Parenting Forum

Featuring parenting discipline

 
Parenting Discipline

Home

Parenting Resource

 

Family Parenting Child Birth

General Parenting
Parenting Advice
Parenting With Love And Logic
Parenting Style
Parenting

attachment parenting

Parenting Magazine

family parenting child birth

parenting magazine

parenting advice

 


Parenting Resource Resources


Actively Listening to your Child



Communicating with our children can be a difficult task at times. We feel like they're not listening to us; they feel like we're not listening to them. Good listening and communications skills are essential to successful parenting. Your child's feelings, views and opinions have worth, and you should make sure you take the time to sit down and listen openly and discuss them honestly.


It seems to be a natural tendency to react rather than to respond. We pass judgment based on our own feelings and experiences. However, responding means being receptive to our child's feelings and emotions and allowing them to express themselves openly and honestly without fear of repercussion from us. By reacting, we send our child the message that their feelings and opinions are invalid. But by responding and asking questions about why the child feels that way, it opens a dialog that allows them to discuss their feelings further, and allows you a better understanding of where they're coming from. Responding also gives you an opportunity to work out a solution or a plan of action with your child that perhaps they would not have come up with on their own. Your child will also appreciate the fact that maybe you do indeed understand how they feel.


It's crucial in these situations to give your child your full and undivided attention. Put down your newspaper, stop doing dishes, or turn off the television so you can hear the full situation and make eye contact with your child. Keep calm, be inquisitive, and afterwards offer potential solutions to the problem.


Don't discourage your child from feeling upset, angry, or frustrated. Our initial instinct may be to say or do something to steer our child away from it, but this can be a detrimental tactic. Again, listen to your child, ask questions to find out why they are feeling that way, and then offer potential solutions to alleviate the bad feeling.


Just as we do, our children have feelings and experience difficult situations. By actively listening and participating with our child as they talk about it, it demonstrates to them that we do care, we want to help and we have similar experiences of our own that they can draw from. Remember, respond - don't react.

Try to wait it out.

Attachment Parenting

Dr. Paula Bloom/Salud!/Consulta Medica 10/27/2008

Optimsim!

Author: PsicologaPaula
Keywords: CNN Paula Bloom Dr. Dra. effective parenting Spanish espanol discipline optimism
Added: October 27, 2008


Prioritizing is the key. When your child looks good, tell him so. Be honest and sincere in your praise. Some parents may worry that setting strict rules may distance them from their children. It is the responsibility of the parent to emphasize positive patterns of communication and ensure the child learns that ignoring communication is not acceptable.