Teaching children to have patience and delay gratification can be tough. It's tough for us as adults and in our go-go-fast-faster-fastest world is getting tougher.
I'm learning that all over again as I deal with my limited mobility for these few weeks. I'm frustrated beyond words that I just can't do the things I normally do.
I've been told that I have an inordinate amount of patience. I don't know if that's as a result of teaching young children at the very beginning of my career or if I was able to do that because I have a lot of patience. I have patience with others to the "nth" power. So why is it so hard to be as patient with myself? What about helping yourself? What about helping your children help themselves?
Life Skills For Children (of all ages)
Feeling: Waiting for things can feel really really hard. You want it and you want it now.
Learning Tool: What to do? Well, for starters acknowledge the uncomfortable feelings. If your child is grouchy because s/he can't have whatever it is that they want acknowledge that the experience of wanting it can feel very frustrating but - hey - sometimes you just can't have what you want right when you want it. The earlier they learn to manage frustration the easier it will be for them later.
Teaching Patience to Young Children: Practice "waiting" for things. Tomorrow when your child asks for something routine (nothing urgent, emotionally loaded or necessary) ask her/him if s/he can wait for a moment or two because you are _______ (busy, engaged, finishing something up, tired etc.) Wait a short moment or two and then give them what they asked for.
Keep repeating this with longer and longer "wait" times. Nothing excessive, you're not trying to create frustration, you're trying to assist them in managing feelings of frustration while waiting.
Be consistent and honest. If you say you're going to give them something, or do something with them, keep your word. If you aren't able to be honest about that too. Again, the earlier they learn that they can't have everything they want, the way they want it, the second they want it, the better it will be for them in school, in relationships, in sports, in extracurricular activities, in life.
Toughie Tip: If your child absolutely can't tolerate the waiting the first few times you try it buy an old-fashioned egg timer and set it with them. Let them move the dial to the minute mark, give them something to do while they listen to the seconds tick off and have them bring the timer to you when it goes off. This gives them a feeling of control over the waiting.
As for you? And me? Well I'm a huge fan of substituting. Now that I can't walk around as much I'm filling that time with other things that I've put off. I'm catching up on a number of projects that require serious planting myself in a chair and doing. I'm finding ways to finish projects in the outdoors regardless. Wireless, pen and paper, cellphones, sunshine and foliage can go a long way in helping to manage the frustration.
And those moments that it just feels like too much? It will pass for you and with your help, for them. It always does, and that's something to look forward to.
Good luck and let me know how it goes!
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2 comments:
Hi - first of all, good luck with your leg!
I'm going to try the egg timer with my 6 year old son today but I'm not sure what to do with my 15 year old daughter. She's at that age - which she's actually been at for....oh I don't know how long.. and it feels like it's getting tougher and tougher to say no to her.
She's got every kind of tech toy and a zillion ways to tune the rest of us out. I'm at my wits end and quite frankly sometimes I just let her do whatever she wants because it's easier than the battles that follow if I don't.
Any ideas? Anything? I'm a working mother and my husband leaves most of the parenting to me. Help. Help. Help. Help.
Hi Nanci,
Sounds like you've got your hands full! I've gotten a lot of email requests for coaching tips for older "kids" and I'll be writing about teens and tweens here in the next couple of weeks.
Until then try and relax. You're doing the best you can at the moments with the resources you have. Pat yourself on the back for knowing yourself, your children and your situation.
The choice of the word battle is a good one. Teens are in the midst of battling everything. Hormones are raging and it's a battle to understand the new them and what's going on. Then there are those annoying parental units who they need/hate/want/despise/are desperate for. Not to mention the need and desire to individuate and find the peer group that matches their inner sense of self.
Oh - and all the tech toys and gizmos that make it so much easier to disconnect from anything and everything they don't want to deal with.
That's for starters.
Good luck - email me if you'd like some more personalized assistance and keep an eye out for more tips and tools for teens and tweens.
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