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TOP TEN DISCIPLINE PRINCIPLES
1. GET CONNECTED EARLY
Discipline is
grounded on a healthy relationship between parent and child. To know how to
discipline your child you must first know your child. This kind of knowledge
resides deep in parents' minds. You could call it intuition, but that term has a
kind of mystique that confuses parents. ("How can I trust my intuition? I don't
even know if I have any!") The term "connection" is easier to understand. With
the high-touch parenting style called attachment parenting, you can build and
strengthen this connection between you and your child, laying the foundation for
discipline. Connected parents become their own experts on their own child, so
they know what behavior is appropriate to expect and how to convey these
expectations. Connected children know what behavior parents expect and make an
effort to behave this way because they want to please their parents. Together
these parents and children develop a style of discipline that works for them. We
describe the tools for connecting with your baby and young child so that you can
read your child's behavior and respond appropriately, so the two of you can
bring out the best in each other. (See
2. KNOW YOUR CHILD
These are the three most useful words in
discipline.
Study your child. Know your child's needs and capabilities at various ages. Your
discipline techniques will be different at each stage because your child's needs
change. A temper tantrum in a two-year-old calls for a different response than
it does in an eight-year-old.
Know Age-appropriate Behavior
Many
conflicts arise when parents expect children to think and behave like adults.
You need to know what behavior is usual for a child at each stage of development
in order to recognize true misbehavior. We find discipline to be much easier
with our eighth child than it was with our first child, mainly because we now
have a handle on which behaviors call for instruction, patience, and humor, and
which demand a firm, corrective response. We tolerate those things that go along
with a child's age and stage (for example, most two-year-olds can't sit still
very long in a restaurant), but we correct behavior that is disrespectful or
dangerous to the child or to others ("You may not climb on the table").
Get behind the eyes of your child
Children don't think like adults.
Kids try
crazy things and think crazy thoughts—at least by adult standards. You will
drive yourself crazy if you judge a child's behavior from an adult viewpoint. A
two-year-old who runs out into the street isn't being defiant, he just wants his
ball back. Action follows impulse, with no thought in between. A five-year-old
likes her friend's toy so much that she "borrows" it. An adult may stop and
weigh the necessity, safety, and morality of an act, but a young child doesn't.
Our son Matthew, at age two was a very focused child. He would become so
engrossed in a play activity that it was difficult for him to let go when it was
time to leave. one day when he was playing and it was time for us to depart (we
were late for an appointment), Martha scooped Matthew up and carried him to the
door. Matthew protested with a typical two-year-old tantrum. At first she had
the usual "Hey, I'm in charge here" feelings and felt that she was justified in
expecting Matthew to obey quickly and be willing to leave his toys. But as
Martha was carrying the flailing child out the door, she realized that her
discipline gauge was out of balance and she was not handling things in the best
way. Her actions were a result of her need to leave, but they didn't take into
account Matthew's need for advance warning and a more gradual transition. She
realized it wasn't in Matthew's nature to switch gears quickly, even if we did
have a deadline. He was not defying her. He was just being true to himself. He
needed more time to let go of his activities. So she calmly took him back to the
play setting, sat down with him and together they said "Bye-bye toys, bye-bye
trucks, bye-bye cars," until he could comfortably release himself from his
activities. It only took a couple of minutes, time that would otherwise have
been wasted struggling with Matthew in the car. This was not a "technique" or
"method"; this disciplinary action evolved naturally from the mutual respect
between parent and child and the knowledge that Martha had about Matthew. At the
end of this exercise Martha felt right because it had accomplished what she
wanted - getting Matthew out of the house with the least amount of hassle. She
taught him a method of releasing himself from an activity without resorting to a
tantrum. That's what discipline is all about.
Realizing how much better discipline worked when we considered our children's
needs in our decisions was a major turning point for us. Initially, we had to
work through the fear that we were letting our children manipulate us, because
we had read, heard from others, and grown up with the idea that good parents are
always in control. We found, however, that considering our child's point of view
actually helped us take charge of them. Knowing our children became the key to
knowing how to discipline them. They knew we were in charge because we were able
to help them obey. That left no doubt in their minds or ours that Mom and Dad
knew best.
3. HELP THE CHILD TO RESPECT AUTHORITY
Parents, take charge of your children. That's basic in Discipline 101. But
being a trusted authority in your child's life does not automatically come with
the job of being a parent. The child who is told he must obey "or else," may
behave, but does so out of fear, not respect. "Honor thy father and thy mother"
is the wise and time-honored teaching; not fear them. Honor implies both
obedience and respect.
How do you get your children to respect you? An authority figure needs to be
both warm and wise. First, get connected to your child. Start as a nurturer, a
baby comforter. In so doing, you get to know your baby and your baby trusts you.
