and over?â If you already have a solution in mind and are just listening until itâs your turn and then tell them what you were going to tell them anyway, youâre wasting your time. Their issues wonât be addressed and the solution wonât last and youâll be doing this whole thing again in a few days. I call it âSisyphean Parenting.â By the way, it doesnât work.Patience. Gently ask questions. Donât judge.Step 2: Define The ProblemOkay, they told you their side. And knowing how kids are, they probably didnât think too much about how that affects anyone other than themselves and thatâs why theyâre in trouble. But thatâs okay. Theyâre a kid. If they had the skills, they would.Again, donât jump to solutions just yet. We need to teach them those skills: being considerate of others, problem-solving, etc. And that means we collaborate, not dictate.The âDefining the problemâ step is when your needs enter into the equation. Magic Formula?âThe thing isâ¦â + (communicate your concerns about the problem)Calm and gentle. Avoid the word âyouâ because unless itâs followed by âare wonderfulâ itâs going to sound like an accus ation. Stick to the word âIâ and talk about your feelings. This teaches them to think about other peopleâs perspectives.Do both of you understand where the other is coming from? Can you both summarize the otherâs position to their satisfaction? Awesome. Letâs build some more skills.Step 3: The InvitationNow itâs time for solutions. And, no, you still donât get to suggest one. Sorry.Magic Formula?âI wonder if thereâs a way we canâ¦â + (address kidâs concern) + âbut that still makes sure toâ + (address your concern) +âDo you have any ideas?âThis teaches them to take other peopleâs feelings into consideration when problem-solving - which is a much better lesson than blind obedience to unilateral demands.Giving them first crack at suggesting the solution doesnât just improve their empathy and problem-solving muscles, it also lets them know youâre interested in their ideas. Itâs a bonding moment. It teaches them, by example, how to collaborate - as opposed to teaching them âHow To Be A Dictator.âThis is how you teach them skills that will make them a successful adult. And it doesnât involve lectures that theyâll ignore.(To learn how to raise emotionally intelligent kids, click here.)Yeah, I know: nothing is ever that simple with kids. So how do we know if itâs working? And how do we course correct when it inevitably doesnât the first time around?The 2 Criteria For Good SolutionsIn order to work, any solution has to include two elements: It has to be realistic. The kid has to actually be able to follow through. It has to be mutually satisfactory. It must solve the concerns of both parties. For the record, kids are terrible at both of these. Thatâs understandable, these are skills to be learned. So letâs start teaching - but not by lecturing.Children will offer solutions that solve their problem but not yours. So again, weâre gonna build those empathy muscles along with problem-solving powers. Donât say, âThatâs a terrible idea.â There are no bad solutions here, only ones that arenât realistic or mutually satisfactory.Greeneâs Magic Formula for this one?âWell, thatâs an idea, and I know that idea would address your concern, but I donât think it would address my concern. Letâs see if we can come up with an idea that will work for both of us.âAnd let them try again. Theyâre learning to think about othersâ feelings and make a plan before they behave. And when they come up with something realistic that works for both of you, youâre done for now. Theyâll be more likely to follow through because itâs their solution.Youâll know youâ re making progress when the kid starts following through on their plan without reminders or help. Until then, they might screw up. No problem. Ask them how you can improve the solution so itâs more realistic or more mutually satisfying.In fact, itâs good if you both acknowledge that the first solution may not work, but that youâre both trying in good faith. Often neither of you will know if itâs truly realistic or mutually satisfactory until itâs been tried. Acknowledging that durable solutions are refined with time reduces conflict. So donât expect immediate miracles.Just the fact that you both showed empathy and listened will bring you closer together than shouting and orders. Itâll make âSolution 2.0â better because your kid knows youâre willing to calmly listen and to give them some autonomy. You may not have immediately solved the issue, but you definitely improved the relationship. And thatâs what leads to many more good solutions in the future.(To lea rn the 10 steps to raising happy kids, click here.)Okay, weâve covered a lot. Letâs round it all up - and for those who feel that this might be too touchy-feely, that the adult world is not always so collaborative, well, weâre gonna address that too â¦Sum UpHereâs how to be a fantastic parent: Mad Skillz: Itâs not a battle of wills, itâs all about skills. And if you listen, theyâll learn. âBut Iâm the parent!â: If that was working there is no way you would have read this far. Youâre not that masochistic. Step 1 â" Empathy: âIâve noticed thatâ¦â + (problem) + âWhatâs up?â Step 2 â" Define the problem: âThe thing isâ¦â + (communicate your concerns about the problem) Step 3 â" Invitation: âI wonder if thereâs a way we canâ¦â + (address kidâs concern) + âbut that still makes sure toâ + (address your concern) +âDo you have any ideas?â Realistic and Mutually Satisfying: Iâm not sure those words describe anything Iâve ever done in my life, but when their solution hits both marks, youâre golden. Some might say the adult world is not always such a collaborative place. Your kid may end up in a job with a boss who unilaterally dictates orders, doesnât listen and makes threats.That is a 100% real possibility. And that is a problemâ¦Which is why we taught them awesome problem-solving skills, right?From The Explosive Child:A (dictator) boss is a problem to be solved. How does your child learn to solve problems? (With the above three steps.) Which skill set is more important for life in the real world: the blind adherence to authority⦠or identifying and articulating oneâs concerns, taking othersâ concerns into account, and working toward solutions that are realistic and mutually satisfactoryâ¦? If kids are completely dependent on imposition of adult will to do the right thing, then what will they do when adults arenât around to impose their will?Iâm going to stop shouting at Hans and weâre both going to use Google Translate.Youâre teaching your kid the skills they need to be empathetic and respectful, to problem-solve and negotiate. And in the process, youâll get better at those things too.When it comes to abilities, we act like kids are our equals. But when it comes to respect, we act like theyâre inferior to us.Try reversing that.Join over 330,000 readers. Get a free weekly update via email here.This article first appeared on Barking Up The Wrong Tree.
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