It’s possible to parent your kids a little too
carefully.
Every good parent wants to be active in their
children’s lives and set them up for future success. However, there’s a fine
line between sticking to appropriate boundaries, making constructive
suggestions, and over-parenting your child. Stifling kids with too many rules
and expectations can lower their confidence and creativity. Here are seven
things you must give up to ensure that your children grow up healthy, happy,
and free to be themselves rather than tire themselves mentally and physically
trying to live up to the expectations you place upon them.
1. Give
up telling them what to do.
Of course children need to be given guidance as they
learn more about the world around them, but this does not mean that they need
to be told what to do in every aspect of their lives! Instead, ask them about
the actions they have chosen for themselves. Bombarding your children with
unnecessary instructions as to how they should live their lives will trigger
resentment and hinder their creativity because you will be doing all their
thinking for them!
This advice applies from the games they want to play
and the clothes they want to wear right up to the career path they wish to
pursue.
2. Give
up your unrealistic expectations.
Remember that children are human beings, and that no
human being is perfect. It is immensely stressful for a child to believe that
they have to be “the best” at something (or even everything!) in order to
considered a worthwhile person. We all have our own individual strengths and
weaknesses. Communicate to your child, both explicitly and implicitly, that you
appreciate their own unique mix of talents.
3. Give
up over-protection.
If you are the kind of person who tends to worry
about every possible outcome or potential disaster, take care not to let this
attitude be reflected in your parenting. Children need to be granted the
freedom to have new experiences and to make their own mistakes. If you
hold your child back from new opportunities or activities on the off-chance
that they will be dangerous, your child will learn that the world is an unsafe
place. As a result, they will be less likely to take positive risks in the
future.
4. Give
up making decisions for them.
An important skill for all successful adults to
learn is how to make healthy decisions. This ability needs to be developed in childhood.
Give your child help in making life choices, such as choosing a hobby or major
in college, but know that ultimately you need to make it clear that they should
be the ones in charge of their own decision-making. Do not attempt to tell them
how to build a CV or map out their life path for them as this can have damaging
consequences.
5. Give
up blaming them for their mistakes.
Everybody makes mistakes, and this includes your
child. Unless a particular mistake is the result of an obviously unwise
decision, try not to blame your child more than is necessary when they make an
error. Mistakes are often a valuable means of acquiring new knowledge. Sit down
with your child and talk about how they can learn from their mistake and make
better choices next time.
6. Give
up praising their intelligence.
When children are praised for their efforts
rather than their intelligence, they feel more inclined to push themselves
harder in the future. Praising a child for their intelligence gives the
impression that you are praising them for a fixed characteristic, which in turn
does nothing to spur them on to greater self-improvement.
7. Give up
setting so many family rules.
Some family rules are a necessity. After all,
children do require some boundaries and need to be taught right from wrong.
However, an overly rigid family setup can cause a child needless anxiety if it
means they live in constant fear of breaking a rule. In addition, it can also
stifle their creativity if they feel as though they are merely a cog in the
family machine that has to behave in the same manner at all times. Prepare to change or get rid of
family rules if they have no obvious benefit.
It can take time to shift your thinking and
approach, especially if you were raised by over-protective or over-involved
parents. Remember that in general, psychological research supports a
careful but liberal parenting style as the best way of encouraging your
children to really excel in life and also to feel happy in themselves.
Enjoy your children for who they are, and endeavour to demonstrate your love
for them on a daily basis.
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