You definitely don’t want that. All that unwanted media attention, the psychiatric evaluations,
the police…

No way!

You want your child an upstanding and normal citizen.

You want Your Children To Grow Up Happy & Confident!

Bottomline:

You’d find numerous ways to explain values to kids and to help them grasp them and learning early in life about the principles of success. These techniques don’t demand that you do all the talking, just that you guide the learning process so your children can visualize your priority values for themselves. Inherent to the picture is knowing which behaviors exemplify the value and which demonstrate the opposite.

A responsibility as a cool parent is to explain your values in behavioral terms. Help your children grasp the emotional results of behaving in accordance with each value. In other words, it feels great to do the right thing. Let them see that that is the “What’s In It For Me”

We all know that wise decisions make us feel glowy inside. And our actions affect the feelings of friends and parents. Help your children learn to recognize that making wise decisions helps them feel wonderful about themselves.

Your goal is to help your children develop a positive emotional response to adopting each of your values. When your child comes home from school and proudly tells you how well he or she did on a spelling or history test, express your positive response, then affirm your child’s positive response. Say, “When you work hard and do well, you feel proud, don’t you?” Then ask, “What else do you feel?” Encourage children to identify as many positive feelings that come from acting on one of the values you have been teaching. Encourage them to bask in those positive feelings. During supper, invite them to share what they did and how good it made them feel. Express your positive thoughts so the entire family can understand how you respond to positive behaviors and choices.

Let your children know how pleased, happy, excited, thrilled, joyous, satisfied, and proud you are when they demonstrate your values. And you also may let them know how disappointed, displeased, unhappy, depressed, sad, upset, angry, and embarrassed you are when they act on values that are opposite from yours. The focus of the emotional response must be the behavior, not the child. Don’t say, “I am unhappy when you are a bad boy.”

Instead say, “Even though I love you, when you are unkind, I feel very disappointed.” This way it becomes more clear to your child that you are rejecting the behavior, not the child. It is important to explain why you feel disappointed, angry, or sad. If your explanation makes sense to your child, it will have greater impact on the future. Give the positive feedback both individually to your child and in front of the rest of the family, but only give negative feedback individually. A good rule is: Praise in public; correct in private.”

Another aspect is helping your children know that other people will respond emotionally to what they do and how they behave. The primary responder will be the person who is directly affected by the behavior: the friend who is treated unkindly, the schoolmate with whom your child is unselfish, the friend who discovers your child to be loyal, and the child at school who is positively impacted by your child’s self-control.

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • DZone
  • blinkbits
  • BlinkList
  • blogmarks
  • BlogMemes
  • Blue Dot
  • Bumpzee
  • co.mments
  • connotea
  • Furl
  • Ma.gnolia
  • RawSugar
  • Simpy
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • YahooMyWeb
  • De.lirio.us
  • Netscape
  • NewsVine
  • SphereIt
  • Spurl