Archive for November, 2008

Don’t Let the Fear of Screwing Up your Kids Screw you Up as a Parent

Saturday, November 29th, 2008
parenting
Mitchell H Milch asked:


Let’s face it, we all want to avoid making the same mistakes raising our kids we believe our parents or surrogate parents made raising us. This is especially the case when we still hold grudges toward parents for what has or has not become of us. Under this historical cloud, we know yet may not admit to the old adage: “The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.” What this adage speaks to is the IMPOSSIBILITY of NEVER being like the parents we recall as having “screwed us up.” As much as we swear that we will never treat our kids the way we were treated, the moments inevitably arise when we sound and act like our parents. This is human nature. We will on occasion, identify and repeat the most noxious and self defeating parenting practices employed by our parents.

I am excluding from this discussion all parenting practices that are criminal and traumatic if they occurred even once. I am referring only, to behaviors we are all guilty of from time to time and, that are only damaging if they persist unchecked over the course of many years. Such behaviors are not an immediate cause for concern. Some examples are: Yelling at our kids, being overly critical of them, and disciplining them in ways that are unfair and unreasonable. An occasional instance of poor judgment on our parts will not damage our children’s psyches. Our children will survive the inevitable physical bumps and bruises in exploring their worlds. Likewise, “good enough” parenting is imperfect and fraught with painful yet, invaluable learning experiences. As parents and children work out their differences emotional bumps and bruises will be looked upon in retrospect as developmental markers.

The real yet, too often overlooked potential for us to do harm to our kids may stem from the unintentional consequences of our obsessive and compulsive dread that we have been hopelessly “screwed up” by our parents and now these scars will render us helpless but, to “screw up” our own kids. Our horror at our own actions whether admitted or not, is not an accurate barometer of our parental abuses of power. More accurately, it is a barometer of ill will we still harbor toward parents we still behave like from time to time. The problems we create for ourselves originate with the labels attached to these grudges. We tend to generalize offensive and perhaps, injurious traits into blanket characterizations that are believed to be as amenable to change as spots on a leopard. Therefore, when faced with painful likenesses to our parents we are apt to judge ourselves as “bad,” “inadequate,” “unlovable,” etc., in the most unforgiving manner imaginable. Although, we are responsible for turning against ourselves we often deny responsibility for, and try to divorce ourselves from these negative identifications with parental figures we have not forgiven. We all do this to varying degrees by blaming our children for triggering the feelings we associate with these negative labels when “they push our buttons.”

In these moments when we get lost in self centered, emotional time warps, we stop thinking about how our actions may affect our children. In fact, the more years we wear a lament across our chest that reads: “Oh, I could’ve been _____or done_____ by now if my childhood had been different,” the more we tend to blame our children each and every time they push our buttons and remind us which tree we haven’t fallen too far from. These are expectable, normal and correctable bumps along the parenting trail. If we can accept what has happened to us and who we are today, we are in a position to work on and change those qualities we find distasteful. If not, we are likely to make our children miserable for what our parents made us miserable over.

For example, if we confuse even healthy self interest with a parent who was hated for being self centered, distant and uninvolved during our formative years, we may get in touch with self hatred and guilt and wind up resenting our children, when they loudly protest our requests for quiet time for ourselves. If however, we are able to take a step back, own, accept, and reflect on our reactions, we may within a minute or two calmly communicate to our children that our needs count too and that they must learn to respect them as important.

If after reading this article you are not even a glimmer more hopeful of changing ineffective parenting practices that need to be changed perhaps, you will delve deeper into the specific challenges you face raising your children. If you have already read the latest parenting primers, attended parenting classes, consulted your pediatrician, and still feel uneasy about what is happening at home you may benefit from a consult with a psychotherapist.



Dolores

What do you think are the four most important part in parenting?

Thursday, November 27th, 2008
parenting
Brendiie™ asked:


To be more specific, what do you think are the four most important part in parenting a toddler? I know the most important thing is - love but other than this. For example, is Nutrition important? What else? Thanks for your help!

xx. [B]wendii[E]

Jay

Parents as Career Coaches

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008
parenting
Mary Askew asked:


Parents help us discover the gifts and the callings that God has for our lives. Parents help children and teens discover their vocational interests and the motivational gifts. Parents identify the steps and resources that are necessary to develop the qualities and talents that children and teens possess.

Parents know that children and teens receive the vocational interests, abilities, skills, and talents in a seed form. These seeds will develop into careers, jobs, tasks, assignments, or ministries. Then, the talents and gifts will produce earnings, wages, and spiritual rewards as the children receive pleasure from knowing that they are fulfilling the callings that God has placed on their lives.

The Goal of a Parent

A parent receives direction from Proverbs 18:16, Proverbs 22:6, and 1 Peter 4:10.

