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“My feeling is it is almost always best to err on the side of mercy and love. There are many parenting ‘mistakes’ that can be ameliorated by lots and lots of love, and the feelings of security it can bring. I also believe that I sometimes need some mercy and love myself.” -- BarelyKnitTogether
Humans have somewhere between 10,000 and 70,000 thoughts per day. The majority of these thoughts are “negative.” Our minds, doing their job of trying to protect us, constantly compare, judge, find fault, and warn.
The information they give us is often valuable. The nitpicking isn’t. All those negative thoughts are what create your anxiety, upset moods and mommy or daddy tantrums. In fact, our minds’ negativity is downright destructive.
It’s our job as grownups to keep our inner critics from running our lives. We can start by noticing all those subtle inner critic attacks.
Today, just notice every time your inner critic comments. Are you criticizing yourself? Your kids? Your partner? Life?
Does that really help anybody change? (Hint: When
we feel attacked, we defend. Our natural desire to cooperate vanishes.)
Does your inner critic help you feel more relaxed, empowered, loving?
Does your inner critic help your kids feel more loved, secure, open, eager to please?
Why not kiss your inner critic goodbye?
Why not offer your family – and yourself -- some mercy and love?
You might make miracles.
"Appreciation and self-love are the most important tools that you could ever nurture. Appreciation of others, and the appreciation of yourself, is the closest vibrational match to your Source Energy of anything that we've ever witnessed anywhere in the universe." -- Abraham-Hicks
What do you do well as a parent? Make a list. In writing, if you can. But at least in your mind, right now. Keep going until you have at least ten things. Better yet, 20.
Now give yourself credit for that list. I know, you're not perfect. Join the club. But just for this minute, give yourself total appreciation for all the things you do right as a parent. All those things no one else ever even notices. Savor that feeling.
Now, for the rest of the day, every time you see yourself acting toward your child in a way that makes you feel good about yourself, give yourself an internal hug or a high five.
The times you don't feel so good about? Let them go and move on to better interactions.
I guarantee you'll feel better and better throughout the day. And so will your kids.
"Experience is that marvelous thing that enables you
to recognize a mistake when you make it again."
-- F. P. Jones
Some parents try so hard to be patient that they let things
get out of hand. Then they snap. Later, they're filled with remorse.
Sound familiar?
Calming down is tough. The key is to intervene BEFORE you
get angry.
Often when we lose it with our children, it’s because we
haven’t set a limit, and something has been grating on us. The minute
you start getting angry, it’s a signal to do something. No, not yell.
It’s time to intervene in a positive way to prevent more of whatever
behavior is irritating you.
If your irritation is coming from you -- let’s say you’ve
just had a hard day, and their natural exuberance is wearing on you --
explain that and ask your kids to be considerate. Do something nice to
nurture yourself.
If the kids are doing something that’s increasingly annoying
-- playing a game in which someone is likely to get hurt, stalling when
you’ve asked them to do something, squabbling while you’re on the phone
-- you may need to interrupt what you’re doing. Then:
- Make a positive connection with your child
- Empathize with whatever they’re expressing
- Restate your family rule or expectation
- Redirect them into positive activity.
Calmly, kindly, cheerfully do whatever is necessary to keep
the situation, and your anger, from escalating.
There's always a solution besides losing it. Sending them
outside? Snuggling with him on the couch for 15 minutes? Dropping
whatever you were doing for five minutes so you can move her along into
whatever she's supposed to be doing? Roaring like a lion and getting the
kids to all join in? Taking five minutes alone in the bathroom to
breathe deep and regroup?
The miracle comes when you face the fact of your rising
irritation, instead of trying to ignore it or reflexively yelling. That
helps you notice the accident that could lie ahead -- and your chance
to step in like the super-parent that you are, to avert disaster.
“Here’s something that fear will never tell you. You don’t have to feel this way. Fear only tells you about fight or flight. It never tells you that the mountain in front of you is of your own making.” -- Guy Finley
"Between stimulus and response there is
a space. In
that space is our power to choose our response. In our
response lies our
growth and our freedom."
-- Viktor E. Frankl
Zen Buddhism says mindfulness is the path to peace and enlightenment. What’s mindfulness? Paying attention to your experience in the present moment.
When we pay attention to our actual experience, we notice how our minds often interpret our experience through a lens of fear that creates stress. That stress triggers us to react in ways that make everything worse. We're constantly making mountains out of molehills.
What if you could respond to stressful times with your kids without getting stressed? Believe it or not, you can. It just takes a little practice. Here’s how.
1. As soon as you feel your hackles rising, stop. Just stop. This is the hardest step, but the most important. When you bring awareness to the present moment, you stop reacting automatically. You give yourself a choice of how to respond.
2. Breathe deeply. Shake the tension out of your fingertips, blow it out of your mouth, whatever works for you to shift your physical state from fight to calm. I say "Thank you for giving me this opportunity to grow," and it calms me right down. Whatever works for you.
3. Once you’re calm, ask yourself: Is there a real problem involving physical danger happening right now, this very moment? Or am I experiencing anxiety, negative thought patterns, catastrophic scenarios? (99% of the time, that's the case.)
