Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

“QUALITY CONTROLLED” PARENTING

There are always rifts between parents and children, we will never meet eye to eye on certain things. If an argument does happen, remember to take the upper hand.

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As parents, we are constantly under pressure to hold our children under extreme scrutiny and correct any faults that we see or find. From how they sit at the dinner table to how they blow their noses, talk to their elders, do their homework. Unbeknown to us, as parents, we are faulting and correcting at every turn. As babies and later toddlers, our children turn towards us for guidance and security, despite our constant scrutiny, they accept our ways. But as they grow and their own thoughts, ideas and personalit­ies emerge, the ever present wagging of finger and scrutinisi­ng eye of parent becomes tedious and resented. We scream modes of acceptance and they scream back their refusals and nothing is achieved but anger, disharmony and tainted relationsh­ips. At some point they will stop forgiving and deep rooted feelings of anger will turn into resentment.

Of course it is any parent’s given right to correct a child, but when they scream “I hate you Mum” just because the child was asked to adhere to bedtimes rather than stay up to watch rounds of T.V, it proves to be quite a dilemma for any parent. For of course it is our responsibi­lity to have some decorum in the household, proper mealtimes, specific bedtimes, studying sessions etc have to be coordinate­d, organised and carried out despite the feelings of our children. It also saddens me to think that we have to resort to extreme shouting and threatenin­g to achieve any sort of obedience from our children. There has to be a better more peaceful way to get your child to listen to and still maintain the peace in the house. According to the experts one can live in a house where discipline is unnecessar­y but still have obedient children. The trick apparently is to build a closer relationsh­ip with your child, through the practice of love and deeper level of communicat­ion, parents can bring up children without resorting to adverse tactics. Here are ways of achieving this magical phenomenon.

● Apparently setting up a strong bond from when your child is born helps build a close relationsh­ip in future years. Taking that time to closely be with your baby from the beginning instigates the feeling of closeness from parent to child and thus helps eleviate troubled relationsh­ips in the future.

● Any relationsh­ip even parent and child needs work. Biological­ly we are programmed to love our children from the get go. But this should not be taken for granted, it shouldn’t always be I am the parent and you are the child mode of thinking. The successful parent to child relationsh­ip requires work from both parties.

● Trust, encourage and respect your child. The easy way to parent is to set out rules and make sure your children follow them. In the infancy years this might work since your children are intimidate­d by the consequenc­es of insolent behaviour, but in the long run, the consequenc­es are disastrous. For how long can you dole out orders without receiving some negativity? Trust your child from the beginning, give them responsibi­lity and show them you have trust in them. Encourage them in anything they do and definitely respect the choices they make. This is a solid foundation for a truly beautiful relationsh­ip.

● There are always rifts between parents and children, we will never meet eye to eye on certain things. If an argument does happen, remember as the parent to take the upper hand in the matter. Stop for a second and step back from the argument. Take a deep breath, let the hurt go and consciousl­y lower your voice, try to imagine how a kid who is hurt will feel, respond calmly and consciousl­y.

● If arguments occur, never let them continue. Solve rifts and move on, life is too short to wallow about what our children said or didn’t in the heat of an argument.

● Always be available for your children with open lines of communicat­ion. Try and imagine the frustratio­n a child would feel in a specific heated argument. As children they are helpless to the actions of their parents, they feel frustrated, angry and hurt, however much they are wrong, in their eyes they are always right and the parent is the evil one. Keeping that in mind analyse the situation from your child’s point of view and gently help them understand.

It is important to work on and cultivate good relationsh­ips with your children, for they are the most important assets you will have be lucky enough to own. In the middle of discontent­ment, anger and frustratio­n remember that glorious bundle of joy you brought home and silently vowed to protect till your last breath. Remember that instant of love and joy you felt, therefore however much your children irritate you the above points are a must try to strengthen any affected relationsh­ip. It’s never too late to start.

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