12 Ways to Help Your
Child Build Self-Confidence
Self-esteem is your child's
passport to lifetime mental health and social happiness
It's the foundation of a child's
well-being and the key to success as an adult. At all ages, how you feel about
yourself affects how you act. Think about a time when you were feeling really
good about yourself. You probably found it much easier to get along with others
and feel good about them.
Self-image is how one perceives oneself
The child looks in the
mirror and likes the person he sees. He looks inside himself and is comfortable
with the person he sees. He must think of this self as being someone who can
make things happen and who is worthy of love. Parents are the main source of a
child's sense of self-worth.
Lack of a good self-image very often leads to behavior problems
Most of the behavioral
problems that I see for counseling come from poor self-worth in parents as well
as children. Why is one person a delight to be with, while another always seems
to drag you down? How people value themselves, get along with others, perform
at school, achieve at work, and relate in marriage, all stem from strength of
their self-image.
Healthy self-worth doesn't mean being narcissistic or arrogant;
it means having a realistic
understanding of one's strengths and weaknesses, enjoying the strengths and
working on the problem areas. Because there is such a strong parallel between
how a person feels about himself and how a person acts, helping your child
build self-confidence is vital to discipline.
Throughout life your child
will be exposed to positive influences builders and negative influences
breakers. Parents can expose their child to more builders and help him work
through the breakers.
1. PRACTICE ATTACHMENT
PARENTING
Put yourself in the place of
a baby who spends many hours a day in a caregiver's arms, is worn in a sling,
breastfed on cue, and her cries are sensitively responded to. How do you
imagine this baby feels?
This baby feels loved; this
baby feels valuable. Ever had a special day when you got lots of strokes and
showered with praise? You probably felt like queen for a day and hopefully you
behaved accordingly. The infant on the receiving end of this high-touch style
of parenting develops self-worth. She likes what she feels.
Responsiveness is the key to
infant self-value. Baby gives a cue, for example, crying to be fed or
comforted. A caregiver responds promptly and consistently. As this cue-response
pattern is repeated many hundreds, perhaps thousands, of times during the first
year baby learns that her cues have meaning: "Someone listens to me,
therefore, I am worthwhile." A stronger self emerges.
Of course, you can't always
respond promptly or consistently. It's the predominant pattern that counts. You
will have days when you are short on patience. Babies pick out the prevailing
parenting style and form impressions. As baby gets older it becomes important
for him to learn how to deal with healthy frustration, as this will teach him
to adjust to change. The important thing is that you are there for him; that's
the message on which baby builds his sense of self.
The confidence-building
aspects that result from attachment-parenting pay off especially with high-need
babies. Because of these infants' more intense demands, they are at higher risk
of receiving negative responses. When attachment parenting produces mutual
sensitivity between connected parents and high-need babies, they learn to see
themselves in a good light.
Because of responsive
nurturing, the connected baby knows what to expect. On the other hand, the
disconnected child is confused. If his needs are not met and his cues
unanswered, he feels that signals are not worth giving. This leads to the
conclusion that "I'm not worthwhile. I'm at the mercy of others, and
there's nothing I can do to reach them."
We emphasize the importance
of early nurturing because during the first two years the baby's brain is
growing very fast. This is the period when a baby develops patterns of
associations – mental models of the way things work. The developing infant's
mind is like a file drawer. In each file is a mental picture of a cue she gives
along with the response she expects. After a certain interaction, the baby
stores a mental image of what happened. For example, baby raises her arms and a
parent responds by picking her up. Repetition deepens these patterns in the
infant's mind, and eventually emotions, positive or negative, become associated
with them. A file drawer full of mostly positive feelings and images leads to a
feeling of "rightness." Her sense of "well-being" becomes
part of baby's self.
Infants who get used to the
feeling of well-being they get from attachment parenting spend the rest of
their lives striving to keep this feeling. Because they have so much practice
at feeling good, they can regain this right feeling after temporary
interruptions. These secure infants cope better with life's setbacks because
they are motivated to repair their sense of well-being, which has become
integrated into their sense of self. They may fall down a lot, but they are
likely to wind up back on their feet. This concept is especially true for a
child who is handicapped or seems to come into this world relatively
short-changed in natural talents. Children who do not have this early sense of
well-being struggle to find it, but they are unsure of what they are looking
for because they don't know how it feels. This explains why some babies who get
attachment parenting in the early years manage well despite an unsettled
childhood because of family problems. Consider the famous case of Baby Jessica,
the two-year-old who because of a legal quirk was taken from the familiar and
nurturing home of her adoptive parents whom she had known since birth, and
given to her biological parents who were strangers to her. She is likely to
thrive because she entered a strange situation with a strong sense of
well-being created by early nurturing. She will spend the rest of her life
maintaining that feeling despite the trauma she endured.