4. Notice what thought(s) are in your mind that are producing your stress.
5. Ask yourself: Is this thought absolutely true? (e.g., Is it really true that the baby will just keep crying all night and I won't get to sleep at all? ....Will my son absolutely become an axe murderer because he hit that kid on the playground? ....Will my daughter absolutely fail in school and life because she got this bad report card? ....Am I really a complete failure as a mother because my children are once again screaming at each other?)
6. Ask yourself: Are there alternative ways of viewing this situation that would be not only less stressful, but more useful in meeting my needs and goals? (e.g., The baby probably won't keep crying, and I can take this one moment at a time and just breathe through it, and I can trade off with my spouse so we each get some sleep.......My son is only three, and he was frightened; I can help him learn to handle his feelings more constructively.......My daughter's bad report card means we need to change our evening routines to work with her more.......I am doing the best I can as a mother and all siblings fight, but I do want a more peaceful home; I think I'll read that book on sibling rivalry." Notice that none of these views involve yelling at your child or berating yourself. Once you calm down and accept the situation, there is always some way to claim your power to change the situation.
Sound hard? Like any other skill, it takes practice. At first, just catching yourself in time to notice your mind running away with itself will feel impossible most of the time. But if you keep working at it, you'll find yourself laughing as you notice your mind's catastrophic thinking. ("I'm really about to lose it with my three year old because I think I have to prove who's boss?!")
The miracle is that once you bring awareness to that moment, you have the choice of how to act.
I had an Aha! Moment recently when I received this letter from a reader: "Dr. Laura, I appreciate all the emails about how to stay calm and inspired. I find they really help. But what about those times when my kid does something really awful -- and deserves what's coming to him?! Won't he misinterpret it if I stay calm then? How do I teach him a lesson?" – Claudine
Now, because we do a better job when we’re calm, rather than frazzled, I do talk a lot in my daily inspiration emails about how to manage our own moods and emotions. I tell parents that we need to take care of ourselves so we have something inside to give our kids.
But this letter made me realize a basic fact about human emotion. When we’re right, and the other person is wrong – and let’s assume for a moment that in this case, this is a fact, not just our opinion --- we WANT to let the other person know that. If they blew it, did something awful, don’t they deserve what’s coming? And if it’s our kid, it’s our job to teach them. Shouldn’t we be showing them how upset we are? How else will they learn their lesson?
Well, let’s double click on this. Maybe we should start by thinking about how people learn lessons. What happens when you really blow it? Let’s say you get a parking ticket. Or somehow lose your credit card as I did this week. Or forget something really important at work, that endangers your job. Does it help when your spouse or boss yells at you?
If you're intent on punishing your child, you'll be interested to know that research shows kids don't behave better when they're yelled at or punished. Like the rest of us, kids who feel threatened go into "fight" or "flight" mode. Learning shuts off. Eventually, if it becomes a regular occurrence, they develop new negative behaviors -- lying, sneakiness, tuning us out, disrespect. So when we yell at or punish kids, we don't prevent a recurrence of the behavior. In fact, we lose influence with our kid.
I'm not suggesting you just let your kid continue doing whatever is driving you crazy. I'm suggesting you adopt a strategy that will actually change his behavior. I know it isn't as satisfying as yelling when you're angry. But long term, it's a lot more gratifying in every way.
So, (you guessed it!) start by calming yourself down. Then:
1. Meet your child's deeper needs. All behavior comes from the attempt to meet basic needs. What's causing this problem behavior? Is it a need for more connection from us? More control over his life? More recognition? A more orderly, peaceful home? Clear limits? More sleep?
2. Help your child develop a competing impulse. For instance, If she wants to clobber her little brother, strengthen their relationship so she feels more protective of him. (And in the meantime, be aware that pediatricians say never to leave a child under the age of five alone with a little one.) If she lies to you, explain that every lie cuts a cord in her relationship to you. (See how much more effective these strategies are than yelling?)
3. Help your child develop a new habit. If you want her to remember something, whether it's her jacket at a friend's house or brushing her teeth, adopt routines to insure she develops the habit.
4. Work with your child to find a win/win solution. This is where you get your own need met, by making things different. Tell your child his action upset you and you want to work together to make sure it doesn't happen again. It's the recurring problems that most often push us to the breaking point, so it's worth solving them. And the only kind of solution that reliably lasts between humans is one that meets the needs of both people. No, you're not giving in. You're not backing off your own need, remember? You’re getting your own need met, AND teaching your child how to have a good relationship with another person – by finding win/win solutions.
5. Wait. Most problem behavior, from dumping his milk on the floor to missing curfew, is age-appropriate. You'll be pleased to know that by next year he'll have outgrown whatever problem behavior is driving you crazy -- and will have found several new ones!
The Aha! For me in this is that ALL of us want to be right. That’s the way the human brain works. But when we insist on being right, it means the other person has to be wrong. And when someone feels wrong, they’re on the defensive. That’s fight or flight. It means learning shuts off. So if we insist on being right, our kid CAN’T learn a lesson, and we're sabotaging both ourselves and our child.
t's fine to show our kids we’re upset, as long as we don't attack them. But instead of modeling temper tantrums, we can model healthy emotional self-management. Rather than railing against our kid, we take responsibility as the grown up. We work with our kid to solve the problem. Yes, our kid learns lessons -- the most important ones! That’s the kind of parenting all kids deserve.

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