
Practical
Parenting Ideas
Cant anyone
else change the toilet paper around here!
Do you blow up over small
things around the house, leaving your child to wonder, "Why is
Mom (or Dad) getting so weird about such unimportant stuff?"
Maybe youre falling into the anger trap.
The anger trap gets sprung
when a parent lets resentment over a lot of little, and maybe not-so-little,
things build up. Its just a matter of time before a major explosion
occurs, often over a minor incident.
This approach to family
communications is no good for the parent: You act in ways you dont
want to, ways that arent effective, that exhaust you, and that
make you feel foolish. And its not good for the kids. If you
dont deal with the issues as they come up, your children will
never know when youre likely to explode, leaving them
on pins and needles or trying to guess what might spring the trap
the next time. They also get trained not to pay any attention until
the explosion, then they scramble, but only to get it to blow over.
In her wise and practical
book, Tired of Arguing With Your Kids?, Dolores Curran quotes
a mother who said, "Yes, Im an angry woman. I have to be
angry to get any help around here. The minute Im pleasant, everyone
stops." Sound familiar?
Curran offers tried-and-true
advice from her own experience and from thousands of parents who shared
ideas that helped them handle anger effectively for the good of the
whole family. Here are a few of her suggested ways to escape the anger
trap:
1.
Express your feelings early on. Dont wait till the last minute
to let them know youre angry. And accept that sometimes anger
is the appropriate response. Curran describes one early-warning technique
she used with her three children.
"Do you agree
that life is more pleasant around here when Im happy?
Id say.
Yes, they would
nod.
Well, Im not
happy. Do you want to know why?
More nods.
Well, Im unhappy
because . . . And I gave my reasons in a non-angry tone of voice.
Now, what do you suggest we do about it?"
Though its difficult
for some parents to express their anger, the dangers of not dealing
with irritations as they come up are real and serious. In the heat
of anger you might say damaging, hurtful things you dont mean.
Once said, they cannot be unsaid. Or your anger can come out as perennial
sarcasm, to the point where theres a constant hostile undertone
in your family conversations. "Good morning, Dad." "Yeah,
well whats it to you!"
2.
Keep your presentation short, no more than a minute. After a minute,
say psychologists, kids stop listening and start resisting. Keep your
emotions level and your message brief.
3.
Detach, detach, detach. State your case, apply the consequences, walk
away. Arguments will continue as long as the kids get a reaction from
pushing our buttons of guilt, insecurity, or defensiveness. It takes
two, so dont be half the problem.
Curran says theres
no harm in letting your children react with sighs and eye rollingwithin
reason. Its better to change the behavior by ignoring it than
to reinforce it by confronting. When children find tantrums, whining,
and rolling eyes get you worked up, they cling to them as the powerful
tools they are. When you detach from the situation and they no longer
get the desired result, theyll drop these tactics for things
that get rewarded, like cooperation, clear communication, respectful
disagreements, and so on.
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