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Are You a Strict Parent?
What is your parenting
strategy? Most parents' attitudes can fit into one of three
categories.
Authoritative:
Parents in this category
are warm and involved, offering emotional support but also establishing
guidelines, limits and expectations. They listen actively to their
children, and when appropriate let them make their own decisions.
Research shows that this style correlates with the best emotional and
psychological outcomes for children; parents recognize that discipline
is most effective when housed in a loving relationship and that one of
the most powerful forms of discipline is positive feedback and
encouragement.
Authoritarian:
Parents in this category
are not as warm or nurturing, do not take child's feelings into
consideration, and tend to be more rigid, imposing rules without
discussing rationale with the child: "You do it because I told you
to, and I am your mother." Basically, compliance and obedience are
sought. These children can appear as "good" children, but
anger is present and if the child has a "difficult"
temperament, power struggles are likely to set in.
Laissez faire or
permissive:
Parents in this category
fail to set up clear guidelines for children, often giving in or
overindulging them. Some of these parents do not necessarily give in,
but rather are more neglectful and have little emotional contact with
their child. The children who are overindulged tend to become so-called
spoiled children who are very demanding and lacking in self-control.
Those growing up with parents who are neglectful often encounter the
greatest difficulties in terms of emotional and behavioral
problems.
The purpose
of discipline
I often discuss two
main purposes of discipline. The word "discipline" stems from
"disciple," meaning it is a teaching process. One purpose is
to insure a safe, secure and comfortable environment where there are
reasonable and clear-cut guidelines and expectations. The next is to
help our children develop self-discipline or self-control, so that even
if we are not present they will make sound judgments and think before
they act. Developing self-discipline is an important aspect of being
more optimistic and resilient.
Effective discipline:
Be empathic and nurturing:
Ask yourself questions such as, "Would I want anyone to say or do
to me what I just said to my child?" Or, "Am I saying or doing
things in a way in which my child will learn from me rather than resent
me?"
Recognize that
discipline begins early:
From birth you want to
nurture a loving relationship, and start to set some limits by the time
the child is a year old. Parents must realize that self-control doesn't
appear by osmosis when the child is older. Rather, your discipline style
with your toddler will determine how effective you will be as the child
becomes a teenager. The goal is to give increasing responsibility to the
child, as they can handle it.
Parents need to work as
a team:
Parents need not be clones
of each other, but if differences in philosophy exist, they should talk
about it privately and try to have a more unified approach. Children are
experts at "splitting" parents when they realize they can get
something from one parent and not the other.
Be consistent, not
rigid:
Don't change rules and
expectations from one moment to the next based on how you feel at that
particular moment. As the child gets older there is a need to be more
flexible. For example, if a teenager has a dance, you could allow him or
her to stay out later as long as you know where he or she is.
Remain firm and
calm:
If you resort to yelling or
hitting, you are not serving as a model of self-discipline.
With a young child you
can say, "You can keep whining, but it won't make me change my
mind." You can start with letting the child make simple choices
as a toddler. You can say for example, "Do you want me to help
you put your toys away or do you want to do it by yourself?" Or
you could ask, "It's your choice, if you write with the chalk on
the wall, we have to take the chalk away."
With a teenager you can
say, "I want you to have a good time with your friends, but I
don't think hanging out at the mall is the best place to be. Maybe you
can think of another place."
Turn more responsibility
over to children as they get older: If one of the main goals of
discipline is to promote self-discipline, then as children get older,
you want them to begin to make more decisions. As teenagers,
parents can still remain firm, but can ask, "I don't want to nag
you about your homework, what do you think will help you to get it
done?" Or, "You can drive the car, but you must let me know
where you are. Will that be a problem?" Basically, you use
natural and logical consequences so children and teenagers learn that
their behavior, which they have control over, results in certain
consequences.
Select battlegrounds
carefully:
Everyone has heard this,
but it’s not easy to follow. When dealing with toddlers, lessen
battlegrounds by not having a multitude of rules, and make certain that
the house is "child friendly." Don't have expensive objects
all over the house so you are constantly telling your child not to touch
something. As children get older, increasingly ask yourself, "What
is really important?" In my clinical practice and workshops, I ask
parents to list all of the things they expect their kids to do each day,
and for some it is a very long list. I suggest that as kids develop,
issues of curfew, drugs and respect for others deserve more focus than
whether the bed is made perfectly or whether a child is a straight-A
student.
Remember that the
most powerful form of discipline is positive feedback and encouragement.
At all ages kids need unconditional love, they need us to be there
for them and to offer realistic praise. While toddlers are more likely
to accept this, in my experience teenagers — even as they are pushing
parents away — want parents to be there for them. One teenager, whose
parents set few limits and who became pregnant, said, "If they had
set limits I may have fought them, but at least I would have known they
cared about me." For more information on Dr. Robert Brooks'
parenting techniques, you can go to his Web site at http://www.drrobertbrooks.com.
source MSNBC
Interactive
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