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4 Parenting Skills (To Minimize Resistance)

by Rhonda on March 4, 2010

Time OutAs a parent, most of us face times when we get frustrated and stressed out if we feel our kids aren’t behaving.

“Why aren’t they cooperating?” we wonder.

“Why do they seem like they’re fighting me on everything!”

Here’s what John Gray, in his book “Children Are From Heaven”  has to say about how to minimize resistance:

“Instead of demanding obedience, positive-parenting skills use children’s resistance to strengthen their will to cooperate. Repeated attempts to break a child’s will through the threat of punishment or disapproval ultimately undermine a child’s natural willingness to cooperate. As long as the will is nurtured and not broken, children’s willingness to cooperate will grow and resistance be minimized.

By nurturing our children’s need at times of resistance, we can most effectively minimize resistance while keeping their will intact. These are the four ways of nurturing:

  1. Listening and understanding
  2. Preparation and structure
  3. Distraction and direction
  4. Ritual and rhythm

To let go of their resistance and feel their inner urge to cooperate, children need understanding, structure, rhythm, and direction. Unless these different needs are being met, children easily disconnect with their inner willingness to cooperate. For example, by means of new listening skills, a parent is able to show that children’s feelings, wants, wishes, and needs are being seen, heard, and understood. When this need for understanding is met, children automatically become less resistant and more cooperative.

Although these needs are universal for all children, every child is unique and may have a greater need in one area or another. If a child needs more understanding, it does not means that he or she doesn’t have other needs as well. Each is important for every child, but one or two may be more important for a particular child.

One of your children may respond well to listening and understanding, while another requires preparation and structure. As you become familiar with each of these skills, you will discover how powerful each is. Fulfilling certain needs will create an immediate positive response in your children depending upon their unique temperament.”

Which of the above ways of nurturing do you think works best for your child?

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Leila March 5, 2010 at 10:02 am

My son is now sixteen so maybe this post isn’t directed so much at his age group. However, I would say that constant negotiation and clear agreements work best for him. Maybe these two skills come under the umbrella of all four of your ways of nurturing.

Rhonda March 5, 2010 at 10:27 am

Hi Leila…I have teenagers too and they still need nurturing, right? Just have to start giving them some space though…I think I’ll add to this post with a little description of each of these types of nurturing…as to what John Gray means by each:

1. Listening and understanding
2. Preparation and structure
3. Distraction and direction
4. Ritual and rhythm

stay tuned….

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