Respect for authority is based on trust. once your child trusts you to meet her
needs, she will trust you to set her limits. one day I asked a mother why she
felt so confident as an authority figure. She said, "A lot of my security comes
from knowing my children." Because she understood her children, she was able to
guide them wisely and know they would follow. Many parents confuse being in
charge with being in control. Instead of directly controlling children, wise
authority figures control the situation in order to make it easier for children
to learn to control themselves. Children respond with genuine trust and respect
rather than fear and rebellion.
4. SET LIMITS, PRoVIDE STRUCTURE
Establish rules, but at the same time create conditions that
make the rules easier to follow. Children need boundaries. They won't thrive or
survive without limits; neither will their parents. To learn about their
environment, toddlers must explore and be energetic. That's their job.
Environmental control is the parents' job. This involves both setting wise
limits and providing structure, which means creating an atmosphere in the home
that makes these limits easier to respect. The limit-setting part of
disciplining a toddler is to say "no" to an exploring child who is headed for
trouble; the structure part is to childproof the home to provide busy minds and
bodies a safe place to play and learn.
5. EXPECT OBEDIENCE
Your child will be as obedient as
you expect, or as defiant as you allow. When we ask parents of obedient kids why
their children obey, they all answer, "Because we expect them to." Simple as
this sounds, many parents let this basic fact of discipline slip away. They are
too busy, their child is "strong-willed;" they make excuses: "It's just a
developmental phase."
In the early years children don't know what behavior is acceptable or
unacceptable until you tell them. one evening at a kid-friendly restaurant, we
observed two families handling the same discipline situation in two different
ways. The two-and-a-half-year-old in one family was incessantly climbing over
the back of the booth, and she kept this climbing behavior up until it became
disruptive to nearby patrons. Wimpy "don'ts" from the parents did not deter the
persistent climber. It was clear this child had no idea that climbing was
unacceptable behavior. She got the message, "We prefer that you not climb, but
we're not going to do anything about it."
Another two-and-a-half-year-old got a different message and showed different
behavior. The parent sat the child next to him, frequently acknowledged the
child, and kept him involved in the family conversation. As soon as the toddler
began to climb, the father immediately redirected him and politely planted the
climber back in his seat. With a combination of creative distraction and
respectful restraint, the parent conveyed to the child that he was expected to
refrain from climbing because climbing would disturb the people in the next
booth. The child got the message that any effort to climb the seat would not be
okay. The child filed this experience into his memory bank, to be retrieved the
next time they went to a restaurant when, presumably, he made fewer attempts to
climb over the seat.
Was the parent in the second family exhibiting controlling behavior? Yes, but
in the right sense of the term. Abusive control is when you forcibly impose your
will upon your child, expecting him to obey, but to the detriment of your
relationship. When you insist on obedience and help the child to get control of
himself, you are using your power over the child in a good way that helps him
develop inner controls. Remember, children want limits so that they don't feel
out of control, and they want parents to stand by those limits. They keep
testing the limits to see if you will uphold them. When you don't, the child
feels anxious that no one is strong enough to contain him. To a child, that is
scary.
6. MODEL DISCIPLINE
A model is an example your child imitates. The
mind of a
growing child is a sponge, soaking up life's experiences; it's a video camera
capturing everything a child hears and sees, storing these images in a mental
vault for later retrieval. These stored images, especially those frequently
repeated by significant persons in the child's life, become part of his
personality—the child's self. So, one of your jobs as parents is to provide good
material for your child to absorb.
"But I can't be perfect." of course not. No parent is perfect. While writing this book, Martha and I would often say, "We know all
this stuff and we still keep making mistakes." In fact, it's unhealthy to model
perfection—a goal that neither parent nor child can meet (though many are
crippled by trying). It's the overall impression that your child receives that
counts, not the occasional blunders or outbursts. If a parent is habitually
angry, anger becomes part of the child's self. The child learns that this is the
way people deal with life. If a parent models happiness and trust, with an
occasional angry tirade, the child sees a healthier model: People are happy most
of the time, but sometimes difficulties make you angry. You handle the situation
and go back to being happy.
Parents, you are the first people your child knows. You are the first
caregivers, authority figures, playmates, male and female. You set the standard
for your child's attitude toward authority, her ability to play with peers, and
her sexual identity. Part of yourself becomes part of your child. Yes, much of a
child's behavior is genetic. More than one parent has been known to remark, "He
came wired that way," but much is also influenced by the child's behavioral
models.