Playing catch-up
But what if I didn't
practice all those attachment styles of parenting, you may wonder? Don't be too
hard on yourself. Babies are resilient and, of course, it's never too late to
start building up your child's self-image. Getting to know your child and
seeing things from his point of view will help you help him learn to trust
himself. This kind of nurturing cements together the blocks of self-worth, and
can also repair them. Still, the earlier the cement is applied, the smoother it
goes on and the stronger it sticks.
2. IMPROVE YOUR OWN
SELF-CONFIDENCE
Parenting is therapeutic. In
caring for your child you often heal yourself. A mother with a high-need baby
in our practice once declared, "My baby brings out the best and the worst
in me." If there are problems in your past that affect your present
parenting, confront them. Get psychological help if they are interfering with
your ability to remain calm and parent effectively.
Heal your past
A child's self-esteem is
acquired, not inherited. Certain parenting traits and certain character traits,
such as anger and fearfulness, are learned in each generation. Having a baby
gives you the chance to become the parent you wish you had. If you suffer from
low self-confidence, especially if you feel it's a result of how you were
parented, take steps to heal yourself and break the family pattern. Try this
exercise (therapists call this "passing on the best, and discarding the
rest")
List the specific things
your parents did to build your self-image.
List the specific things
your parents did to weaken your self-image.
Now resolve to emulate the
good things your parents did and avoid the rest. If you find it difficult to
follow through with this exercise on your own, get help from a professional.
Both you and your child will benefit.
Don't be too hard on your
parents
They probably did the best
they could given their circumstances and the prevailing advice of the times. I
remember once hearing a grandmother say to a mother, "I was a good mother
to you. I followed exactly the schedule the doctor gave me." This new
mother felt that some of her present problems stemmed from the rigid scheduling
that she endured when she was a baby. She was determined to learn to read her
baby's cues. I reminded her not to blame her own mother because the prevailing
parenting practice at the time was to follow the "experts'" advice on
childrearing. The mother of the 90's, however, is more comfortable becoming the
expert on her own child.
Polish your mirror
No one can put on a happy
face all the time, but a parent's unhappiness can transfer to a child. Your
child looks to you as a mirror for his own feelings. If you are worried, you
can't reflect good feelings. In the early years, a child's concept of self is
so intimately tied up with the mother's concept of herself that a sort of
mutual self-worth building goes on. What image do you reflect to your child?
She will see through a false facade to the troubled person beneath. Matthew, on
a fill-in-the-blanks tribute to his mother, wrote: "I like being with my
mother most when she's happy." Children translate your unhappiness with
yourself to mean unhappiness with them. Even infants know they are supposed to
please their parents. As they get older, they may even come to feel responsible
for their parents' happiness. If you are not content, they must not be good (or
good enough). If you are experiencing serious problems with depression or
anxiety, seek help so that you can resolve these feelings before they affect
your child.
Martha Notes: Tip of the Day
"Shortly after the
birth of our eighth child, I was overwhelmed with two babies in diapers and the
needs of four older children at home. My stress was reflected in my face; I was
often not a happy person. Fortunately, I recognized what I was showing of
myself to my children. I did not want my children growing up believing that
mothering is no fun or that they caused me to be unhappy. I sought help, fixed
my inner feelings and polished my mirror so that my children could see a better
image of themselves."
3. BE A POSITIVE MIRROR
Much of a child's self-image comes not only from what the child
perceives about herself, but from how she thinks others perceive her. This is
especially true of preschoolers who learn about themselves from their parents'
reactions. Do you reflect positive or negative images to your child? Do you
give her the idea that she's fun to be with? That her opinions and desires
matter to you? That her behavior pleases you?
When you give your child positive reflections, he learns to think
well of himself. He will also willingly rely on you to tell him when his
behavior is not pleasing. This becomes a discipline tool. "All I have to
do is look at her a certain way, and she stops misbehaving," said one
mother. She had saturated her child's self awareness with positive feelings,
and the youngster was used to the way he felt being on the receiving end of
these strokes. When mother flashed a negative reflection, the child didn't like
the feeling it produced. He changed his behavior quickly to regain his sense of
well-being.
