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A Cure for the Common Bad Attitude

Nothing in parenting remains the same from day to day—nothing except the presence of feelings! Feelings are part of life, part of being a child, and definitely part of parenting.

Nothing in parenting remains the same from day to day—nothing except the presence of feelings! Feelings are part of life, part of being a child, and definitely part of parenting.

Because your child is growing quickly, her feelings change from one moment to the next. That means your parenting solutions have to change too.

First Time Experiences

Every day your child is having what I call “first time experiences.” She finds herself in new situations with no real experience or wisdom to deal with them. She isn’t being “bad,” she just isn’t sure what to do. She’s bound to make mistakes. All she knows is she’s being chastised for doing something she doesn’t know how to do correctly and that frustrates her and causes big feelings.

Today’s parents are having first time experiences, too. They’ve never parented this child in this situation before. Parents are also dealing with the fast pace of technology. Living at warp speed can cause you to feel overwhelmed from the minute you get up to the minute you go to sleep. Those two factors can cause frustration and big feelings, too.

When both parent and child are frustrated and filled with big feelings, reactions occur. Both can resort to yelling, punishing and threats to try to manage those feelings.

I know you’ve felt it, the longing for a better way to handle situations like these. You intuitively know there is one, but you don’t have time to search for it. My tip today is a place to start, a place to go to when you find yourself headed toward reacting with anger to life’s daily pressure, to big feelings, or to your child’s behavior.

The Root of Misbehavior

Many parents deal with back talk, stomping feet, and constant arguing. I’m not sure there’s just one answer that works for all children, of all ages, but this tip is a good place to begin.

When a child misbehaves or cops an attitude, most parents tend to focus on the misbehavior, foot stomping, arguing or attitude, only. But those things are actually the end result.

What parents have forgotten is each bit of misbehavior or attitude has its roots in feelings that have gone unnoticed, unchecked, unacknowledged. Unexpressed feelings grow and grow until they blossom into misbehavior or an attitude. So what’s a parent to do?

Rewinding the Video

A good place to begin is to “rewind the video” so to speak.  No matter what’s happened.

You’ll need to take a breath and pretend that you’ve rewound the video to the beginning of the situation the place where the feelings went unnoticed. Now begin asking your child some questions about what she was feeling at the beginning of the situation, before the incident occurred. The questions need to be asked in a genuine, loving and calm way, so the child will respond. The parent then needs to be silent and wait for the child to answer.

When a child is asked a question followed by silence, the pressure for someone to speak fills the room. If you say anything you run the risk of igniting a reaction. However, if you remain silent the feelings that went unexpressed, that led to the misbehavior, arguing etc. usually comes rolling out.

Here are some questions to get you started.

“What didn’t you say that you wanted too?”

“What was your heart feeling?”  

“What made you mad?”

“What didn’t you tell anyone?”

Because you now know that your child is simply having a first time experience, you’ll find you’re more willing to teach what needs to be learned about the situation, rather than automatically yelling, punishing or threatening.

There’s another benefit to being silent after you’ve asked a question, too. Silence tends to calm you down, which helps neutralize any frustration or reactions you were about to have.

In this fast-paced world where things change from one minute to the next, this is a tip that will help resolve feelings—even if the feelings change five times during the conversation.

Sharon Silver is the author of Stop Reacting and Start Responding: 108 Ways to Discipline Consciously and Become the Parent You Want to Be, and the monthly Online Skills Class, a local, national and international anytime e-class providing parents with solutions for reacting, correcting behavior, outbursts and more to create the parenting instruction manual you always wished came with your child! Click here to receive 2 FREE tips from Sharon's book. Find Sharon on Twitter and Facebook

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Jo Perry May 23, 2013 at 08:50 am
I wish the media had countered Garcetti's claims with an examination of the facts and had exposedRead More his relationship with BIG development. Only the LA Weekly covered these stories--keep reading it and keep posting.
Barbara Krause May 21, 2013 at 07:58 pm
Oh, it was under announcements and not opinion so that is why I did not understand the post whichRead More appeared as facts.
John Walker May 21, 2013 at 05:14 pm
Presumptuous? What about my "endorsement" is presumptuous. You don't really need toRead More respond😃, I just didn't understand the comment.
Barbara Krause May 21, 2013 at 09:06 am
Somewhat presumptuous this early on Voting Day.
David Pearlberg December 21, 2012 at 11:00 pm
I attended N.H.H.S. in the mid-seventies. Mr. Reeves and Mr. Moelter were two of my favorites.Read More Loved Mr. McLeroy for Sociology.
Kim Phillips-Clark December 19, 2012 at 07:25 pm
great article Mary! Ms. Korney, she sometimes scared me to death! But always around christmas IRead More think of her and pronounce my letters clearly at the end of a word when I sing. I can still remember the song I had to sing for my final, "If ever I would leave you..." She taught me a lot. I agree with everything you said about Mr. Reeves. I had Mr. Pesin for Algebra, he did nothing to help further my math skills. The biggest flirt around, ick. We had a girl in school at the time that flirted her way to an A and hardly ever went to class. Go figure!! I also thought quite highly of Ms. Requiam. Glad she's still around.
Mary McGrath December 18, 2012 at 07:59 pm
Oh, that's so funny Suzanne....what a great story!
Miki Henderson April 27, 2013 at 02:27 pm
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Cheyenne Chasen March 25, 2013 at 01:00 pm
Love seeing the new entries each and every week! Keep it up!
Alex Daniels May 22, 2013 at 12:18 am
glad you lost Wendy...not even your mafia DWP bedfellows could push you through..now go away...
Alex Daniels May 21, 2013 at 09:05 pm
I also notice Wendy Gruel has no platform, except taking money from special interest (most notablyRead More her puppet masters at the DWP) and having one of the most negative campaigns I've ever seen......no thanks, negative Wendy, fool me once.....Eric is our next Mayor....
Jo Perry May 20, 2013 at 08:27 pm
The signs are everywhere! Please vote for Wendy, Nora. He is also running ads about Wendy GreuelRead More that he knows are outright lies.
Mike Szymanski (Editor) May 19, 2013 at 02:21 pm
She has received a lot of flak about making a premature decision...I hope someone from OvarianRead More Cancer or the community weighs in on this and gives their thoughts in a blog! Thanks...just click the START BLOGGING button below! THANKS!
Mike Szymanski (Editor) May 17, 2013 at 09:34 am
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