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By Katie Malinski, on March 20th, 2008
Teaching emotional intelligence is an enormously important thing for
a parent to do. But how? For younger kids, it’s all about giving them
the language to conceptualize and communicate about their experiences.
This is worth repeating: kids must acquire language tools
that will allow them to (a) conceptualize their experiences, and (b)
share/communicate about them-and the child’s emotions are a very important part of their experience. So, it’s important to teach this stuff, and luckily, it’s also pretty easy.
Step 1: Identify your own most common emotions. You
can choose from a very wide variety of emotions (happy, annoyed, silly,
angry, loving, sad, excited, frustrated, anxious/worried, joyous), but
pick 3 basic ones to start.
Step 2: Start describing your own emotions, and say
why you are feeling them. (out loud, in front of your child.) Deliver
this information in an emotionally neutral way, as much as possible. It
may help if you first identify predictable times/events when you feel
those feelings, so that you’ll be prepared with a bit of a script. (For
example: annoyance while driving, joy at the end-of-the-day-reunions,
feeling silly or happy during playtimes…)
Step 3: At essentially the same time, begin
reflecting for your child what emotions you think they might be feeling
at any given moment. For example: “Ooh, you look really frustrated.” or
“You look like you’re feeling proud of yourself for that!” If you have
a child with a good attention span for discussion, you could add in an
extra sentence that clarifies what s/he was doing that suggested a
particular emotion. For example: “You’re yanking on that strap and
yelling-I can tell that you are really frustrated!” Also at this
stage-start describing emotions you observe in other people around you.
“Look Susie, Billy is crying. He feels sad because you grabbed his
toy.” Or, “Wow, John, look at Grandma’s big smile-you really made her
feel happy when you said that.” (Note: for those of you thinking: “You
can’t make anyone feel a particular emotion… I agree with
you-but this is a conversation with a small child. They’re learning
vocabulary and observational skills. We’ll save the higher level
self-actualization lesson for 4th grade. ;^) )
Step 4: After you’ve been describing your own
emotions and reflecting your child’s emotions for her/him for a few
weeks, start asking your child if they are feeling a
particular emotion. For example: Oh, “did that loud noise scare you?”
or “Are you feeling angry that I took that away from you?” The goal
here is simply to support their understanding and use of emotional
vocabulary.
Step 5/Level 2: Once your child begins to use emotions
in their daily vocabulary, give yourself a pat on the back! Annnddd…
now you’re ready for level two… time to begin talking about how you manage your emotions.
For example, you might say: “When I feel scared, I take a deep breath
and talk about it with someone I love.” Or “When I feel angry, I take a
deep breath, close my eyes and count to 10.” (side note: taking a deep
breath is both an ancient wisdom and a modern miracle-a technique that
we’ve know about for eons, and one that modern research repeatedly
finds to be effective in managing many things.) Anyway, this
conversation teaches your child some all-important coping skills (for
dealing with the inevitable stressors of life) while underscoring the
message that you are an empathetic and supportive parent.)
Allright, there ya go! Good luck, and take care.
Update: a silly (but cool!) graphic to illustrate this entry:
title="Wordle: Teaching Kids about Emotions">
src="http://wordle.net/thumb/wrdl/83000/Teaching_Kids_about_Emotions"
style="padding:4px;border:1px solid #ddd"
>
By Katie Malinski, on March 7th, 2008
It can be such a relief to know that other people are struggling with the same challenges that you are. It can also be
comforting, in a way, to find out that there are problems out there
that you don’t have. (well, it’s true!) To that end, this post is the
first in a multi-part series about the most common parenting conflicts.
I did a small survey and have summarized the results below. (In other
words, this is neither scientific nor exhaustive.) But I think you’ll
find common ground all the same.
Typical areas of conflict between parents:
- Discipline: (strategies, thresholds, undermining vs united front.)
- Anxiety: (differing levels and differing triggers)
- Self-care: (Who gets personal time! Who is getting more! There is Never Enough!!)
- Sex: (hormones, feeling over-touched, the importance of reconnection.)
- Lifestyle issues: (diet, TV, language, work vs play)
- Balance and Sharing: (household labor, ‘owning’ the kids, reading parenting books, extended family, role modeling, competing for love.)
Steps that can help:
- Define a common problem.
- Use “I” statements. Avoid blame and ‘making wrong.’
- Active listening skills (body language, focus, “uh huh,” rephrasing, empathetic response.)
- Reach out. Ask friends, family, professionals. Ask for help. Ask
for camaraderie. Ask for distraction. Ask for advice. Both parents must
reach out!
- Acceptance, compromise, communication.
- Counseling. You get the help of an ‘expert’ with training and
experience in these exact issues, plus a dedicated hour each week to
focus on growth.
