Defining Rules: Parenting Advice

Boy in Spain

Image via Wikipedia

Wisdom is meant to be common. Logic is to be expected. You are governed by careful thoughts, with all impulses tamed to experience. There are rules that must be followed — and you strive always to uphold them, knowing that they create order for an all too hectic world.

Your child doesn’t share this sensibility, however. He is instead baffled by it, can’t comprehend why you devote so much of yourself to regulations… or why you assumed he would do the same.

It is an easy mistake for parents to think that their children are capable of good reasoning. This is a skill that is developed over time — and yet it’s too often believed to be natural. It’s not. Individuals must understand therefore that youths need explanations for every rule that is created.

The laws of a household must be clearly defined. Children require structure — but, more importantly, they require clarity. All rules must be detailed. Their causes and effects must be outlined in ways that can be easily understood. This is the only way to make them relevant, ensuring that they’re adhered to. Choosing to simply demand obedience without offering why will result in confusion and possibly rebellion.

Parents must therefore chart out every rule. They must cite the need for order and be certain that need is recognized. Communication is essential and correlations must be created. This will allow obedience to be achieved with ease, rather than requiring constant punishment.

Your child doesn’t process information the way you do. You must therefore offer explanations that are simple, straightforward and can’t be undone by young logic.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Creating Unique Techniques: Discipline

A cheerful boy in the former park of the house...

Image via Wikipedia

Your child is unique. There is no simpler truth, no easier admission. He is defined to happy (and occasionally bewildering) impulses, is guided by thoughts you can’t always understand. He is an individual — and you try always to maintain this, to offer him the necessary confidence to remain who he wishes to be.

There are times, however, when he may wish to be someone who disobeys you: committing peculiar offenses and ignoring the consequences. He forgets that rules are meant to be followed — and that you must then punish him.

Choosing the right kind of punishment, though, is vital.

Parents must understand their children: noting all passions and dislikes, the favored hobbies. Each youth is one of a kind, and they must all be treated as such — even in the penalties they earn.

All consequences must be tailored to the individual. Children must receive warnings that reflect who they are and what they most adore. This is the only way to provide relevancy. Standard threats (time-outs, a lack of dessert and similar options) may not have any influence. Choosing to take away a favored toy or refusing to give permission for a play-date may instead cause panic, however.

And this is what allows punishments to be understood. The intention of discipline is to create correlations between inappropriate behaviors and their poor effects. Allowing the consequences to be basic, though, will often undermine the process. Each penalty must have importance. This is the only way success can be achieved.

Your child is unlike any other. His punishment therefore must be the same.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Positive Praise: The Need for Consistency

Child 1

Image by Tony Tr?n via Flickr

Time is the villain of your storybook existence. It moves too swiftly, demanding all of your attention, stealing precious hours. There are never enough seconds to do what you must, and the result is a schedule that is frantic on the best of days. Too often does this leave you unable to maintain the goals you’ve created. Moments can’t remain suspended and you must rush after them, ignoring what is not essential.

Positive reinforcement suffers from that definition — and all of the efforts you’ve offered to conditioning suddenly disappear.

The notion of positive reinforcement is one many parents are familiar with. Its foundations are shaped to rewards and happy consequences, allowing children to make connections between morality and the smiles it can bring. Too often is it considered to be a simple process — with families certain that occasional rewards will be enough to satisfy its requirements.

This is incorrect.

The purpose of this system is to establish the value of good behavior. Accomplishing that requires time, with children conditioned slowly over an excess of months. Consistency is therefore needed; and individuals who lack the ability to offer that will not see results.

It’s essential therefore that parents devote the necessary minutes each day to positive reinforcement. They must be constant in their rewards, ensuring that the connections are solidified. A routine must be established… and maintained. Refusing to do this will only cause erratic behavior and low retention levels. Children will simply not understand what’s expected of them.

Positivity isn’t an easy task. It must instead be offered dedication — with time utilized wisely and consistently.

 

Enhanced by Zemanta

Avoiding Anger: Discipline Advice

A scream was all too easy. It burst out of you, the sound cobbled together from the many stresses of the day. All of the little frustrations had gathered in your throat and they had to spill out. They simply required a catalyst.

Your child provided one.

He had disobeyed the rules (again). He had refused to do as you instructed. And the result was your anger, the sudden break of all patience. You unleashed a furious tirade, channeling the displeasure of your career, your finances and more into one single shout. It felt good… until you realized the aftermath was your son’s shock.

Discipline is essential within families. There must be consequences for actions; there must be punishments for crimes (however meager). This is necessary to establish morals and ensure that children learn the difference between right and wrong.

Choosing to discipline youths while you are angry, however, is as counter-productive as it is cruel.

The intention of enforcing rules is to make distinctions between good behavior and bad decisions. All causes have effects — and this must be taught to children. When you are upset, however, you lose the ability to offer logic. You instead become emotional, offering shrieks instead of reasons. This does not work. Instead it only frightens adolescents. They assume that they are the source of all problems and will then suffer from broken egos.

It’s imperative therefore that you tailor discipline to sense. All conversations should be calm and eloquent, offering explanations rather than screams. This will allow children to understand the reasons for your displeasure instead of believing that they’ve somehow become the origins of every single concern.

Enhanced by Zemanta