Category : Enjoying Parenting

An Opportunity to Connect

Children require so much attention.  From the moment they’re born, they’re completely dependent on us – their parents – for everything. Sometimes, we give so much attention it feels like we don’t have anything left.  This kind of energy drain can really take the joy out of parenting.  How can we make it more fun, take care of ourselves and still give the amount of attention our kids need?

First, the better we take care of ourselves, the better we will be at taking care of our children.  This is obvious, and so frustrating when it seems like there’s no time or resource to take care of ourselves.  But we can start with the little things.  Find some exercise that your child will do with you.  Bench press the baby, or have the toddler follow you through a few yoga steps.  You can make up a story as you go along, stretching yourself while telling your child about the rainbow you’re making with your body.  My favorite thing to do is put on a favorite song and lip-sync while dancing outrageously and air-guitaring with my son.  I think it’s more fun (and state-shifting) for me than it is for him!  Most importantly, find someone you can talk to when you’re feeling upset or pushed to your limits.  Even just taking 5 minutes to “vent” about how you can’t stand some phase your child is going through will make that phase easier to tolerate.  And, it will often help you feel closer to your friends, more supported, and less isolated, which raises our capacity to experience joy!

Another great way to bring joy into parenting is to play with our kids.  Playing can be really hard sometimes as parents!  We lead such stressful, hard-working lives, that we forget how much fun playing can really be.  Or we get cranky when yet another thing is asked of us – we’ve worked hard all day, and now they want us to play? But if we can just move beyond our frustration and get into a game with our children, step into their world with them for a minute, we will most often find that we are having more fun, and that we are making significant connections with our kids that increase their confidence and boost closeness.

To start right now, notice some of the things that make your children laugh, and repeat them!  If you trip or bumble and they think it’s funny, don’t get mad and start lecturing on how it’s not nice to laugh at someone else.  Use it as an opportunity to connect.  Start to bumble even more, or trip even bigger so they can laugh harder.  As you fool around, they’ll learn that making mistakes is okay, can even be FUN!  They’ll gain confidence, and you’ll feel closer too.

Or take something you do regularly that feels like a bore, a chore, or plain icky, and make it fun! Turn waiting in line into an opportunity to daydream, or meet people, or tell each other stories.  Turn dish washing into a ballet dance, or picking up clothes into a game of “shooting” for the laundry basket.  Or even start by throwing the clothes at the laundry basket and missing intentionally.  When you miss, start crying about missing, and beg for your child to pick it up.  If she doesn’t, or tells you you have to, make an even bigger fuss!  “I don’t Waahhhhhnnnnnnaaaaa!”  See if your child will boss YOU around a little, and let her have a little fun.  When we approach our daily have-to’s with fun, our kids will jump in and come along.

Sum Sum Summertime

Ahhhh, summer.  Time off, time to breathe, time to play, shouldn’t it be amazing?  The fact is, summertime for adults has often become a juggling act of handling camps, carpools, kids’ time off, and planning vacations (if you get to have them).  All these stresses, added to the sometimes unquenchable excitement kids have for their time off and the inevitable disappointments that come with that, can cause us as adults to actually even dread what we used to love! How can we keep ourselves sane in summertime while we help our children get the most out of their time off? Check out this article by master trainer & my mentor, Patty Wipfler.  It’s got great tips for getting through, and for understanding what’s behind some of that niggly wiggly summer behavior.  http://www.handinhandparenting.org

Stop Struggling. Start Now.

Why does parenting feel like such a struggle sometimes?  A struggle to get them out the door.  A struggle to get them through dinnertime.  A struggle to get them to sleep.  A struggle to get them to listen to a word you say!!!

Between a child’s seemingly endless need for attention and help, and our over-worked, under-acknowledged state of being, it can feel like we’re struggling over EVERYthing, even the little things that “should” be a breeze.  But the truth is we don’t have to struggle.

With a little information, and a fundamental structure for understanding and working with our children’s behaviors, we can have success, transform those hard situations, and really be connected with our kids in a way that brings us joy, relief, satisfaction and confidence in our parenting, and just as importantly, in a way that teaches character, self-confidence, and responsibility to our kids.

In just 3 sessions, you can learn why your children have to act out just at that perfect wrong moment, and what to do about it so you not only handle the problem in this moment, but also create character, understanding and connection in the long term. You can create consistency in how you approach discipline, limits, tantrums and boundaries, and you can stop feeling so frustrated.

Come to Oakland this Wednesday night and try the first session.  If you don’t like it, you don’t have to take the whole series.   I guarantee you will walk away feeling empowered by your new knowledge and tools.

So don’t wait.  Don’t put off coming because you cannot take the time.  This kind of information gives you time, because it takes out the time you waste worrying if you’re doing the right thing, or arguing with your partner about the way to handle issues of raising children.  Come and soak up some wisdom… I look forward to seeing you!

The Connection Connection

Connection – it’s what we live for as human beings.  Studies done with monkeys Frown showed conclusively that without it, we simply won’t make it.  Studies done with children and adults have shown that without connection large parts of the brain go literally undeveloped.  And more comprehensive research studies show that the Parent Child Connection is the #1 protective factor that keeps kids healthy, happy, and making wise choices through adolescence Smile.  Amy MacClain’s transformational classes and coaching teach you how to create positive lasting connections with your children, yourself, and in all your relationships.  And, she’ll teach you to use your connection to handle everything from tantrums to withdrawal to aggression and more.

Parenting by Connection

Connection is not just some woo woo term used to promote permissive parenting.  In the latest research, connection – specifically the parent-child connection – is actually the #1 predictor for whether or not our children will engage in risky, aggressive or self-destructive behaviors when they get into their teen years. So how do you get it?  How do you get a toddler to know she’s connected to you?  How do you connect with that wily tween who wants less and less to do with you?  How do you create connection in times when all you want to do is put the child out with the dog?

Connection actually happens in the brain.  That may sound simple and self-evident, but most of us don’t know exactly how the brain and nervous system work together to allow children to learn, think, and experience that we care about them.  We don’t know how to BE in ways that allow for the brain to feel connection.  My 3-part class answers these questions powerfully, giving you the opportunity to turn messy moments into real gems.  To start right now, try just listening to your child the next time their behavior goes off track.  If they reach out to whack the child next to them or grab someone else’s toy, gently stop their behavior with your hand, let them know in a loving voice that you cannot let them hurt someone else, and then listen to them.  Let them tell you how unfair it is, how they really want it, how that other person has had it FOREVER.  Let them share all of their upset feelings with you as you hold your boundary gently.  When they’ve shared for a few minutes, then see if you can re-direct them or offer them something else to do.  While you’re listening, pay attention to your child and see if you can notice their nervous system re-setting as they offload tense emotions to you.  Watch for when they seem to come back to their “normal” calm and flexible selves. You’ll be amazed how powerful your listening can be!