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View Full Version : Tip of the Day: May 8, 2008


Hoppy
05-08-2008, 08:56 AM
From www.screamfree.com

Quote of the Day: "If you can give your son or daughter only one gift, let it be enthusiasm."
— Bruce Barton, U.S. author (1886-1967)
http://www.screamfree.com/resources/partners/template/images/hal_runkel.jpg Hal's Take: One of the startling truths about parental anxiety is that we often try to stamp out the very qualities and skills that will serve our children best in adulthood. We get so frustrated at their refusal to take our first ‘no’ for an answer, yet that’s the exact skill they’ll learn in Sales and Negotiation 101. We openly complain about our “strong-willed child,” but if we want our kids to say no to peer pressure, then they better have a strong-will.
The same thing happens when it comes to being spirited, excitable, and enthusiastic. We love it when our kids are fired up on the ball field, or strongly-motivated to finish a school project. But when they’re passionate about achieving a new level on a videogame, or just plain giddy, giggly, and loud, we get easily annoyed. I know I do.
Our job is not to stifle our kids’ emotions when they seem inappropriate, or misapplied, or just too exuberant. Our job is to calmly steer those emotions into productive expression. This could mean sometimes allowing their good mood to brighten ours, especially when we’ve had a bad day and feel entitled to be grumpy. This could mean consciously observing our child and discovering what they’re really passionate about—and then championing that passion.

Hal Runkel, LMFT, author of ScreamFree Parenting:
Raising Your Kids by Keeping Your Cool.

Graceysmum
05-08-2008, 12:03 PM
This one is a hard one for me. I just want obedience...and it drives me crazy when my girls don't take no for an answer......and yet they are MY kids. :paranoid: And I question everything. All the time.

:lol:

Hoppy
05-08-2008, 03:23 PM
You know, I get so annoyed because my boys whistle all the time. It just gets on my every nerve. I have to try harder to just tune it out and let them just BE.

3babesandadad
05-22-2008, 10:37 AM
ugh- my dd oversings me- drives me nuts, i know it's silly, but i consider it rude. Example: I sometimes sing to myself when I'm doing dishes or laundry or whatever. If DD is in earshot she'll begin singing loudly over top of me. Not that I mind her singing, I do not, and not that I'm some great singer, cause I'm not, but to me, it's just rude to do that to people. And trust me- she only does it because I'm doing it. AND I really KNOW the reason she does it is NOT to be rude- on the contrary- she just wants to sing with mommy. So putting my own feelings aside about it being disrespectful and accepting that she only wants to do the things I do WITH me, has been a hard overcoming.