We may often be of great help to our children if our timing is correct.
Help offered prematurely may cut off communication before the real problem is found.
Giving support and genuine reassurance is appropriate AFTER "reflecting feelings" has run it's course and both we, and they, fully understand the actual problem. (Reminds me of "Come let US reason together that YE may understand...")
Premature, or false, reassurance is OUR attempt to guarantee our child will be successful or happy without THEIR "paying their price".
Genuine reassurance, properly timed, is an expression of our love and our confidence in our child.
Suggesting ways to solve their problem and offering personal and family resources may help if, and when, he or she is receptive. Our suggestions may also create 'dependency' and take away 'responsibility'.
Each of our efforts to help must be carefully evaluated to determine whether or not they will promote "growth" and "maturity".
It is our duty, as parents, to create a climate of acceptance and trust so that our children freely seek our counsel rather than resist it.
From "Becoming a Better Parent" LDS Social Services
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Monday, December 22, 2008
Communication: Your Part - Reflect MORE Feelings
When you correctly describe your child's feelings, your child may send you another code. As the process continues, your child moves step-by-step to a deeper level of communication.
Reflecting feelings is like a mirror, not an echo chamber. Simply parroting or echoing your child's words is not helpful. Summarising, and reflecting their feelings to them is.
Your child then sees themself more accurately and is frequently able to solve his/her own problems. When he or she DOES need your help with a problem, they will be much more receptive if they feel, from past experience, that you truly understand most of the time.
Your child needs to feel UNDERSTOOD before they will be able, and willing, to understand what YOU are saying to him/her.
If WE do not clearly understand our children, WE distort the image WE reflect back to them of themselves, and THEY gather wrong concepts about themselves.
"See what I made! See what I made Dad..." says your son...
Your reply 1: Dad ignores the statement and says "I'm busy, don't bother me now"
Your child will think "I'm not important; I'm not interesting; I'm a bother; I am not much good am I?"
Your reply 2: "Oh yes... I see you made that yourself? Why didn't you saw it off straight?"
Your child will think "I can't do anything right. I must not be much good."
Your reply 3: "You made that all by yourself? You seem proud that you could do it."
Your child will think "I must be good. I can do something by myself!"
Try it! Then try again... "If at first you don't succeed, try, try, try again!"
Practice makes perfect...
Your child is learning to be a whole and wholesome infant/todler/child/adolescent.
You learn to be a whole and wholesome parent.
From "Becoming a Better Parent" LDS Social Services
Reflecting feelings is like a mirror, not an echo chamber. Simply parroting or echoing your child's words is not helpful. Summarising, and reflecting their feelings to them is.
Your child then sees themself more accurately and is frequently able to solve his/her own problems. When he or she DOES need your help with a problem, they will be much more receptive if they feel, from past experience, that you truly understand most of the time.
Your child needs to feel UNDERSTOOD before they will be able, and willing, to understand what YOU are saying to him/her.
If WE do not clearly understand our children, WE distort the image WE reflect back to them of themselves, and THEY gather wrong concepts about themselves.
"See what I made! See what I made Dad..." says your son...
Your reply 1: Dad ignores the statement and says "I'm busy, don't bother me now"
Your child will think "I'm not important; I'm not interesting; I'm a bother; I am not much good am I?"
Your reply 2: "Oh yes... I see you made that yourself? Why didn't you saw it off straight?"
Your child will think "I can't do anything right. I must not be much good."
Your reply 3: "You made that all by yourself? You seem proud that you could do it."
Your child will think "I must be good. I can do something by myself!"
Try it! Then try again... "If at first you don't succeed, try, try, try again!"
Practice makes perfect...
Your child is learning to be a whole and wholesome infant/todler/child/adolescent.
You learn to be a whole and wholesome parent.
From "Becoming a Better Parent" LDS Social Services
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Communication: Your Part - Reflect Feelings
Reflective listening is the big brother of Summarizing.
When your child is talking, listen for their feelings and emotions.
They may not say the feeling words... but they will display their feelings in body, facial expression or eye language. They will also likely express their feelings and emotions in tone of voice, or pace or forcefulness of speaking.
"Is my child sad, hurt, afraid?"
"Might this be embarassment, worry or disappointment?"
"Does my teenager look or sound frustrated?"
"If I were my child, experiencing these things now, how might I possibly feel?"
Recognising, describing, and labelling feelings expressed by our children increases their self-awareness and broadens our, and their, human experience (Emotional Intelligence). This level of intelligence results in deeper, more meaningful communication. It strengthens and fosters our, and their, emotional health.
If you can't determine what the feeling you are seeing and hearing might be... guess. Reflect your guess to your child "I guess you might be feeling annoyed about that?"
If you have guessed inacurately, your child will likely correct you "No, not quite annoyed, I am more uncertain than annoyed." You will both have learnt something more about your child.
Be a brave, sincerely interested parent as often as you can.
Be a brave and sincerely interested parent more often than you used to be and less often than you presently practice to become in the future!
Adapted from "Becoming a Better Parent" LDS Social Services
When your child is talking, listen for their feelings and emotions.
They may not say the feeling words... but they will display their feelings in body, facial expression or eye language. They will also likely express their feelings and emotions in tone of voice, or pace or forcefulness of speaking.
"Is my child sad, hurt, afraid?"
"Might this be embarassment, worry or disappointment?"
"Does my teenager look or sound frustrated?"
"If I were my child, experiencing these things now, how might I possibly feel?"
Recognising, describing, and labelling feelings expressed by our children increases their self-awareness and broadens our, and their, human experience (Emotional Intelligence). This level of intelligence results in deeper, more meaningful communication. It strengthens and fosters our, and their, emotional health.
If you can't determine what the feeling you are seeing and hearing might be... guess. Reflect your guess to your child "I guess you might be feeling annoyed about that?"
If you have guessed inacurately, your child will likely correct you "No, not quite annoyed, I am more uncertain than annoyed." You will both have learnt something more about your child.
Be a brave, sincerely interested parent as often as you can.
Be a brave and sincerely interested parent more often than you used to be and less often than you presently practice to become in the future!
Adapted from "Becoming a Better Parent" LDS Social Services
Saturday, December 6, 2008
Communicating: Now for Your Part - Summarize
SUMMARIZE - Let them know you heard their important information and feelings.
SUMMARIZE - content - theirs
SUMMARIZE - feelings - theirs
If you do it well they will carry on talking.
If you do it well you will have been consentrating on them
If you do it well you will use words like:
"Now let me see if I have understood you... You said... you felt..."
"This is what I am gathering so far... (content and feelings)"
Listening carefully enough to be able to summarize what they say shows acceptance, builds confidence, and greatly improves communication.
Next time you have a discussion with someone about religion or politics - or other controversial subject - practice summarizing your oponent's content and feelings... See the positive effect your summary has on the person who is speaking. He/she may be willing to listen to your opinion and point of view.
SUMMARIZE - content - theirs
SUMMARIZE - feelings - theirs
If you do it well they will carry on talking.
If you do it well you will have been consentrating on them
If you do it well you will use words like:
"Now let me see if I have understood you... You said... you felt..."
"This is what I am gathering so far... (content and feelings)"
Listening carefully enough to be able to summarize what they say shows acceptance, builds confidence, and greatly improves communication.
Next time you have a discussion with someone about religion or politics - or other controversial subject - practice summarizing your oponent's content and feelings... See the positive effect your summary has on the person who is speaking. He/she may be willing to listen to your opinion and point of view.
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