7. NURTURE YOUR CHILD'S SELF-CONFIDENCE
The growing
person with a positive self-image is easier to discipline. She thinks of herself
as a worthwhile person, and so she behaves in a worthwhile way. She is able to
forgo some willful misbehavior to maintain this feeling of well-being. When this
child does misbehave, she returns more quickly to the right path, with less need
for punishment.
Not so the child with poor self-image. The child who doesn't feel right
doesn't act right. His parents don't trust him, so he can't trust himself. No
one expects him to behave well, so he doesn't. The bad behavior cycle begins:
the more misbehavior, the more punishment, which intensifies the child's anger
and lowers the child's self-esteem, producing more bad behavior. This is why our
approach to discipline focuses primarily on promoting inner well-being in the
child from the beginning. Throughout life your child will be exposed to people
and events that contribute to his self-worth and to others that chip away at it.
We call these builders and breakers. We will help you to set the conditions that
expose your child to many more builders than breakers, and, of course, to be a
builder yourself.
8. SHAPE YOUR CHILD'S BEHAVIOR
A wise parent is
like a gardener who works with what he has in his garden and also decides what
he wants to add. He realizes he cannot control the characteristics of the
flowers, when they bloom, their scent and color; but he can add those colors
that are missing in his garden, and he can shape it to be more beautiful. There
are flowers and weeds in every child's behavior. Sometimes flowers bloom so
beautifully that you don't even notice the weeds; other times the weeds overtake
the flowers. The gardener waters the flowers, stakes the plants to help them
grow straight, prunes them for maximum bloom, and keeps the weeds in check.
Children are born with some behavioral traits that either flourish or are
weeded out, depending on how the children are nurtured. other traits are planted
and vigorously encouraged to grow. Taken altogether, these traits make up the
child's eventual personality. Your gardening tools as a parent are techniques we
call shapers, time-tested ways to improve your child's behavior in everyday
situations. These shapers help you weed out those behaviors that slow your child
down and nurture those qualities that help him mature.
Most shaping of a child's behavior is a when-then reaction. (When Billy's
room is a mess, Mom says "No more playing outside until it's cleaned up.")
Eventually, the child internalizes these shapers, developing his own inner
systems of when-then, and in so doing learns to take responsibility for the
consequences of his actions. ("When my room is a mess, it's no fun to play
there, so I better clean it up.") He learns to shape his own behavior.
At each stage of development, your shaping tools change, depending on the
needs of your little garden. In the discipline section of this site, we give you
gardening tips to help you confidently shape your child's behavior and make his
personality work to his advantage, so he will be a more likable person who
contributes to the garden of life.
9. RAISE KIDS WHO CARE
Being a moral child includes being
responsible,
developing a conscience, and being sensitive toward the needs and rights of
others. A moral child has an inner code of right and wrong that is linked to his
inner sense of well-being. Inside himself he knows that "I feel right when I act
right, and I feel wrong when I act wrong." The root of being a moral child is
sensitivity to one's self and to others, along with the ability to anticipate
how one's actions will affect another person—and to take that into account
before proceeding. one of the most valuable social skills you can help your
child develop is empathy—the ability to consider another person's rights and
feelings. Children learn empathy from people who treat them empathetically. one
of the best ways to turn out good citizens is to raise sensitive children.
Besides teaching children responsible behavior toward others and toward
things, also teach them to take responsibility for themselves. one of the most
valuable tools for life you can give your child is the ability to make wise
choices. You want to plant a security system within your child that constantly
reminds him: think through what you're about to do. By learning to take
responsibility for their actions in small things children prepare to make right
choices when the consequences are more serious. our wish for you is to help you
raise kids who care.
10.TALK AND LISTEN
Communicate with
your child so she doesn't become parent deaf. The best authority figures
specialize in communication with children. oftentimes re-phrasing the same
directive in a more child-considered way makes the difference in whether a child
obeys or defies you. Wise disciplinarians know how to open up a closed-off child
and consider the Golden Rule: talk to your children respectfully.
Besides learning how to talk to a child, it is equally important to learn how
to listen. Nothing wins over a child (or adult) more than conveying that you
value her viewpoint. Being in charge of your child doesn't mean putting her
down.
Each of these discipline points depends on the others. It's hard to be an
authority figure, a good model, a behavior shaper and obedience teacher if you
and your child aren't connected and you don't know your child. You may know the
psychological principles of behavioral shaping, but shapers won't work if you
can't communicate with your child. And even a connected relationship doesn't
guarantee disciplined children if you fail to convey your expectation that your
child obey you. These ten interdependent building blocks form the foundation of
the approach to discipline on our site. Put them all together, and you have a
blueprint for raising children who are a joy to be with now and who will make
you proud in the future.
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of health care. The information presented in this site gives general advice
on parenting and health care. Always consult your doctor for your individual
needs.