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Your response changes your child’s!
Now what? The next step in emotion coaching is to
connect with your child and draw him to you.
How you respond matters. The key
question is, does your response de-escalate the situation or innocently
escalate it?
If you coming roaring in like a bulldozer you’re going to
push your child further into the red zone.
So take that deep breath, relax those shoulders, and monitor the tone of
your voice.
Move in with the idea
in mind that you are coming to help.
Your child’s body language will tell you how you’re
doing. If he looks away, thrusts out his
jaw, melts down, strikes out, runs away, shuts down or cringes he’s viewing your
advance as a threat. And not as someone coming to help. If he
looks up at you and turns to you – you’re connecting.
What exactly does this
sound like?
Here’s the situation; two children want the same toy. If as you move to intervene you say, “I see
you both want the same thing.” The children immediately know you are coming to
listen and help. If on the other hand you
come roaring in like a fighter pilot and immediately demand, “Who had it
first?” Or, “Give it to your sister,
she’s younger.” Or, “If you are going to
fight over it, I’m taking it away.” The kids will immediately know they’re
under attack and will be ready to battle with you.
Here are some more
examples. We want to stress this is the beginning – it’s not the end
of this interaction. It’s merely a step
– one of five to win cooperation.
Situation
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Event
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De-escalating Responses
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Escalating responses
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Sibling and peer relationships
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One child grabs a toy from another
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What did you want to tell him?
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Stop fighting with your sister.
You can’t do that. Give it back.
|
Needing attention
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Two children both wanting mom or dad
at the same time.
|
I know you both want mom.
Do you want to know when I can play
with you?
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Right now I have to feed the baby.
You need to wait until I’m done.
If you are going to act that way go to
your room.
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Handling a disappointment.
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You say, “No” and they start melting
down.
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Did you have a different plan?
I know you really
want…
It’s hard to wait when you really want
something.
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Stop it!
I said “No” and I mean it.
No, you can’t have it.
|
So check your response:
- Does your
approach de-escalate the situation or escalate it?
- Does your
child know you are coming to help when you approach or plant their feet
ready to do battle?
- Are you
connecting and drawing your child to you?
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