parenting

Four Daily Habits That Build Connection

Mom and daughter smiling at each other
A guest post from author, Rebecca Eanes

Looking back on my childhood, the summer vacations to the amusement parks and over-the-top Christmas celebrations do stand out in my mind, but the grandiose doesn’t take up the biggest places in my heart.

It was small things–fishing at the lake on a hot summer’s day, playing Scrabble at the table, gathering over mashed potatoes and baked chicken–that made me feel connected. It was the ordinary regular occurrences that made us feel like family.

Now I’m raising two children of my own. When I feel like I need to throw a Pinterest-worthy birthday party or guilt arises because I haven’t yet taken them to Disneyland, I remind myself that it’s the everyday habits I keep that they will hold most dear.

It’s during the moments when I put aside busyness to be present and attuned to the people in front of me–to laugh, to listen, to love–that the messages that matter reach their hearts. You are valued. You are loved. You belong here.

It doesn’t take a lot of time to connect deeply with our children. In just a few minutes at a time, several times throughout the day, we can bring our focus onto them and fill their cups with positive attention and affirmation.

Here are four daily habits you can begin now to build connection:

1. Start the Day with a Morning Blessing

Mornings can be a real hassle. Trying to get everyone up and out the door on time is often a stressful time for families.

Our adult minds are focused on the dozens of things we must accomplish in the next 12 hours, and our children are often tired, grumpy, or preoccupied with their own thoughts on the day ahead.

Taking two or three minutes of the morning to focus on our child’s face and say something positive can really have a big impact. “Good morning, my love! Seeing your sweet face makes me happy” is a thoughtful way to greet a child into their day.

I think “Triple A to start the day.” That stands for attention, affection, and affirmation.

Aim to give them your full attention for at least a couple of minutes, offer a hug or rub on the head, and say something positive about them. Making this a daily habit starts each day off on the right foot.

2. Afternoon or After School Gathering

Do the children get home from school and scatter in every direction? Mine tend to do that. Even if you homeschool or your children are still very young, creating an afternoon or after school gathering provides another connection point in your day.

Some ideas for this gathering include tea time, a spread of fruits with dip or cheese and crackers, a round of Uno, or reading aloud a chapter from a great book.

Again, this is undistracted time spent with your loved ones and it only takes a few minutes of the afternoon. This can easily be adjusted to an after-dinner or before-bath gathering. The time on the clock is not important. It’s the time spent that matters.

3. A Meal at the Table

When my children were very little and my husband worked odd shifts, we never ate together. I would snack through the day, my kids would eat dinner in the playroom, and my husband just ate whenever he got home.

So, I certainly understand that dinner at the table every single night is not suitable for all families. Perhaps an early morning breakfast together is more doable, or even a late evening dessert-only meeting in the kitchen works best.

Some researchers suggest that the benefits from family meals are many, including healthier eating for kids, improved psychological well-being, greater academic achievement, and even less delinquency!

We don’t need studies to tell us that gathering together for conversation and good food is meaningful though, do we? If it’s not already on your priority list, it’s a great time to start this connection-building habit.

4. One-on-one Time at Bedtime

In my house, we call this “special time” and I am surprised by how much my children crave this individual attention because until very recently, I was with them all day, every day!

I created this habit with the start of them attending school to build in some special time to hear about their days where they don’t have to talk over each other or be interrupted.

I initially set it at 10 minutes per child but we often talk beyond that because children really do open up their hearts during this time. If they don’t have much to talk about, which is rare, I ask them three questions. “Tell me something good that happened today.” “Is there anything you’re worried about or want to ask?” “Tell me one of your dreams or goals in life.”

I know that by this time of night, most of us are ready to be done with the day. We might even develop a tendency to rush through the bedtime routine to get to that ever so elusive “me time.” Truly though, these few minutes spent connecting heart-to-heart with my kids is worth pushing back my episode of Pretty Little Liars just a little longer.

Final Thoughts From Amy

We are so grateful for Rebecca’s wisdom on our blog. As a fellow Positive Parenting educator, Rebecca understands the importance of using Positive Parenting techniques to raise and guide our children.

Like Rebecca, I’ve made it my life’s mission to share Positive Parenting strategies with parents all over the world because I know first-hand how life-changing they are.

If you struggle with siblings fighting or mealtime drama or backtalk, I’d love to have you continue learning with us.

Join me for a FREE ONLINE CLASS and you can see for yourself if Positive Parenting Solutions is a good fit for your family.

In this class, I’ll teach you how to get your kids to listen–no nagging, reminding, or yelling required.

As always, I’m wishing you the best on your parenting journey and am always here if you need me!