Be realistic
You can't be up and smiling all the time and still be human. Your
child should know that parents have down days, too. Children can see through
fake cheerfulness. Your sensitivity toward him will increase his sensitivity
toward you, and someday he may be the one lifting your self- confidence.
Putting Humpty-Dumpty Back
Together Again
You spend the early years building your child's self-confidence.
You spend the later years protecting it. Many thin-skinned children need
protection from situations they find overwhelming. I was examining
five-year-old Thomas for his school-entry physical. Thomas was a sensitive
child whose mother had spent years helping him build a strong sense of
self-worth. We were engaged in a philosophical discussion of the long-term
benefits of attachment parenting and Thomas was understandably bored. He began
hanging on my scale—an expensive scale that is built into the top of the
examining table. My first thought was the safety of my table. To me it was more
at risk than Thomas, so I firmly asked, "Thomas, would you please stop
hanging on the scale?" Just as Thomas was about to crumble from my
unintended put-down, his mother interjected a saving, "...because you're
so strong." She knows how to get behind the eyes of her child.
4. PLAY WITH YOUR CHILD
You will learn a lot about your child—and yourself—during play.
Playtime gives your child the message "You are worth my time. You are a
valuable person." It is well known that children learn through play. It
improves a child's behavior by giving him feelings of importance and
accomplishment. Instead of viewing playtime as a chore, use it to make an investment
in your child's behavior.
Let your child initiate the
play
A valuable learning principle that parents should keep in mind is
this: an activity initiated by the child holds the child's attention longer
than one suggested by the adult playmate. More learning takes place when the
child chooses what to do. Child-initiated play also increases self-worth:
"Dad likes to do the things I do!" of course, you may be thinking,
"oh no, not the block game again!" or "We've read that story twenty
times!" That's the ordeal of parenting. You'll get bored with The Cat in
the Hat long before your child. If you want to bring something new to the same
old play activity, add your own new twists as the play continues. Stop to talk
about the book: "What would you do if the Cat in the Hat came to our
door?" "Let's turn this block tower into a parking garage."
Make your child feel special
During play, focus your attention on the child. If your body is
with your child but your mind is at work, your child will sense that you have
tuned out, and neither one of you benefits from the time together. Your child
loses the value of your being with her, concluding that she is not important.
You lose the opportunity to learn about and enjoy your child—and to relearn how
to play. I remember the fun six-month-old Matthew and I had in our "play
circle." I sat him facing in front of me with a few favorite toys (mine
and his) making a circle around him with my legs. This space contained him and
provided support in case he, as a beginning sitter, started to topple sideways.
Matthew had my undivided attention. He felt special and so did I. Making all
those goofy baby noises is fun.
Parents need play
As a busy person, I had a hard time getting down to a baby's level
enjoying unstructured, seemingly unproductive play. After all, I had so many
"more important" things on my agenda. Once I realized how much we
both could benefit, this special time became meaningful. Play became
therapeutic for me. I needed time away from some of those other things to focus
on this important little person who was, without realizing it, teaching me to
relax. Play helped me to get to know Matthew's temperament and his capabilities
at each stage of development. The child reveals himself to the parent—and vice
versa— during play; the whole relationship benefits greatly. Playtime puts us
on our child's level, helping parents get behind the eyes and into the mind of
their child. Take time to enjoy the simple pleasures of play.
Play is an investment
Consider playtime one of your best investments. You may feel that
you are "wasting time" stacking blocks when you could be "doing
something" instead. Some adults panic at the thought and really have to
struggle to be able to let go of their grown-up agenda. Of course, you don't
have to play all day long, nor will your child want you to (unless he senses
your resistance!). What may seem like a meaningless activity to you, means a
lot to your baby. The more interest you show in doing things with your baby early
on, the more interest your child will have in doing things with you when he's
older. As your child grows, you can involve him in your play and your work,
since being with you is the best reward. Think of it this way—you are doing the
most important job in the world—raising a human being.
5. ADDRESS YOUR CHILD BY NAME
What's in a name? The person, the self—little or big. I can still
remember my grandfather impressing on me the value of using and remembering
peoples' names. This lesson has proved profitable. One year I was a pre-med
student competing with a bunch of marketing majors for a summer sales job.
