I am a John Rosemond certified parent coach. Rosemond parenting is based on love and leadership; parents become leaders whose children choose to follow their leadership! My business, LPC-Ludwig Parenting Coach,serving the greater Buffalo,NY area, provides workshops and individual coaching to teach Rosemond parenting principles and help families put them to use in addressing children's misbehavior.
Friday, May 4, 2012
Parenting your Preschooler Workshop
There are still a few slots available in this workshop. This is an interactive, often humorous workshop that will focus on preschooler problems such as bedtime hassles, food fights and tantrums. Funded by Still in One Peace Crisis Services, there is no cost to participants. We will meet on Wed May 9th and 16th at the Clarence Youth Bureau, 10510 Main Street from 6:30-8:30PM. Call the Youth Bureau at 716-407-2162 for registration
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Do What You Can Do, When You Can Do It!
People often
question me when I suggest that they delay consequences. For example:
· Didn’t wash the car when asked on
Saturday? Parent says no to the movies
on Friday (because you didn’t wash the car when I asked you to)
· Didn’t stay with you in the
store? Parent sends the child to bed
immediately after supper (because you didn’t stay with me in the store).
· Didn’t get ready for school on
time? Parent tells the child on Saturday morning that he can’t play outside for
the whole day (because you weren’t ready for school on Wednesday by 8AM)
Parents’ major
concerns seem to be:
1.
The child
will forget what the event was all about.
2.
The child
will think he got away with the misbehavior if punishment isn’t immediate.
To the
first, let me illustrate how long children can remember. Last week, our 3 year old grandson discovered
the ice machine on our freezer. He
busily went about getting water and ice for everyone – needed to “help all the
very thirsty people”. He was so cute! But then his Dad said “enough”! And 2 minutes later he asked me for the
“purple sippy cup” – which he has used maybe 3 times in his life and not since
Christmas. Of course, when he got it, he
could put water and ice in one more time!
The point is, he easily remembered something that happened 3 months
earlier.
To the
second point; the purpose of consequences is not so much to punish past
behavior as it is to deter future misbehavior.
Most parents are in the mode of punishing behavior as soon as it happens. You feel like you “did something”, but while
you may win the encounter, you hardly win the war! If you wait for the right moment and make the
consequence relatively agonizing to your child, he will start choosing better
behavior in the future.
Finally, if
you begin disciplining this way, your child will soon understand your
approach. The first few times he may
feel he got away with something, but he should get the picture once he
understands that great big consequences are going to fall sooner or later.
As a rule of
thumb, children can remember their misbehavior events for 1 day at age three,
for 2 days at ages four and five and for seven or more days after age 6.
Summary: to
convince your child that you are in charge, don’t make a big deal out of
misbehavior when it occurs, don’t yell, stay calm and wait for the moment when
you can calmly, but authoritatively levy a great, big consequence that really
matters to your child. Do what you can
do, WHEN you can do it.
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
The Homework Beast
Last fall a friend received a “Homework Tip” sheet from
their 7th grade daughter’s new school. Parents were directed to check the homework
memo book nightly, supervise the homework and provide all needed help. If books were forgotten, the parent should come
to school – access to lockers was available 24/7!
Makes you wonder whose responsibility the homework is,
doesn’t it?! Many parents take school
expectations on homework way too seriously.
They sit with their children, coaching, nagging and hand holding night
after night. And the more they do, the
less their children do. Families are
held hostage by the nightly homework battle – nerves get frayed, bedtimes get
later and later, and homework takes center stage for the whole family. Parents feel that it is a “good parent”
requirement to make sure the homework is done and done correctly. But all this help only builds dependency and
actually, lowers self-esteem as the child feels increasingly incapable.
Under these conditions, the child is learning absolutely
nothing about becoming a responsible, resourceful human being – and isn’t that
a MAJOR component of the homework experience?
I would suggest that the proper parent role is to MINIMIZE
their involvement. Inquire and be aware of
homework assignments, show interest and an expectation that it will get
done. Provide a quiet place AWAY from
family activity to do homework and basic supplies such as pens, paper, crayons,
and pencils. If the child needs
assistance, tell him to pick up his work from his quiet homework place and
bring it to a parent with his question.
