Welcome

to my blog, Connect thru Love. My postings will be about changing the parenting paradigm from consequences and control, which do NOT, I believe, have long term effects on behavior, to a love based teaching/living model. And what i appreciate most about this model, even from my very right-brained perspective, is that it is based on neuroscience and what and how the brain processes experiences. And though I am a therapist, when I work with families who are encountering difficult behaviors in their children, I am an educator and a coach to the parents.

I invite you to not only read, but to comment and ask questions regarding behaviors you are encountering with your children. And if you are a teacher, counselor/therapist, or case manager, I would love to hear from you as well.

To ask a question, please email me at connecthrulove@gmail.com
or simply post it in the comment section.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Threat=Stress=Fear

What do threat, stress and fear have to do with parenting children with difficult behavior? Only EVERYTHING! When you are preparing to go on a summer outing or vacation trip and your often out of sorts 12 year old is whining about having to sit in the car for a long time on a hot day...you jump to how awful the whole day or week is going to be. Your stress gauge begins it's climb. You try to be light hearted and tell everyone what a fun time it is going to be and how the family is going to get to do this and that and see lots of new things. Your 9 year old hits his 6 year old sister with his backpack as he drags it to the car...she screams and he tears a whole in the pack scattering his belongings...you ask him what he did to his sister, he says nothing, you start yelling and giving consequences for his unkind AND lying behavior, he mumbles under his breath and you give him another consequence for his behavior. Everyone gets in the car, your son is relegated to the very back seat with the luggage and he turns up the volume on his CD player on which he has the latest of obscene music, you and your spouse both begin to yell at him...You are now sure that this trip is going to be awful and that you really should have had your mother have him for this trip. You see clearly how embarrassed he will make you feel, how people will be staring at this 12 year old who seems to be the devil incarnate. What were you thinking? And from this moment forward, your son will be displaying negative behavior in reaction to your negative reactions to his behavior triggering only more negative reaction (e.g. more consequences, threats). How much worse can this scenario get? Plenty worse!

SOLUTION:
Rewind the scene...your son begins to whine like a 3 or 4 year old...BREATHE...let him know that you understand that he might think that he is going to be cooped up in the car all day. Tell him what the day is going to look like...i.e. how long you will be in the car that you plan on stopping often to get out of the car, have bathroom breaks, get cold drinks and that it won't be a really long day in the car (and if at all possible, you have made sure that it won't because you have a kid or kids who don't transition well from home to the unknown, at least the unknown for that day). Ask him what music he would like to download for his player (if you haven't already done that)...go to the computer with him and get him his songs (15 minutes now will save you hours of grief later). My guess...he will have dial down the whining and will be more calmed. and you will be responding to his behavior instead of reacting and he in turn will respond rather than react to your parental dictates.