After I landed the job I inquired why I, though less qualified, had been hired.
"Because you remembered and used the names of all of your interviewers."
Addressing your child by name, especially when accompanied by eye contact and
touch, exudes a "you're special" message. Beginning an interaction by
using the other person's name opens doors, breaks barriers, and even softens
corrective discipline.
Children learn to associate how you use their name with the message
you have and the behavior you expect. Parents often use a child's nickname or
first name only in casual dialogue, "Jimmy, I like what you are
doing." They beef up the message by using the full name to make a deeper
impression, "James Michael Sears, stop that!" one child we've heard
about refers to his whole name as his "mad name" because that's what
he hears when his parents are angry at him. We have noticed that children with
self-confidence more frequently address their peers and adults by name or
title. Their own self-worth allows them to be more direct in their
communication with others. Our two-year-old Lauren dashes by my desk chirping:
"Hi, Dad!" The addition of "Dad" impressed me more than an
impersonal "Hi!" A school-age child who is comfortable addressing
adults by name will be better able to ask for help when needed.
6. PRACTICE THE CARRY-OVER
PRINCIPLE
As your child gets older, encourage her talents. She can do well at
something, whether as a two-year-old who packs exceptional pretend picnics or a
ten-year- old who loves ballet. Over the years, we've noticed a phenomenon we
call the carryover principle: enjoying one activity boosts a child's
self-image, and this carries over into other endeavors. One of our sons is a
natural athlete, but he wasn't interested in academics. Operating on the
carryover principle, we encouraged his enjoyment of athletics while supporting
him as he worked on the academics. The schoolwork improved as his overall
self-confidence increased. Recognize your child's special talents, and help her
build on them, then watch the whole person blossom.
7. SET YOUR CHILD UP TO
SUCCEED
Helping your child develop talents and acquire skills is part of
discipline. If you recognize an ability in your child that he doesn't,
encourage him. Strike a balance between pushing and protecting. Both are
necessary. If you don't encourage your child to try, his skills don't improve,
and you've lost a valuable confidence builder. If you don't protect your child
from unrealistic expectations, his sense of competence is threatened.
Beware of
value-by-comparisons
Children measure their own value by how they perceive others value
them. And in our measuring-and-testing society, children's skills—and therefore
their value—are measured relative to others. Your child may bat an exceptional
.400 on the softball team, but she will feel inadequate if her teammates are
batting .500. Be sure your child believes you value her because of who she is,
not how she performs. Do this by giving her plenty of eye contact, touching,
and focused attention. In other words, give of yourself regardless of how the
game or the achievement test turns out.
Don't expect your child to excel in sports or music or academics
just because you did. The one thing your child can excel in is being herself.
She must know that your love for her does not depend on your approval of her
performance. That's a tough assignment for a parent who may have been raised to
perform for love and acceptance.
WALL OF FAME
In our Sears' family gallery of accomplishments, our walls display
Hayden's cheerleading trophies, Erin's horse ribbons, Matthew's Little League
pictures, etc. Every child is good at something. Discover it, encourage it, frame
it, and display it. If your home is missing this wall, your child is missing
his moment of fame. If you have a child who is not athletic, try scouting. With
Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts everyone wins and everyone gets lots of badges. As
children walk by their showcase, they can see at a glance five to ten years of
achievement. This gives them a lift, especially during times when their
self-worth is faltering.
8.HELP YOUR CHILD BE
HOME-WISE BEFORE STREET-SMARTS
Sometime during your parenting career you may run into the idea
that a young child should be exposed to children with different values so that
he can choose for himself. This may sound good, or at least politically
correct, but it just plain doesn't work. It's like sending a ship to sea
without a rudder or a captain. Only by chance will that ship reach a desirable
destination. Children are too valuable to be left to chance.
Screen your child's friends
The child's values and self-concept are affected by persons of
significance in his life— relatives, coaches, teachers, religious leaders,
scout leaders, and friends. It's up to the parents to screen out those who pull
down the child's character and encourage those that build it. Keep a watchful
eye on your child's friendships. First, let your child choose his own friends
and monitor the relationships. At the end of a play experience examine your
child's feelings. Is he at peace or upset? Are the children compatible?
Coupling a passive person with a strong personality is all right if the
stronger child pulls your child up rather than knocking him down.