Proverbs 22:6 Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it.

1 Peter 4:10 As every man has received a gift, even so minister the same gift one to another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God.

Proverbs 18:16 A man’s gift makes room for him, and brings him before great men.

To learn about abilities, interests, and motivational gifts, parents have many tasks:

Assess children’s and teens’ vocational interests, abilities, skills, beliefs, and values.

Discover potential careers that are linked to children’s and teens’ identified interests.

Help children and teens choose the suitable post-secondary education and training.

Provide resources that help children and teens utilize their vocational interests, abilities, skills, beliefs, and values.

Understand the relationship between education, training, and specific occupations.

Introduce experiences that meet career, cognitive, emotional, and behavioral goals.

Present information on the current and future labor market.

Introduce problem-solving and decision-making strategies, and

Solve career issues, conflicts, and concerns.

The Steps Towards Completing Career Exploration Process

Step One: Preliminary Assessment

Parents must gain access to computerized, online, or paper/pencil career assessments. From these assessments, parents, teens, and children gain knowledge and understanding of our abilities, ambitions, aptitudes, identities, interests, life goals, resources, skills, and values. During this assessment period, parents will evaluate children’s and teens’ readiness for career planning.

Gary W. Peterson and others of the Center for the Study of Technology in Counseling and Career Development University Center, discussed the differences in career planning readiness. Children, teen, and adults can be categorized as:

Decided

Decided yet needing a confirmation

Decided yet not knowing how to implement their decisions

Decided choosing to avoid conflict or stress

Undecided

Undecided with a deferred choice

Undecided yet developmental unable to commit to a decision

Undecided and unable to make a decision because the individual is multi-talented

Children, teen, and adults transition from indecision to decisiveness when they complete the following steps in the career decision making and planning process.

Step Two: Educational and Occupational Exploration

Parents, children, and teens gather information about:

Educational choices

The benefits of educational achievement

The economy or labor market

Occupational choices

Specific occupations and programs of study

Training opportunities

The relationship between work and learning

Positive attitudes towards work and learning

Personal responsibility and good work habits

A typical working day for a specific occupation

Career exploration systems

Step Three: Problem solving

Parents, children, and teens solve career problems by:

Identifying educational and career planning obstacles

Creating solutions or courses of action

Setting achievable goals

Resolving conflict and tension

Making a commitment to reach our God-given potential

Problem solving should take into consideration personal values, interests, skills, and financial resources. Big problems are broken down into smaller, more manageable steps. Achievable goals result in the production of new competencies, attitudes, solutions, as well as educational and training opportunities.

Step Four: Goal Setting and Decision Making

As individuals, parents, children, and teens:

Set, formulate, prioritize, and rank goals

Clearly state our vocational interests, abilities, and values

Derive plans or strategies to implement the solutions

Make a commitment to complete the plans

Understand decision-making processes

Evaluate the primary choice

Consider a secondary occupational choice, if necessary

Decision-making processes include:

Developing learning and career plans

Identifying suitable occupations

Selecting appropriate educational programs

Figuring the costs of educational training

Considering the impact of career decisions.

Step Five: Implementation

While implementing and executing our learning and career plans, parents, children, and teens translate vocational interests, abilities, and skills into occupational possibilities. Parents, children, and teens do reality testing through interviewing current workers, job shadowing, part-time employment, full-time employment, and volunteer work. Parents, children, and teens obtain skill training, for example, social skills, resume writing, networking, and preparations for interviews.

Career Planning Resources

In order to assess gifts, talents, and abilities, parents, children, and teens need career resources. Career planning resources include books, videotapes, audio-tapes, games, workshops, self-assessment inventories, career exploration web-sites, and computer-assisted career guidance programs. These resources are found at libraries, community colleges, and resource centers.

The basis for most of the resources is the National Career Development Guidelines. In 1987, the National Occupational Information Coordinating Committee (NOICC) developed The National Career Development Guidelines. The guidelines were organized into three areas: Self-knowledge, Educational and Occupational Exploration, and Career Planning.

Self-knowledge deals with our self-concept, interpersonal skills, growth, and development.

Educational and occupational exploration reveals the relationships between learning, work, career information skills, job seeking, skill development, and the labor market.

Career planning includes self-assessment, career exploration, decision making, life role formation, goal setting, and the implementation of career choices.

Conclusion

We are each significant, different, and special. Yet, God knows our gifts, talents, and abilities. God has chosen us for special positions and tasks. Our occupations should reflect the callings that God has placed in our lives. Our vocations represent the gifts given to us by God. Our destinies come from God. Parents help children and teens discover God-given talents, abilities, and interests so that children and teens can fulfill God’s purpose for their lives.