After a couple minutes discussion, send the child back to his homework
haven to continue on his own. If the
child truly doesn’t understand the work, it is a good sign that he needs more
help from his teacher and should ask for it the next day in class. But very often, once sent back to continue
his work alone, the child gathers his wits about him and figures it out. And perhaps most importantly, there should be
a rule about when homework must be done.
In our home it was 8PM at which time the pre-bedtime routine began. When this rule went into effect, my 8 year
old daughter did indeed cry hysterically when homework wasn’t done. I stood absolutely, calmly firm; the kids
faced the consequences in school the next day of not having finished their
homework; and suddenly homework started getting done by the deadline. I am sure my children said fun things like
“my mom wouldn’t let me finish my homework” and I am sure teachers had a few
raised eyebrows. But once we got past
these couple of incidents, homework forever and always became my children’s’
responsibility and was nearly always done and done well.
They learned their school lessons, but they also learned
responsibility, resourcefulness, time management and perseverance – traits that
will follow them throughout their lives!
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
School Volunteer
I am volunteering in a local elementary school this
year. Each week I work with several kids
who need extra help in math. I usually
do one on one sessions with first, second and third graders.
All works really well, except…..my 2nd grade group of 3 or 4
kids. The group changes week to week
depending on who most needs help. And
frankly, after the first couple weeks of being polite, they pretty much stopped
listening to me. The kids liked this
half hour of special time out of the classroom and took it as an opportunity to
squirm, wiggle and giggle. I could not
control them for the short 30 minutes I had with them!
I normally get to their classroom about 5 minutes early and
could easily see how well behaved the entire classroom was. The teacher is pleasant but firm and a lot of
work is getting done. My dilemma was
that I had absolutely no authority or consequence over these little people that
could inspire them to follow my directions.
Hmmm….what to do???
A few weeks ago at the end of our session, I asked the kids
what happens in their class if they talk and giggle and wiggle when they should
be working. With big eyes and complete
seriousness, they told me the teacher takes one of their 3 sticks. They carefully explained that losing 1 stick
is a warning, losing 2 sticks loses 5 minutes of recess and losing 3 sticks
means losing all of recess. BINGO! With a serious look on my face, I calmly
announced that from now on, when they misbehaved with me, I would ask their
teacher to remove a stick. Problem
absolutely, completely solved. They do
not want to lose a stick!!!
Now each week I remind them of the rule at the beginning of
the session (because the kids in the group often changes, I need to make sure
they all know it). But then I do not
remind, threaten or give second chances.
So far, I haven’t needed to take a stick. They are really delightful and
we get our work done! I may need to take
a stick in the next couple weeks but I am betting it will only be once. So, kudos to a great teacher who knows how to
be a leader in her classroom and make it easy for volunteers like me to
actually accomplish something!
That’s it parents – figure out the consequence that matters
to your kids and let them know that misbehavior will “earn” them that
consequence. While you will have to levy
the penalty a few times, they will likely soon be following your directions!
Monday, February 6, 2012
Parenting Takes Energy!
A friend described nightly
battles getting their 4 year old to stay in bed. They put him down at 8PM and then the fun
begins. He gets up to ask for all the
usual things – water, one more hug, a
bathroom trip, something he forgot to tell them, more water, more hugs and on
it goes.
I suggested a simple strategy
– tie a ribbon on his bedroom door. If
after he goes to bed, he wants something, tell him he may bring you the ribbon
and you will cheerfully fulfill his request. However, if he gets up again, his
bedtime will be an hour earlier the next night.
Each night starts fresh with 1 ribbon on his door (even if he has the
earlier bedtime).
The parents correctly pointed
out that he will still likely get up over and over again. I responded yes, he probably will, but just
calmly lead him back to bed each time – without fulfilling any of the
additional requests. It is the early
bedtime over a series of days or weeks that is going to help him choose to stay
in bed in the future.
In the meantime, the parents
are going to be spending some energy in repeatedly taking him back to bed. And they need to do this calmly and without
yelling – which takes additional energy when you are tired after a long
day. And this strategy may not get
immediate results – he may improve for a bit and then try testing to see if his
parents really mean it. So more getting
up and leading him back to bed…… But in
2 or 3 weeks of parental consistency, bedtime problems should be a thing of the
past.
The parents looked at me in
exasperation and said “But I want him to mind me right now!" Realistically if what they have been doing so
far isn’t working, isn’t it time to try something new? Currently they are using just as much energy
meeting his requests as they will when leading him back to bed. The big difference is the first approach is
likely to continue – for years! And the
second can solve the problem in a few weeks.
