Wednesday, May 15, 2013

How to Avoid the Talk-Persuade-Argue-Yell-Hit Trap

Many adults enter parenthood with visions of "picture perfect" children. 

They imagine a warm and loving home, as well as respectful and polite kids, all eagerly doing whatever is asked with only an occasional explanation from Mom or Dad.

These people are living in Rainbow Town.

As a veteran parent, you know this is not reality but many parents have the idea that kids are just smaller versions of adults: reasonable and unselfish. This is the "Little Adult Assumption."

Moms and Dads who embrace this myth often prefer the "modern method" of discipline—talking and reasoning.

Unfortunately, words and reasons alone can prove unsuccessful. Sometimes they have no impact at all, and then parent and child fall into the trap known as the Talk-Persuade-Argue-Yell-Hit Trap.

This tragic sequence results from the very best of parental intentions. Your child is doing something you don't like. You tell her to stop. She continues with her mis-behaviour, so you try persuading her to see things your way.

When persuasion fails, you start arguing. When arguing is not successful, you yell. Yelling fails, so, feeling there is nothing left to do some parents turn to hitting.

The two biggest parenting mistakes, too much talking and too much emotion, trigger the Talk-Persuade-Argue-Yell-Hit Syndrome.

Changing Kids’ Behaviour Begins By Changing Your Expectations
If you have a child who is doing something you don't like, get real upset about it on a regular basis and sure enough he'll repeat it for you.

Too much yelling and too much anger on the part of a parent are destructive for several reasons. First, they move the focus off of the child's misbehavior and on to the parent's own outburst.

Second, many children take the emotional eruption of a parent as a challenge to a fight, and there are plenty of kids who love a good fight.

Third, parents who over explain and give three, four or five reasons to a child to encourage right behaviour are almost saying "You really don't have to behave unless I can give a number of good arguments as to why you should."

This is not discipline, it is begging, and the shrewd enough child will simply take issue with the parent's reasons.

Changing children's behaviour often begins by changing parents' expectations of their children. Trying to teach young children appropriate behaviour is actually closer to training than it is to teaching "little adults."

This means choosing a method and repeating it consistently until the "trainee" does what the trainer wants. Very little of the training involves extensive verbal explanations.

Most important, the trainer remains calm, patient and gentle, but also persistent and firm. Keep in mind, children need consistency and repetition in a warm and loving environment.

Take Care of Your Own Behaviour First!
Check your own behaviour. If remaining calm, patient and gentle is most often a struggle for you, perhaps your life needs a little work. It’s very hard to be a good parent, especially if you don’t take good care of your own behaviour first!

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