While some children will wisely seek out complimentary playmates on
their own, sometimes it is helpful to set up your child by purposely exposing
him to appropriate peers. Some groups of children just naturally seem to get
along well. If your child's group does not seem to have the right chemistry, it
would be wise to intervene. By being a monitoring mom, Martha was able to come
to the rescue of one of our children who was being intimidated and blackmailed
into stealing money from us. This junior racketeer in the neighborhood was
busted because Martha became suspicious of certain phone calls and listened in
one day. Our frightened seven-year-old was in way over his head and was greatly
relieved when we intervened.
Keep a kid-friendly home
Make your home inviting to your child's friends. Yes, you will have
more messes to clean up, but it's worth it. Hosting the neighborhood helps you
monitor your child; it gives you the opportunity to observe your child's social
style and generally learn more about your child's personality—which social
behaviors are appropriate and which need improving. You'll be able to make
on-the-spot disciplinary interventions, either with your child in a private
lesson or in group therapy if the whole pack needs some redirecting.
The roots of a young child's self-concept come from home and
nurturing caregivers. After six years of age, peer influence becomes
increasingly important. The deeper the roots of home-grown self-confidence, the
better equipped kids are to interact with peers in a way that builds up
self-worth rather than tearing it down. They know how to handle peers who are
fun to play with and those that give them problems. When children are
attachment parented, they are well equipped to manage different environments
(home, grandparents, preschool, Sunday school) with different rules very well.
For healthy social development, a child first must be comfortable with himself
before he can be comfortable with others.
Clinging to homebase
In normal development a child moves out from the known into the
unknown. She tries out new experiences in much the same way that an attached
infant learns to separate from mother. It is quite normal for a child to
retreat periodically into the comfort of the known (her home and family) as she
progressively ventures into the jungle of the unknown. It is important for the
child to have a strong attachment base. Being shy does not mean that a child
has a poor self-image. She needs an extra dose of confidence so that she can
follow her own inner timetable in adjusting to new situations and
relationships. Parents often wonder what degree of clinging to homebase is
normal. Look at the problem over the course of an entire year. If you see no
change in the child's willingness to venture out, that may be unhealthy. But if
you see some gradual moving out, then your child is simply a cautious social
developer, which is characteristic of sensitive children, who may form a few
meaningful and deep relationships, rather than numerous superficial ones.
9. Lose labels
"I'm asthmatic," seven-year-old Greg proudly said to me
when I inquired why he came to my office. Indeed, Greg did have asthma, but the
physical problem was much easier to treat than the emotional side effects of
his label. A few puffs of a bronchial dilator and his wheezing cleared, but his
label persisted. I mentioned privately to Greg's mother that there are two
issues to address in any child with a chronic illness: the problem itself, and
the child's and family's reactions to the problem.
Every child searches for an identity and, when found, clings to it
like a trademark. "Asthmatic" had become Greg's label, and he wore it
often. His whole day revolved around his ailment, and his family focused on
this part of Greg instead of on the whole person. Instead of feeling
compassion, Greg's brothers and sisters had become tired of planning their
lives around Greg's asthma. They couldn't go on certain trips because Greg
might get too tired. It became a family illness, and all, except Greg, were put
into roles they didn't like.
To take away Greg's label would be to take away Greg's self-esteem.
So, we made a deal. I would treat Greg's asthma; the family would enjoy Greg,
and we all worked at giving "the asthmatic" a healthier label to
wear.
10. MONITOR SCHOOL INFLUENCES
ON YOUR CHILD
Schools can be hazardous to a child's emotional health. School
choice (if you have one) needs to be carefully considered. The connected child
who enters the school arena with peers from various upbringings and degrees of
attachment will have a set of expectations that he may not find at school.
Children meet the challenges of a new social group with different behaviors. If
a child is securely attached to his caregivers and armed with a strong
self-image, he may not be disturbed by these different behaviors. He may stick
cheerfully to his own style of play. Or, he may be frustrated, creating stress
on his emerging personality. If his self-confidence is shaky, a child may view
aggressiveness or bullying as normal and make these behaviors part of himself
or allow himself to be victimized.
Around age six, when your child begins elementary school, other
adults become influential in her life. These are people who are around your
child enough to influence her behavior and model values. Once upon a time
persons of significance in a child's life came primarily from within the
extended family, but in today's mobile society a child is likely to have a
wider variety of peers and persons of significance. This means that today's parents
need to be vigilant as to who is modeling what behavior to their children. Here
is where there is confusion in the ranks of parents as disciplinarians. There
are two extremes. On the one side are the parents who feel it's healthy for
children to experience a lot of different value systems while growing up so
that they will be more open-minded as adults. On the other side are parents who
want to protect their child from all outside influences and any ideas that may
differ from their own beliefs. This child grows up in a bubble-like atmosphere.