It is important to understand
that a child has free will. Parents are
not going to tie him in bed, so the only way he is going to stay there is IF HE
CHOOSES TO. Parents need to make the consequence big
enough to help him choose the behavior they want.
Certainly when a problem
behavior is long standing, it takes some time to correct it and it does take
energy. So, up off the couch, to attend
to your child’s misdeeds – but comfort yourself that this new leadership
strategy is going to get your child’s attention – not just over bedtime issues,
but all the issues that come up as a child learns to take his proper place in his
family – as a disciple of parents he chooses to follow!
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Parenting Overview
I can sum up Rosemond parenting principles is just a couple
of sentences!
Under this parenting style, a child chooses to follow the
legitimate authority and leadership of his parents. His parents convey their loving leadership
with clear, authoritative direction that does not give explanations and pays
only a little attention to the child’s feelings, wishes, and wants. The parent
conveys his expectation with a few clear, concise words and does not enter into
arguments or discussions about his directions.
There you have it! It
sounds terribly simple and at its heart, it is.
What complicates the matter is typical parental unwillingness to make children the least bit unhappy. So parents argue, and explain and negotiate
and change the directions to try and make the child happy with whatever is
going on. But so often, your child does
not really know what is best for him or what he really wants and the more this
drama continues, the more he misbehaves.
When a parent insists on proper behavior, the child will become more
secure and thereby happier and more obedient.
Most parents are perfectly comfortable with leadership,
authoritative speech for a visit to the doctor.
They say things like, “You need to come home right after school today
because you have a doctor’s appointment at 4:00.”
Only a very few parents would say: “Hey it is time for your
physical. Would you like to go see Dr. Smith?
He is such a nice man. Won’t that
be fun? Is it ok with you if we go? Is today a good day or would you like me to
change it for you?”
And even if the child grumbles and whines that he doesn’t
want to go, most parents will not enter into much discussion about it. They know health care is in the child’s best
interests and that is just the way it is going to be.
When parents want their child’s attention, they need to
claim it simply, clearly and concisely.
A direction to: pick up toys, come to the dinner table, turn off the tv,
start getting ready for bed, stay by my side at the store, stop hitting your
brother - should be given just as simply as the doctor announcement.
That is Rosemond parenting in a nutshell. Now if your children aren’t used to such
direction, it is going to take awhile and a few interventions to convince them
that you have chosen to claim your legitimate authority. But indeed it can be done when a parent
commits himself to leading his children.
More on how in future postings!
Monday, January 9, 2012
Time Out
No, I don’t mean for the kids! This one is for you. Take a deep breath and let it out slowly……….REALLY slowly……… Go ahead, I’ll wait for you.
There, didn’t that feel good? Don’t you feel more relaxed?
One of the biggest mistakes parents make is reacting to misbehavior before they think. If everyone took a long, slow, deep breath and backed 2 steps away from the issue at hand, they would allow themselves to think through their options. Managing misbehavior is largely a matter of strategy. When you shoot from the hip with an immediate response, you often act out of anger and you often yell. And frequently, you just impose the first consequence you think of - without considering if it will really change the way your child is acting. Oh, it might stop whatever is going on right now, but will it stop it for the long haul?
Consequences that really stop misbehavior are large enough to get your child’s attention and often “larger” than the misbehavior. But when you get your child’s attention, he will more likely choose better behavior in the future; you won’t need to constantly impose large consequences.
Didn’t pick up his toys? Parents, take a deep breath and don’t react at all. But tonight after dinner, announce he is going to bed right now because he didn’t pick up his toys.
Didn’t wash the car when you asked? Parents, take a deep breath and do it yourself. But Friday night when he wants to go to the movies, tell him no because he didn’t wash the car.
Now if there is a perfect consequence when the incident occurs, there is nothing wrong with imposing it - if you can do so calmly and without yelling. But many times there isn’t one at hand. So take a deep, long slow breath and wait for the right moment. It will come. And I promise, your child (older than 3) is going to remember the misbehavior and learn a lesson about how he wants to behave in the future!
One word of caution – it is part of the strategy to REMEMBER to impose a consequence – too often if we get past the moment, we tell ourselves, “oh that behavior wasn’t so bad” or we forget about it until the next time. Don’t do that – misbehavior needs your attention; it just needs to be your calm, well planned attention!
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