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SEVEN WAYS BUSY PARENTS CAN HELP THEIR CHILDREN FEEL SPECIAL
By Jane Nelsen, Ed.D. Adapted from Positive Discipline for
Working Parents
Do you ever wonder, "Will my children suffer because they have a working mother?
Will they be deprived?" The answer: That depends on what you believe and what
you do.
Many happy, successful people have been raised by working moms. It is not the
circumstance of life, but how we perceive those circumstances and what we do
that has the greatest impact. Each person decides whether challenges will be
stumbling blocks or stepping stones to joy and success in life. Understanding
this does not negate the struggles and concerns of working moms, but it can
offer hope and a basis for dealing with the struggles in ways that benefit
rather than harm children.
Let's begin with your beliefs. It is a myth that children who have a working
mom are automatically more deprived than children who have a stay-at-home mom.
Many stay-at-home moms are just as busy as you are. However, children usually
adopt the attitudes of their parents--or learn to manipulate in areas of
weakness. If you are feeling guilty and fearful that your children will
be deprived, chances are they will feel deprived. They may develop
a victim mentality, or they may play
on your guilt for special privileges. On the other hand, if you have an
optimistic,
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Positive
Discipline for Working Parents
by Jane Nelsen and Lisa Larson
Raising Responsible, Respectful and Resourceful Children When You Work Outside
the Home As a working parent, do you struggle to find a balance between work
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share these common concerns. But help has arrived! Over the years, parents
just like you have come to trust the Positive Discipline series for its
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Working Parents is an invaluable resource to nurturing cooperation, good
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courageous attitude , your children will be influenced and will
learn from you.
Give up the belief that you have to make it up to your child for being a working
mother. Present your circumstances with a positive attitude: "This is how it is,
and we are going to benefit from how it is. "
The greatest gift you can give your children is to have a hopeful outlook on
life no matter what your circumstances--and all circumstances, no matter how
difficult, offer opportunities to learn and grow. Focus on how you can make the
best of your present opportunities as a working mom to help your children feel
special. Following are five possibilities.
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Take time for hugs. No matter how busy you are, there is always time for a
three-second hug. That is a substantial hug that can lift spirits and change
attitudes--yours and your child's. Sometimes a hug can be the most effective
method to stop misbehavior. Try it the next time you are feeling frazzled or
your child is whining and see for yourself. Give hugs in the morning, right
after work, several during the evening, a longer one just before bed. You
will both feel very special.
-
Hold weekly family meetings. Twenty to thirty minutes a week is a small
investment of time with huge payoffs. Children feel very special when they are
listened to, taken seriously and have their thoughts and ideas validated. That
is the immediate payoff. The near future payoff is that you can solve many daily
hassles during a family meeting. Your kids can help you create morning and
bedtime routines and come up with creative ways for handling chores. It is
amazing how much more willing children are to follow rules and plans they have
helped create. The long range pay off is that children learn important life
skills such and communication skills and problem-solving skills. Think of the
benefits to their future jobs and relationships. It takes much less time to hold
weekly family meetings where children learn to cooperate and solve problems than
the time it takes to nag, lecture, and scold. During busy times parents often
find relief or create a diversion from a problem by simply inviting the child to
put the problem on the family meeting agenda. Everyone learns to trust
that a respectful solution will be found soon.
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Ask for help. Children need to feel needed. It is much different when you ask
for help in an inviting manner instead of lecturing and scolding. "I would
appreciate anything you can do to spruce up the family room before dinner,"
usually invites much more cooperation than, "How many times have I told you not
to leave all your stuff all over the family room!" Children feel special when
they are helping. They don't feel special when they are being scolded and put
down.
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Spend regularly scheduled, special time. This does not take very much time and
can be comforting to parents and children when it is part of the schedule. Very
young children need special time daily for ten to fifteen minutes. This doesn't
mean you never spend more time than that. It does mean that you have scheduled
special time for you and your child to count on and look forward to. One mother
scheduled time with her daughter for reading books or playing games from 5:30 to
5:45. Her daughter loved helping her mother start dinner first while looking
forward to their special time. If the phone rang during the special time, Mom
would say, "I'm sorry I can't talk right now. It is Tara's special time. " Tara
would beam. After the age of six, 30 to 60 minutes a week works well. You may be
able to talk teenagers into a date night for just the two of you once a month.
The amount of time is not as important as the attitude created by scheduled
"special" time. Children feel special when they know that time with them is as
important to you as all your other appointments and tasks. During other times
when you are just too busy or too tired, children will not feel discounted (and
you don't feel guilty) when you can say, "I'm too busy or too tired now, but I'm
looking forward to our special time. "
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Share sad and happy times as part of the bedtime routine. When tucking your
child into bed at night, take a few minutes to let her share the saddest thing
that happened to her that day. Just listen respectfully without trying to solve
the problem. Then share your saddest time of the day. Follow this by taking turns
sharing your happiest event of the day. You may be surprised at the things
you hear when your children have a few minutes of your undivided attention to
evaluate their day and hear about yours.
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Take a few seconds to write a note for your child's lunch bag, pillow, or
mirror. One very busy Mom decided to put a note in her daughter's lunch bag
every day for a year. She took time on airplanes or while waiting for an
appointment to write several notes or silly rhymes in advance, such as "Roses
are red, Violets are blue, Every day, I think about you. " When she traveled, she
gave the child care person notes to tuck into the lunch bag for each day she was
gone. Her daughter's friends gathered around her at lunch in eager anticipation
to hear the note of the day. Her daughter felt very special.
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When you run a short errand in the car, ask one of your children to ride
along -- just so you can spend as much time as possible together. You might make
a big deal of this by creating a chart during a family meeting so you can check
whose turn it is. During these rides be a closet listener (don't ask questions).
You may be surprised at how much your children may open up and start talking
when there is no "inquisition" that makes them feel like clamming up. Simply let
them know how glad you are to have a few minutes to be with them, and share
special moments from your own life or day. Kids feel special when you share
yourself.
Helping your child feel special is a matter of planning and habit, not a lack of
time. The fringe benefit of making it a habit to help your child feel
special is that you will feel like a special mom or dad.
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