Somewhere between these two extremes is the right answer for your
child. Throwing a child into the melting pot of diverse values at too young an
age, before she has any of her own values, may produce a child who is so
confused that she develops no conscience and no standing value system. Parents
who overprotect may end up with a child who cannot think for herself, leaving
her vulnerable to challenges or so judgmental that she condemns anyone with
different beliefs. Somewhere in the middle is the parent who grounds the child
in a firm value system and guides her as she encounters other value systems.
The child, because she has a strong value system to begin with, is better able
to weigh her parents' value system against alternatives and develop her own
firm code of values. It may be different from the parents'. It may include many
of the parents' values with a sprinkling of alternatives learned from peers or
teachers. But the important thing is that the child has a value system from
which to operate. He is not a leaf hurried downstream in the river that takes
the path of least resistance, overflows its bounds, and eventually drains into
a large sea of uncertainty. Many children flounder, sometimes for the rest of their
lives, searching for values that should have been formed in infancy and early
childhood.
Parents, don't be misled by the complacent term "latent"
applied to middle childhood. This is not the time to sleep and get careless.
This is the age in which your children build consciences and learn your value
system. In fact, it's the only time in their entire life when they
unquestionably, at least early in that stage, accept their parents' value
system. Slowly they form their own standards through interaction with peers,
other families, and teachers, and through neighborhood relationships and
church/synagogue friendships. They discover a larger world with a variety of
beliefs and behaviors. As they talk (endlessly) and observe and experiment in a
variety of situations, they learn about how they will choose to act and react.
Trying belatedly to impose your values on a teenager whose main developmental
task at this stage is to identify his own values is difficult. The best way to
get your values across is to "walk your talk" by living your values.
11. GIVE YOUR CHILD
RESPONSIBILITIES
Children need jobs. One of the main ways children develop self-
confidence and internalize values is through helping maintain the family living
area, inside and out. Giving children household duties helps them feel more
valuable, besides channeling their energy into desirable behavior and teaching
skills. Try these tips:
Enter the work force early. Beginning around age two, children can
do small jobs around the house. To hold a child's interest, choose tasks the
child has already shown an interest in. Our two-year-old, Lauren, had a thing
about napkins, so we gave her the dinnertime job of putting napkins at each
place. A mother in our practice told us: "I couldn't keep our three-year-old
away from the vacuum cleaner. So I gave him the job of vacuuming the family
room. He kept busy and I got some work out of him." Starting between ages
two and four, a child can learn the concept of responsibility to self and to
parents and for his personal belongings. Once he learns a sense of
responsibility for these things, a sense of responsibility to society will come
naturally in the next stage of development.
By three years of age, a child can be taught to clean sinks and
tubs (using a sponge and a small can of cleanser). Young children love to
scrub.Three's and Four's love to sort laundry into darks and lights. At five,
the child can be doing dishes every night. Teach him exactly how you want them
handled (for example, excess food in the garbage, dishes rinsed, and then put
in the dishwasher). Be sure to use unbreakable cups and plates and put messy
pans in the oven to be cleaned later by an adult.
By seven, a child can be cooking at least one meal a week from
start to finish. Teach him how to fix his favorite meal and let him learn how
to pick out the ingredients at the market. Encourage school-age children to
make their own lunch. Besides giving them a sense of responsibility for their
own nutrition, they are more likely to eat what they make. Once taught, the
child can be left alone in the kitchen—no hovering mother. Relax and talk to
your mate.
Give special jobs
Call a job "special" and it's more likely to get done.
Whatever magical ring the word "special" has, it sure gets results.
Perhaps a child infers that "I must be special because I get a special
job." A four-to five-year-old can have reassigned chores, with reminders,
of course. To put some order in our busy house we announce: "It's tidy
time." Try assigning one room for each child to tidy up. Children at all
ages suffer a bit of work inertia, especially as tasks wear on and lose their
fun appeal. But sometimes children need to learn that work comes before play.
To get them started, work with them.
