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COMMUNICATION IN EVERYDAY LIFE Assertiveness skills Body language Communicating with your children Conversation skills Difficult People Emotional Maturity Enhancing your marriage Family Life Interpersonal relationships Speaking skills Writing skills BUSINESS COMMUNICATION Business ethics Business etiquette Business writing Communication in the workplace Cross-cultural communication Conflict resolution Creative thinking Crisis management Customer relations Effective meetings Job-hunting skills Management strategies Marketing communication Negotiating skills Networking in business Presentation skills Team building Technology and communication Telephone marketing
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How to Turn Disrespectful |
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When 6-year-old Johnny asked his mom, "Can little kids cook?" She answered, "Certainly, with supervision!" Johnny thought for a moment and said, "I want to cook. Do I need glasses?" Today you'll see that building character in children doesn't require glasses but it does require "super vision."
Vision that sees with your mind as well as your eyes
Sammy's sassing, Hannah's hitting, and Billy's blaming are difficult to take when juggling work and family life. Yet they need to be viewed as disrespect and handled with firmness.
Vision that understand your role as parent
When little Hector yells, "I hate you," it's disturbing but only if you let it. Avoid taking his rants and his raves personally. Deal with Hector's disrespect firmly.
Vision that grasps the long term results of your present actions
Yelling at Lulu for not doing her chores and then doing them for her teaches Lulu to be lazy and disrespect your rules. Insist with firmness that she do them. This is vital to her future well-being and your self-respect as a parent.
You aren't born knowing how to build character in your children. You can learn.
Educator Marilyn Wiltz advises, "Remember you are the parent." As the parent you are the leader, the guide, and the counselor for your children.
It is important to establish a strong calm inner sense that you are the parent and you are in control. Your children will feel your inner strength if you feel it too.
Failing to draw the line and be the parent is the biggest mistake.
When you argue, negotiate, and plead with Betty to stop her tantrum, you put Betty in charge. When you discipline Alex and then apologize, you put Alex in charge. When you tell Terry you're not going to buy the toy and then buy it for him anyway, you put Terry in charge.
When you don't draw the line, you put your child in charge. When you draw the line, you put yourself in charge. You are the parent.
When your Sally is screaming at the top of her lungs, stop saying, "This behavior is my fault. I'm not a good parent." Start saying, "This is Sally's problem. How can I help her?".
Effective parenting takes firm "super vision," remembering you are the parent, and drawing the line. When your kids are disrespectful, stop the yelling, stop the arguing, and get your kids to be accountable for their own behavior.You'll be teaching respect - and building character too.
Drawing on her vast experience as educator, probation officer, social worker and private counselor, Jean Tracy, a.k.a. "Granny Jean", created KidsDiscuss.com, devoted to building character in young hearts and growing minds. Subscribe here to her free parenting newsletter Tips and Tools for Character Builders and receive 80 free family fun activities. Read about her Character Building Kit here.
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Some Related Articles: How Self-Esteem Without Caring Creates Selfishness in Kids
Family Communication Skills and Family Meetings
Set Limits or Let It Ride?
Your Kids Not Listening? It's a Two-Way Street!
How to Communicate With Your Child
When 'Everybody Does It!' Comes Back to Haunt You
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