As parents, we will use prayer, the Word of God, other books, videotapes, audio-tapes, games, workshops, training materials, self-assessment inventories, career web-sites, computer-assisted career guidance programs, and resource centers to assist us in helping our children, and teens.

References

Miller, Juliet V. (1992) The National Career Development Guidelines, Eric Digest ED347493, ERIC Clearinghouse on Counseling and Personnel Services, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Peterson, G., W., Sampson, J., P., Jr., Reardon, R., C., and Lenz, J., G. (1996) A Cognitive Approach to Career Development and Services, Center for the Study of Technology in Counseling and Career Development, University Center, Suite A4100, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida 32306-1035, http://www.fsu.edu/ ~career/techcenter/html



Jill

Time for a Little Single Parent Romance - You Will Love It

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008
parenting
Francis Githinji asked:


Parenting has never been easy. Most of the time we do not see the work involved in raising children when we see them smartly dressed and good mannered. Behind those beautiful beings there are dedicated and loving parents. Life is not a rigid entity and it accommodates a lot of differences. There are single families where one parent has all the responsibility of bringing up one or more children. Dedication calls for time because the young ones take a lot of time. Every single parent likes spending too much time with the children that sometimes they seem to give up on their social life. There is still hope for single parent romance. The little time they can afford should be quality time spent with someone who is ready to dispense and receive love, romance and happiness.

Single parent romance is a challenge considering the tight schedule. They usually get up as early as possible to ensure that kids are not late for school and they have their break fast and lunch ready all the time. They drive the kids to school, then go to work and work non-stop for an eight hour shift. Children hate to be the last ones to be picked up from school and so the loving single parent has to be there just in time. It is not cute to go out to look for love with the kids in the car and so they head straight home to go and prepare supper, supervise the homework and before they know it, it is time to sleep. The duties are so overwhelming that physical dates are impossible.

With the many online dating sites, single parent romance can be a reality because it only involves sitting down in front of a computer. It does not involve moving around. What can be more convenient for a single parent? In the top dating sites, there are many interesting single parent personals who you can hook up with a click of a mouse. The sites and the facilities offered have proved to be excellent tools for finding single parent romance. With online dating, every single parent is assured of success within the shortest period of time. There are people there in with all sought of experiences and different lifestyles. In such a mix you can’t miss someone who understands your situation perfectly.

For more fulfilling single parent romance, i advice that you get a trusted babysitter. The young ones always need someone to keep an eye on them and for you to have total relaxation, you need to know that your children are in good hands and everything is as it ought to be. Do not look at every relationship in a marriage point of view. The romance moments might not result into anything serious but you will have had your fun. For a healthy relationship with your children it is important for you to have sometime with another adult. A little romance usually goes along way. It affects how you treat yourself and more importantly your beautiful children.



Jonathan

How to get husband to “plug in” to parenting?

Sunday, November 23rd, 2008
parenting
ADC asked:


For example, my husband has never fed a bottle to either of our children or stayed up with them when they were sick. I really haven’t slept in 3 years.He works a stressful job and sees my job as a stay-at-home mom to do the bulk of the parenting. My problem is that I don’t EVER get a break. I don’t even get 1 hour a week to myself.
The obvious answer is to ask him to pick up the slack when I want to go do something & in turn let him get out too. He says he is too uncomfortable and won’t know what to do while I’m gone. At the same time he doesn’t want to learn how to fix a bottle, etc. He says he has never been comfortable around babies but he feels sure he will be more comfortable with them when they are older. In the meantime I’m so tired I collapse in bed each night with no quality of life. Babysitters are not an option I’m comfortable with. I do have some family who could sit with them and let me get out but it makes me resent him for not being willing to try to parent.

Bobby

Does parenting strictly decide how smart kids turn out or is there some genetic link?

Sunday, November 16th, 2008
parenting
Seymour Butz asked:


Like I hear people say that “that kid is just too smart.”

Or is it parenting skills that determine how smart someone becomes. Not just parenting skills but parents being ideal role models like parents who are always reading, always having intellectual conversations, parents who give weekly pep talks, etc. etc.

I’m a nice guy but I’m not the smartest guy in the world and I attribute it to my parents. They are not the smartest people themselves, they’re not the most hard working, stuff like that.

What do you think.
I’m talking about nerdy smart. like doing well in school and in your career.

I’m not talking about street smarts.

Bessie

Anyone familiar with the friend of the court system in MI and Parenting time?