Create job charts
Make this a creative activity for a family meeting. List the jobs
to be done, and let each child choose and rotate if they want. We divide jobs
into paying, extra- credit jobs they can earn money for, and nonpaying or those
that are naturally expected of the children for the privilege of living in our
home. Expect to pay a higher price on the most unwanted jobs. Best is to pay
immediately after the work is responsibly done, since children are
immediate-reward oriented. In the next stage of development, from five to ten
years, children can make the connection that with increasing privileges come
responsibilities. When we decided to get a family cottage, the deal was that
Saturday mornings would be family fix-up time at the cottage, and only after
the work was completed would the recreation begin.
Plant a family garden
Planting a garden teaches children that they reap what they sow.
During our family garden phase, when our children were younger, we tied in
caring for a garden and caring for them: Water the plants and they grow nicely,
keep the weeds away and the flowers bloom better.
Other jobs boys and girls love and do well when first taught
alongside a parent include: washing the car, sweeping outdoor living areas and
sidewalks, gardening, vacuuming, dusting, and baby tending. By seven or eight
they can put in a load of laundry, and by ten they can be doing their own
laundry. When children have jobs in the home, not only are parents relieved of
some of the busywork, but children feel they are contributing to a cause. They
feel useful and needed. And the energy they spend on the home becomes an
investment they are making into the value system of that home.
12. ENCOURAGE CHILDREN To
EXPRESS, NOT STUFF, THEIR FEELINGS
Expressing feelings comfortably does not mean the child is free to
explode at every emotional twinge, but rather develops a comfortable balance
between expressing and controlling feelings. She should eventually be able to
keep a lid on her emotions when needed, but not so tightly that she can't remove
the lid in a "safe" setting, such as exercising (i.e., run like mad
to blow off steam), or with a trustworthy friend. All babies freely express
their feelings. Maturity develops through years of learning how to stay calm in
difficult situations. A child with unbridled emotions becomes a brat. A person
who never expresses emotions becomes too reserved. Too much control or too much
emoting will both produce problems in adult life.
Stuffing feelings doesn't do any good for the child, the parents,
or the relationship. It tells the child that you are threatened by her feelings
or she gets the message that you don't care to understand her feelings. The
child picks up on your attitude and learns that expressing or even having
feelings is not okay. The child decides that the feelings that accompany the
ups and downs of her daily life are not worthwhile. In a child's logic, if her
feelings are not worthwhile, she is not worthwhile. If this unfeeling pattern
repeats itself over and over, the child quickly learns both to suppress the
feelings and especially to hide them from her parents.
Even more devastating than being uncaring is responding to a
child's feelings with anger messages, "I don't want to hear any more
bellowing about that stupid fish!" The fear of parents' reactions to her
feelings turns a child into a feeling stuffer.
on the positive side, picture what happens when a child feels free
to express herself and a parent accepts her feelings. Consider this example:
"Daddy, the necklace Grandma gave me for my birthday broke." Dad
stops what he is doing and focuses on his child, looking into her eyes and
placing his hand around her shoulder. He says, "I'm sorry. That was such a
special necklace." Both his verbal and his body language convey: "I
am available to you; your feelings are important to me. You are important to
me." His reaction frees the child to tell him more about her feelings and
to work through them by talking to him. Instead of retreating into her
shell or erupting into a tantrum, she has been given a way to express her
sorrow. And he has boosted her self-worth by accepting her feelings, which are
a reflection of herself.
DO YOU OWE YOUR CHILD
SELF-ESTEEM?
Parents may misunderstand the meaning of self-esteem and feel that
this is just one more thing they are required to give their child along with
regular meals and a warm winter jacket. They guard against anything that may
undercut self-esteem – to the point where it becomes ridiculous. ("oh,
Billy, you don't really sing flat. You're just tonally challenged.") They
measure self-esteem daily, as one might take a temperature. ("Julie's
self-esteem is low today. Her big brother beat her at checkers last
night.")
Every infant whose needs are met has self-esteem built in. Like an
arborist caring for a tree, your job is to nurture what's there, do what you
can to structure your child's environment so that she grows strong and
straight, and avoid whittling away at the tender branches. You can't build your
child's self- esteem compliment by compliment, activity by activity. Parents
are already overloaded with guilt because they may not be doing enough to
foster their child's self-worth. You don't need a degree in psychology to raise
a confident child. Much of parenting is easy and fun. Hold your baby a lot,
respond sensitively to her needs, enjoy your baby. Then sit back and enjoy the
person whose self-esteem is developing naturally.
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