The
following is an excerpt from my book, “25 Ways to Encourage Good Behavior with More
Discipline, Less Punishment,” from my series Single Parent Wisdom: If only I knew then, what I know now…
#1 Take Care of Problems Now, Not Later
Do you keep quiet when you witness misdeeds and
then lump the memories of misbehavior into one angry outburst? Allen Elkin, Stress Management for Dummies®, describes this as Kitchen-Sinking a person. It’s not fair. Children prefer fair. If you didn’t correct
the action when it happened, how was she to know that you really cared?
“Discipline works best when it’s immediate,
mild, and brief, because it’s then associated with the transgression and
doesn’t breed more anger and resentment.” from Nancy Shute, “Good
Parents, Bad Results,” U.S. News & World Report
Don’t catastrophize
· The world won’t end if the trash
doesn’t make it to the curb this week.
· Your child isn’t condemned to a
life in prison if she steals one piece of candy. Discuss the
theft and have consequences for wrong choices of behavior. [Or explain the open box on the
counter did not mean they were free to take.]
· The roof won’t fall in if your
child disagrees with you about a House Rule. Say, “I can understand how you
might feel that way.” Consider her opinion and change the rule, or not.
The above words sound simplistic.
They are meant to be. Parents don’t need to read all the studies done on
behavior management. That is the job of authors. This book series offers parents
guidelines, and the freedom to apply them to their role, or to ignore them if they
do not seem appropriate for their lifestyle.
It is popular today to parent
more as a friend, then a parent. This does not benefit any child, especially
for his future adult life. A parent must decide how he wants to raise his
child, and include the other parent’s ideas. If the two parents can agree, the
child will be able to understand his role so much better. If they can’t agree,
eventually the child will learn what each parent expects and behave
accordingly, or rebel. That is the child’s choice. Once the child is an older teen, his parents can begin towards more of a friendship role, but still remain parents when needed.
The parents’ choice is to decide
what consequences work with each particular child and apply them. Suggestions
for consequences that are logical, reasonable, and far out (catch the child off
his guard) are available at the singleparentwisdom.com website. Or you can
simply apply the standard, “We do not behave like that in this household.”
A child needs to be taught how he
should behave to get the style of life he desires. This will benefit him
immensely as he grows up. There are standards set for acceptable behavior in
every area of life: school, college, friendships, jobs, marriage, parenting,
and as a member of a community. It is the parents’ job to provide this
instruction, with every step.
Get a FREE Book: “25 Ways to Encourage Good
Behavior with More Discipline, Less Punishment” by Julie Prescott;
Wynot Publications; ISBN 978-0-982132609
E-book ISBN: 9780982513965
While supplies last, request one
or more free copies of the paperback 25 Ways from the publisher for the
cost of postage. Contact the publisher Wynot
Publications at info@singleparentwisdom.com.
Note: Title missing from the spine
on the free copies.
No comments:
Post a Comment