Saturday, November 15th, 2008
parenting
ASINGLEMOM asked:


My fiance has 3 kids from a prior marriage, 2 of them still minors. The kids were taken away from us over the summer because my fiance cancelled their trip (that was scheduled on his parenting time) to their grandma’s. The kids were planning to go to grandma’s and not come back because their grandma is rich and they have friends down there. Now, Christmas is coming, and 1 of the kids have accepted our apologies while the other is calling us stupid etc. The mother is constantly reminding the kids of how her relationship with their father was (it wasn’t pretty, but he never hit, abused in any way his children, she couldn’t keep her legs or mouth shut). She also tells them that he doesn’t love them because he’s barely there to see them… he lives in another state and working 80 hours a week to pay their child support, his rent, car payment, taxes whatever else you can think of. My fiance and ex always argue, pretty ugly convers. what will the friend of the court do in this case?

Clyde

Free Dating Site for Single Parents Meet

Friday, November 14th, 2008
parenting
Jenny Willston asked:


A single parent is defined as a man or woman who got divorced or separated. Single parents are freely available for a new relationship to start a new life. The old method for these single people to find partners is from parks, social places, and others. Because of the internet booming in recent years, many free online dating services have been emerged that help single parents to find dates online. This way saves money and time for them. Most of single parents have children so they must spend time with their children. This internet world is great which help single moms and dads to find each other and still have time with their kids.

There are many relationships created from these free online dating sites in the past years. Online singles find love and romance right there in front of their computers. For just a few clicks, you will see many single mothers and fathers showing in front of you just like a movie. For those who never know about a free dating service, it is a website which has all single people registered their personal ads to look for dates. They also post their photos at these dating sites. A personal dating ad includes some information about yourself or a description about you, as well as whom you are looking for. It is recommended to post a photo with your profile to increase the chance for other single people to drop you a line. A common sense is that most internet singles search for personal ads with pictures.

Not all single parents meet each other online will get married. Free online dating websites provide the means for singles to find other single people. After you got the email address or phone numbers from the others, then you are on your own. You can meet face to face with that single parent or chat privately or others. It is totally up to you. Statistics showed that many marriages and weddings created from these free dating sites for single parents. Single parents are everywhere, locally in the United States, or international countries, including Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, and others. We all need love. Single mothers seeking single fathers from these online dating websites are convenient and simple. You have time for your children and time for your new date.

Free dating site for single parents meet each other is booming. However, most single parents are still haunted from their last marriage. However, you have to move on with your life. You need love. This modern computer world you live in, so enjoy the best of that. Online dating services are so popular these days. In other words, single moms and dads seek each other online is just a few minutes of their time. It takes you a few minutes to create a profile and a few minutes to search for other singles. Looking for a long term compatible relationship is right there for just a few clicks. The best tool to find online dates is from free dating service for single parents.



Jeanette

what are the effects of authoritarian parenting style on children behaviour?

Thursday, November 13th, 2008
parenting
marry_shah20 asked:


i need the effects of authoritarian parenting style on children behaviour?like why they mis behave their behavioural problems…why they have change personalities?

Glenda

Fetal Alcohol Syndrome And Parenting- Before And After The Baby

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008
parenting
Ann Marier asked:


Responsibility is a very important word in parenting. Parents should not just decide, ‘Let’s have a baby’ and ignore all other peripherals. When you decide to have a baby, you should realize that you are choosing to be responsible for another life and hence, everything you do would reflect upon it.

The fetal alcohol syndrome and parenting is a very well debated topic. Everyone knows the terrible impact alcohol and tobacco smoke can have on an unborn child. Here are a few very important aspects of fetal alcohol syndrome and parenting.

This article is focusing on the mother because it is the female who carries the baby in her womb and the fetal alcohol syndrome and parenting aspects directly concern her. However men too, need to be equally responsible with drinking and smoking in order to provide as supportive an ambiance to the would-be mother as possible.

If you are a would-be mother who is addicted to alcohol, you need to consider the following steps at once:

1. Inform and consult a doctor about what you need to do to ensure that the baby is not affected by the FAS.

2. Enroll yourself in Alcoholics Anonymous and solicit the group’s help and support in shaking off the habit.

3. Enroll in a detoxification center and get rid of the habit with the help of medical supervision and treatment. Make sure they know you are pregnant; some anti-withdrawal medicines can harm the baby.

4. Surround yourself with photographs of healthy and beautiful babies, so it will encourage you to stay away from the alcohol for the sake of the tiny life that is forming inside your womb.

5. Plan many things for the baby. For example, have shopping sprees, theme parties, baby showers, etc all the time so it will keep you motivated to stay off alcohol.

6. Read many books on fetal alcohol syndrome and parenting and understand the dangers of alcohol and your responsibility as a parent well.

7. Keep in mind that you do not have the right to play with the life of another human being - and if you feel that alcohol will still remain your first love - do not have a baby. It is not only the impact of the fetal alcohol syndrome and parenting that is crucial, it is also how you will take care of the baby after it is born, what type of home you will be able to offer him/her and so on. This is a huge commitment and you should be able to fulfill it.



Russell