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Episode 048: Encouragement AND Praise, How It May Be Just What the Doctor Ordered

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When? This feed was archived on April 28, 2019 01:36 (5+ y ago). Last successful fetch was on February 06, 2019 18:11 (5+ y ago)

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Manage episode 201192110 series 2135895
Content provided by Parent With a Pro. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Parent With a Pro or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Our kids struggle when they only hear negative things about themselves or are in trouble much of the time. They can start to feel like they are just “bad” kids. They start to feel an emotion called shame. Brene Brown teaches that guilt and shame are two very different things. Guilt is when we feel we have done something wrong, but there is hope, because we can change. Shame is when we feel WE ARE a mistake, WE are the problem, WE cannot change. Therefore, there is no hope. This leads to self-doubt, depression, and anxiety. We want our kids to avoid the pain that shame brings and have to work EXTRA hard to help our strong-willed kids. We want to teach you how to use positive praise and encouragement to help your child feel connected to you and feel positively about themselves. LISTEN ABOVE OR READ THE SUMMARY BELOW Mike Fitch, CMHC Our strong willed child may be trying even if it doesn’t look like it We want to teach you this principle using an analogy. Two kids are in the same class, with the same teacher, and working equally hard to get a good grade. One child naturally understands the subject being taught while the other child doesn’t. As a result, one child gets an A and the other gets a C. Does it mean that they didn’t work equally hard? No, it means that one child was more naturally gifted at the subject than the other. Does it mean that the child who struggles more can’t learn? No, it means that it will just take more time, effort, and patience. Our strong willed kids naturally struggle to behave as well as their peers do. Their emotions seem to be stronger, their tempers flare faster, their wills are just stronger. However, they also feel sad that people think they aren’t good kids. They want to be liked, loved, and want to know that they are good. It is one of our primary roles as parents to understand that our strong willed kids are struggling, to let them know that we believe in them, that we see the positive in them. This can be SO hard as we may be struggling the see the good and the positive in them ourselves. Yet, if we don’t see it in them, who will? Where to start? PRAISE EFFORT Pay attention to hard your child is working at behaving well and praise their efforts not just their results. In the school analogy, you could praise your child for studying, for listening in class, for doing their homework. An example with behavior is you could praise your child for choosing to use nice words instead of angry words. Just point out the effort that their making. PRAISE PROGRESS Praise any progress they make. Once again, in our school analogy, if the child that struggles got a B instead of a C, praise that progress! Is the grade an A? No, but your child made progress! With behavior if you have a child that went a whole week without hitting someone and that’s the first time they did that, praise that progress! PRAISE NEUTRAL BEHAVIOR If we’re struggling to find really praiseworthy things that our strong willed kids are doing, then start praising neutral behavior. Find a time when they’re not fighting with a sibling to say “Hey, I just want you to know that I love how you are doing your own thing and not fighting with your brother! That makes our home feel really peaceful and you made that possible.” Look for times that your child is simply not rocking the boat and find a way to praise them for that. PRAISE THE POSITIVE OPPOSITE If you are working with your child on extinguishing a certain negative behavior, make sure you praise the positive opposite behavior. For example: If you are trying to get your child to stop arguing with you, have an appropriate consequence for when they are arguing with you BUT offer praise when they choose not to argue with you. Help them feel good for making that positive choice, let them know how you feel about when they choose not to argue with you. Ask them how they feel when they are talking calmly versus arguing with you.
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88 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 

Archived series ("Inactive feed" status)

When? This feed was archived on April 28, 2019 01:36 (5+ y ago). Last successful fetch was on February 06, 2019 18:11 (5+ y ago)

Why? Inactive feed status. Our servers were unable to retrieve a valid podcast feed for a sustained period.

What now? You might be able to find a more up-to-date version using the search function. This series will no longer be checked for updates. If you believe this to be in error, please check if the publisher's feed link below is valid and contact support to request the feed be restored or if you have any other concerns about this.

Manage episode 201192110 series 2135895
Content provided by Parent With a Pro. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Parent With a Pro or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Our kids struggle when they only hear negative things about themselves or are in trouble much of the time. They can start to feel like they are just “bad” kids. They start to feel an emotion called shame. Brene Brown teaches that guilt and shame are two very different things. Guilt is when we feel we have done something wrong, but there is hope, because we can change. Shame is when we feel WE ARE a mistake, WE are the problem, WE cannot change. Therefore, there is no hope. This leads to self-doubt, depression, and anxiety. We want our kids to avoid the pain that shame brings and have to work EXTRA hard to help our strong-willed kids. We want to teach you how to use positive praise and encouragement to help your child feel connected to you and feel positively about themselves. LISTEN ABOVE OR READ THE SUMMARY BELOW Mike Fitch, CMHC Our strong willed child may be trying even if it doesn’t look like it We want to teach you this principle using an analogy. Two kids are in the same class, with the same teacher, and working equally hard to get a good grade. One child naturally understands the subject being taught while the other child doesn’t. As a result, one child gets an A and the other gets a C. Does it mean that they didn’t work equally hard? No, it means that one child was more naturally gifted at the subject than the other. Does it mean that the child who struggles more can’t learn? No, it means that it will just take more time, effort, and patience. Our strong willed kids naturally struggle to behave as well as their peers do. Their emotions seem to be stronger, their tempers flare faster, their wills are just stronger. However, they also feel sad that people think they aren’t good kids. They want to be liked, loved, and want to know that they are good. It is one of our primary roles as parents to understand that our strong willed kids are struggling, to let them know that we believe in them, that we see the positive in them. This can be SO hard as we may be struggling the see the good and the positive in them ourselves. Yet, if we don’t see it in them, who will? Where to start? PRAISE EFFORT Pay attention to hard your child is working at behaving well and praise their efforts not just their results. In the school analogy, you could praise your child for studying, for listening in class, for doing their homework. An example with behavior is you could praise your child for choosing to use nice words instead of angry words. Just point out the effort that their making. PRAISE PROGRESS Praise any progress they make. Once again, in our school analogy, if the child that struggles got a B instead of a C, praise that progress! Is the grade an A? No, but your child made progress! With behavior if you have a child that went a whole week without hitting someone and that’s the first time they did that, praise that progress! PRAISE NEUTRAL BEHAVIOR If we’re struggling to find really praiseworthy things that our strong willed kids are doing, then start praising neutral behavior. Find a time when they’re not fighting with a sibling to say “Hey, I just want you to know that I love how you are doing your own thing and not fighting with your brother! That makes our home feel really peaceful and you made that possible.” Look for times that your child is simply not rocking the boat and find a way to praise them for that. PRAISE THE POSITIVE OPPOSITE If you are working with your child on extinguishing a certain negative behavior, make sure you praise the positive opposite behavior. For example: If you are trying to get your child to stop arguing with you, have an appropriate consequence for when they are arguing with you BUT offer praise when they choose not to argue with you. Help them feel good for making that positive choice, let them know how you feel about when they choose not to argue with you. Ask them how they feel when they are talking calmly versus arguing with you.
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