I
have an excellent illustration with something that happened to me
today.
As
usual, I felt overscheduled today, yet I made great progress and
stayed on time. As if I didn’t have enough to do, I added another
task – to wash my dirty car that had bird droppings on it. I
allotted myself 40 minutes to wash my car. I did the best I could
even though I knew I could not dry or wax it. At least it doesn't
look embarrassing anymore! I left the car in the carport and went
inside to change and go out for my next appointment.
For
those who don’t know me I usually do not show many negative
feelings to others (even though I believe people should).
Sometimes
we need so little to feel much better. So why not offer this to our
children?
--“I
see you really wish this play date would never end, huh?”
--“It
seems you would love to have candy for lunch and ice cream for
dinner.”
--“I
understand that you really hope I would stay, and not have to go to
work.”
These
statements of acknowledgement bring comfort to a tense situation and
show children we are aware of their distaste or disagreement. By
acknowledging and active listening, we are open to the contrary even
if we can’t go along with the contrary. We listen and nod with an
understanding body language. This diffuses those moments when our
children feel powerless!
Cheers,
Teacher Kira
To learn more about Parenting Classes and Exploration classes, visit our website: http://www.ourparentingplace.com
I've been there before, when I just say, today's the day I woke up on the wrong side of bed and everything is going the wrong way for me...and then at some point you just have to let it go and it feels great when you can let it go.
ReplyDeleteSure. If in addition someone can understand you....it feels even better.
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