Be
Smart With Your Children's Feelings
by Mark Brandenburg MA, CPCC
All of you have heard about how important it is to"honor your
children's feelings."
While this seems like a worthy endeavor, it's a fairly
vague notion and can easily be dismissed, especially when your child
is crying or whining.
But if we look at the benefits of paying close attention
to your children's feelings, it may become an idea that has a great
deal of merit.
We'd all like to raise kids who are well-adjusted,
happy, and successful. How can we improve our chances of raising kids
who have these qualities?
One place to start is to acknowledge the growing
body of evidence which indicates that a person's "emotional intelligence"
is of great importance. It's becoming clear that having a high emotional
intelligence is a great predictor of job success as well as personal
success.
Emotional intelligence measures qualities like awareness
of your own feelings, the ability to empathize with other people,
listening skills, etc. Once we recognize the importance of these qualities,
we can ask how parents can help to foster these qualities in their
children.
The first step in fostering emotional intelligence
in your children is to make a fundamental shift in your view of parenting.
Many parents see their role as someone who responds to their children's
bad behavior, and attempts to "mold" them according to certain
ideals. Not only can this be ineffective, it can actually increase
the "bad" behavior by giving it extra attention.
A different way of parenting is to commit yourself
to helping your children become more connected to their own emotions
and to their families. It recognizes that your children will be having
intense emotional experiences almost every day of their life. It calls
for you to assist your kids in learning how to manage these powerful
emotions and to model this behavior yourself.
It begins in your home every day. It begins when
you stop dismissing your kids' feelings by saying things like, "Come
on, it's OK, don't cry," or "You should want to go to your
piano lesson."
It's very difficult to see your kids being sad or
angry. But when you deny the validity of their feelings, you further
disconnect your kids from being able to identify and deal with those
feelings. In other words, you lower their emotional intelligence.
To raise the emotional intelligence of your kids,
there are a number of things you can do.
Here are some ideas:
- Start making it a habit to identify your own feelings as well
as the feelings of others. Try not to label people. Instead of saying,
"He was a real jerk," you could say, "He seemed very
angry."
- Stop trying to cheer your kids up when they're upset. They need
to know their feelings are being acknowledged, and need to know
you're there to listen and understand.
- Do all that you can to keep your own emotional life balanced
so that you can be there for your kids. If you're overwhelmed or
off balance, you cannot be a source of emotional support for your
child.
- Be a great listener. When your child has something to say, try
to drop what you're doing and focus completely on what they're saying.
Skillful reflection back of what they've said to you will show them
they've been heard, and this is a great help to kids wrestling with
intense feelings.
- Help your kids to identify what they're feeling by being specific
with your questions. It's often helpful to ask something like, "Are
you feeling sad?" or "Are you feeling angry?" Pay
attention to your child's response to your questions or comments
about their feelings. Your goal is to help your child process their
feelings and to work through them, not to fix anything or to tell
them if they got it "right."
One of the most difficult things about being a parent
is being with children when they aren't at their best. Whining and
crying from children seems to bring out the worst in most parents.
The great irony of this is that the more parents
encourage their kids to "get over" whatever emotional difficulties
they're having at the time, the more of these emotional difficulties
will crop up.
Kids who don't feel "heard" emotionally
tend to either shut down or to get louder.
Neither of these seems like a very good choice.
Our kids would live in a happier, healthier world
if they were raised in an environment in which their feelings were
honored.
When parents learn the secrets of creating that environment
they'll be an important part of that process.
Mark Brandenburg MA, CPCC, is the author of "25
Secrets of Emotionally Intelligent Fathers" http://www.markbrandenburg.com/father.htm.
For more great tips and action steps for fathers, sign up for his
FREE bi-weekly newsletter, "Dads, Don't Fix Your Kids,"
at http://www.markbrandenburg.com.
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