In future posts, I will delve a little deeper into the different categories. First up: discipline. Come back for more!
By Katie Malinski, on March 6th, 2008
Earlier this week I had an initial appointment with a physical
therapist. Towards the end of our visit, he gave me some instructions
for things to do at home. I sortof understood, but wanted
clarification, so I asked a question. This is where things went
downhill.
Apparently, my question was a dumb one. I know this because the PT
told me so. He tilted his head, raised his eyebrows, smirked a bit, and
then repeated what he’d just said, with extra emphasis. The
overwhelming message was “You should not have asked that-you should
have been able to figure it out. Something must be wrong with you if
you had to ask that question.”
Really? Really?
In the Beyond Birds and Bees workshop, I tell parents to first respond to their kid’s questions about sex by saying “oh, good question!” While there are many reasons to do this, the primary reason is that it reinforces to your child that you are an askable parent. I think I want this PT to take my class. ;^)
From the perspective of the well-informed, basic questions can seem a little funny. But let’s remember 2 things-1, to be “ignorant” simply means that the person hasn’t learned it yet.
And 2, each of us also started out with small steps, teasing out nuance
and learning how to make our own inferences. If 1 + 2 = 3, does 2 + 1
also equal 3? …that sort of thing. That equation looks laughably simple
now, but it was a lot harder when you were 5.
As parents, we know that learning is a life-long process, and that no one is an expert in everything. Children who are encouraged to
ask questions, who see their parents acknowledging that they don’t know
everything but will work to find answers-those kids are better prepared
for a successful adulthood. Kids who don’t get that-the ones
who are made fun of for asking “dumb” questions-will stop asking
questions. It’s sad, too, because as the questions stop, the learning
slows. At the end of the day, the people who asked questions are the
people who will know more.
So this week, in whatever you do, consider responding to every question with: “oh, good question.” Because, really, they are all good questions.
By Katie Malinski, on March 1st, 2008
Is your school-aged child being teased? Kids can really be mean to
each other, and when our kids hurt, we hurt, too. The older they get,
the harder it is to fix things for them. The good news is that there
are concrete, positive steps you can take to help your child handle
teasing.
Respond to this problem on two levels.
- First, focus on your child’s emotional needs. Don’t rush to
problem-solving too fast. Allow your child to feel their feelings and
vent them in a safe place with a safe person (you!) Actively listening
(which includes eye contact, focus, repeating back, and empathetic
noises like “uh-huh,” etc.) will actually provide a measure of relief.
It feels good to tell your story to someone who cares and is really
listening.
- Then, when your child is done venting, ask if he wants your help,
and if so, how he wants you to help. You may discover that all they
wanted was to talk about it. That really happens! Even kids sometimes
just want validation, not problem-solving. Alternatively, your child
might ask for a “fix.” Depending on your child’s age, a phone call to
parents or teachers, etc might be appropriate. However, no one can
really make them stop, so we’d better move on to level two.
One of the most important things we parents must do for our kids is prepare them for The Real World.
The Real World is imperfect and full of unfairness, bullies, and
cheating. Much as we might like to, we cannot shield our kids from
teasing (or other unpleasantness) for their whole lives. It will find
them, so we’d better teach them how to deal with it on their own.
Here are steps to take and lessons to teach your child in order to
better equip him to deal with teasing (or other crummy peer behavior).
- Overall ego-strengthening. If a child feels anxious about a
particular aspect of themselves, they are likely to react more when
teased. The reaction is the teaser’s reward. (This is why some people
say to “just ignore them”). But, a child who can recognize her own
diverse strengths will have an easier time internally rejecting the
rude comments. If your child doesn’t feel sensitive or vulnerable to a
comment, they won’t react. This makes it less ‘fun’ for the teaser, so
it won’t happen as much.
- Humor. Nothing disarms like humor. There’s a great scene in the old Steve Martin movie “Roxanne”
where his character (who has a very large nose) makes fun of a guy who
had made fun of his nose. Steve Martin embarrasses his teaser by
humorously pointing out that the teasing comment was uncreative and
common. What a way to reclaim the upper hand!
- Insight into the other person’s possible motivations. It helps to
know, for example, that kids sometimes tease because they feel insecure
themselves. This also emphasizes the important life lesson “It’s not
about you,” which can be powerful and life-changing.
- Teach your child the power of not being defensive. “Yeah,
I’ve got a big nose. And, I’m the 4th grade champion at basketball.
Wanna play?” In this example, the child being teased acknowledges the
truth in what the bully is focusing on (which eliminates any ‘sting’,
and the shifts the power) then refocuses the conversation onto an
aspect of himself where he is powerful and capable.
I hope that these ideas are helpful. For more information, or to ask
questions, leave a comment or send me an email through the website!
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