6. Be What You Want Them To Be. Even if you've never taken a class in psychology, just about everyone knows that children learn by modeling and the people they model most often are their parents. We all want our kids to be happy." Well, are you happy? Do you have honor and integrity? Do you treat people the way you want to be treated? Are you overly materialistic? Are you moody? This article is not designed to lay any guilt on you because it won't make you a better parent. If there are things you want to change about yourself, work on it now. Try to be the best human you can be. There's a good chance your children will model your good qualities.
7. Exercise Love not Fear. Don't belittle anyone - certainly not your children. Don't be sarcastic. Drop all the negative stuff. Most of us make our decisions based on one or two emotions: trepidation or caring, and unfortunately, many of us allow fear to motivate us rather than allowing consideration. If you want healthy children, teach them to act based on love not fear. They won't be in the majority, but they'll be healthy. I can tell you lots of things not to do: don't be pessimistic or cynical.but what we really mean is don't inflict damage. Don't cause pain. Don't cause fear. Instead, create love. Build self-confidence. Let your children know they are safe and protected.
8. Set Rules and Boundaries. It's a law of nature that every action has a consequent reaction. Every action of your children has a consequence. Whatever your rules are, make sure your children understand them and understand the consequences of breaking them. Breaking those rules is bound to happen at some point or another, so be sure you follow through with the consequences - not out of anger or emotion, but just because those are the consequences. Discuss with your child what the consequences could be. Let your child help to establish his own consequences. It makes it a lot easier for you to enforce if he's participated in their creation.
9. Be Your Children's Hero. Keep promises. Put the full force of your meaning into what you are saying and do it the first time. If you lie, your promises become meaningless. Let your children inspire you to be the best you can be. Children will do as you do. I wanted to be my kid's hero - a role model, a guide, the kind of man they would one day look for in a husband, the kind of man they would try to create if they had sons. I found my meaning in life: I would be great dad. What could be more important than that? What about you? Will you ever do anything that is more important than raising your children?
10. Don't Resist Change. Have courage. You've got no choice. People generally don't like change. We know that change is inevitable and yet we resist it because we believe it will be painful. But resisting it is, in itself, painful. So we resist the unknown because it might be painful. It all boils down to the fact that we're afraid of the unknown. Most of our actions are based on fear or love. Divorce was certainly a huge change and it caused all kinds of fear. Have faith. Take courageous risks. Create a stable environment. Don't make comparisons. Look back from the finish line to move forward. Go out there and really live. You were meant to do this!
To accomplish effective parenting takes persistence. It will take practice for you to get all of these into your method of operating. Practice still makes perfect, even for you. We'd like to recommend that you re-read this article and keep it at the ready so the next time your children require your practical parenting expertise, you'll know right where to go for it. These ten effective parenting tips can become your parenting guide to positive discipline so that your children turn out to be successful adults.
Systematic Training For Effective Parenting
Your kids deserve your very best all the time. You've only got one chance to mold them into the kind of adult who is productive, thoughtful, enthusiastic, visionary and hardworking. You won't always feel good about doing what is necessary, but remembering that you've only got one chance to get it right for them will help you do what you need to do. Here are five effective parenting tips to help you:
1. There Is No Tomorrow. You've only got right now, today, to do the right thing and to be there emotionally for your children.. Once this "right now" is gone, it's gone forever. It will take a conscious decision on your part to maximize every single moment of your time with them. Decide that you will give them your complete attention even if it means setting your stuff aside. Of course you won't be at the 100% level. No one is. But if you decide in this right now moment to utilize as many of the following right now moments with your kid's benefit held at the forefront, they will benefit from your decision.
2. Begin With The End In Mind. It won't do any good when your child is eighteen years old to look back and wish you'd done things differently. Right now is when you get to make the decisions that will affect his getting to eighteen. Think through what you'd like that to be and then think about how you'll have to "be" in the intervening years to help your child accomplish that. Be sure to listen to what your child says he wants and weave that into the plan. Help your child become an achiever. Your primary goal as a parent is to give your children the tools that they can use to lead happy, healthy and successful lives. That's all that matters. That is your magnificent obsession. Remind yourself each day of the goal you're working towards and remind yourself that it doesn't happen in a single day.
3. Your Influence Is Greatest Every Day. Teaching is what you do every time you interact with your children. And it always happens today. There isn't a moment when you are not teaching your children - if you're helping with schoolwork, watching their team sports or just sitting down to the family meals. It doesn't matter if you're having dinner in your kitchen or if you're a part-time parent who is having dinner at McDonald's. What matters is that you're really there. You are a guide and an anchor. Know that you are a teacher, that you are a role model. That's how you will have the greatest impact on your children. Parenting is about the millions of "small things" and not about big events or sounding great when you talk about them. It's about the quiet times and the little things.
4. Listen To Them. You'll Be Amazed. One of the most important things you can do to fully be with your children is to listen to them with full attention. You have to shut down the voice inside you that prattles on about your own past or perhaps your own future. You don't need to pre-think up an answer to them. If you do, you won't hear what they are saying to you. If you're not present with your children, they know it. What is the message you're telling them if you're not present? They're not worthy? They're not important? They're not valuable? Stop. Look. Listen. This means to set aside whatever you are working on, stop watching the television.V., stop reading the paper, stop thinking about other things. Look. Look into their eyes, you're less likely to be distracted when you're looking into their eyes. Listen. Don't let that voice in your head drown them out. Sometimes to make sure I'm listening, I will repeat in my head what they're saying.
5. Control Your Emotions. Don't yell at your children. If you yell at children, they do not hear you. Instead, you're simply upsetting them. That doesn't mean if you've yelled at your children, you're going to destroy their psyche. Remember, take the long view. We're building a foundation one brick at a time. None of us is perfect. Yelling at your children and upsetting them once will have no effect on them. Yelling at them the entire time they grow up, well.....let's hope that somehow children who have to deal with that eventually learn how to overcome it. Most of us fall somewhere in the middle. The point here is that it's not effective. It's not promoting your magnificent obsession. See if you can pinpoint what kicks off that emotion. It's not your children. Keep in mind your goal of being a great parent and then create a disconnect. Emotions aren't a bad thing. The problem is that we have triggers that release our emotions without thinking.
If you use these effective parenting tips, you'll be on your way to a healthy and happier relationship with your children. Look for five more tips in our next installment in this series.
Len Stauffenger has sinced written about articles on various topics from Bathroom Home Improvement, After Divorce and Health. Len Stauffenger's parents taught him life's simple wisdom. As a divorced dad, he wanted to share that simple wisdom with his girls. "Getting Over It: Wisdom for Divorced Parents," his book, is the solution. Len is an author, a Success Coach and an Attorn. Len Stauffenger's top article generates over 110000 views. to your Favourites.
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