About the Author

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Rebecca Eanes is the creator of www.positive-parents.org and author of The Newbie’s Guide to Positive Parenting. In her new book, Positive Parenting: An Essential Guide, Rebecca shares her hard-won insights on giving up the conventional parenting paradigm to reconnect heart to heart with her children. Because parenting is about so much more than discipline, Rebecca hits on important topics less spoken about, making this more than a parenting book. It’s a book about building lasting family bonds and reclaiming joy in parenting.

The One Simple Phrase to Change Your Parenting Mindset Forever

Mom kissing young daughter on the foreheadMom kissing young daughter on the forehead

Mom kissing young daughter on the forehead

Let’s be honest. We love our kids to pieces, right?

But parenting is exhausting – especially when we add in sports, extracurricular activities, family obligations, keeping the house in order, getting a semi-decent meal on the table, our own jobs – and, oh yeah – having any semblance of a life.

Sometimes it feels like we’re barely surviving rather than thriving.

Sound familiar? I get it. I’ve been there and done that.

However, there’s a flip side of the coin that’s made a huge difference to me as a parent and to the way I approached my days.

In fact, it totally changed my perspective.

The Phrase that Changed My Perspective

How? Through the thoughtful words of another parent. Years ago, an insightful minister in my church was getting ready for her son’s upcoming wedding.

She shared a perspective that has stayed with me ever since. After offering some reflection on twenty years of being a mom and watching her little boy become a man – she challenged our congregation to shift our internal conversations from “I have to” to “I get to.”

Instead of “I HAVE to” go to soccer practice, (basketball, football, theatre, dance – fill in the blank) – think — I GET to support my child’s ambitions.

I get to watch them grow stronger and more well-rounded.

I get to be there for their ups and their downs.

I get to spend uninterrupted time in the car with them as we carpool for the millionth time.

I get to fix them a meal and hear about their day or even glance over to see them sleeping in the seat beside me as we drive home from a long day.

I get to teach them to appreciate their talents by encouraging their dreams and nurturing their gifts.

I get to be part of taking my child from infancy to adulthood and hopefully share a whole lot more after that.

Now there was an Aha! moment. It stops you in your tracks.2016_05_09_20_43_27.pdf002

Because they really ARE only little once. They really are under your roof for such a short time.

There’s a whole lot of firsts and seconds and thirds – memories to be made as we’re raising our children and if we are blessed enough to GET TO be there for those – wow, that’s a gift. Right?

Will there be times when the last thing we feel like doing is sitting in the blazing sun watching a sporting event or climbing aboard a bus with 60+ teenagers (and that awesome combination scent of sweat, body odor, and WAY too much spray cologne)? Oh yeah.

Will there be times you’re wiped out from work, but you race to make the opening curtain anyway? Absolutely.

Will you have a to-do list a mile long and find yourself doing laundry late one night or making the mad dash to the store at six in the morning for something you forgot and wondering if it is all worth it? Yep. Every bit of it and then some.

Here’s what I can share with you, though. Both of my guys are out of college now; one is married, and I have a new daughter-in-law. They are no longer little boys. They are fun, faithful, amazing young men, and yes, I got to enjoy all those precious moments.

I wouldn’t trade those tiring days for anything in the world.

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Final Thoughts

Closing chapters on stages of parenting can be bittersweet. But yes – it’s worth it.

Trust me, I know what it feels like to lose the joy in parenting. Honestly, the same thing happened to me when my boys were young, which is what prompted me to begin my Positive Parenting Solutions journey.

If you want to bring peace into your home and find the joy in parenting again, I’d love for you to JOIN ME FOR A FREE ONLINE CLASS!

I’ll teach you how to get your kids to listen without nagging, yelling, or losing control.

And just remember, next time you’re exhausted and thinking I have to…. stop. Breathe. Take a look at your kid and change your words to “I get to.” Say it out loud, “I GET to take you to practice today!!” It’s powerful. It’s a game-changer. I promise.

Title Image: YAKOBCHUK VIACHESLAV/ Shutterstock https://www.shutterstock.com/photos

The Porn Talk: Why, When and How to Tackle This Troubling Part of Modern Life

A guest post from Sexual Health Educator, Amy Lang, MA

PPS Porn Talk

You’ve barely got a grip on the sex talk and Holy Cats! You need to have a porn talk too? Ugh. The reason to talk to your kids about pornography is probably pretty obvious — your kids are online and so is porn and chances are…the two will eventually collide.

The sad story is this: every child will see pornography by the time they get through puberty – probably sooner. Whether they access it themselves, a kid on the bus shares it from a smartphone, or it pops up on a computer screen – unfortunately, your kids will see pornography. Children need to be prepared so they know what to do when they see pornography. And guess what? YOU are the best person for the job. Yay! #ParentingRocks #Not

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A Radical Solution to Elementary Homework

New wisdom from Heather Shumaker, author of It’s OK to Go Up the Slide and It’s OK Not to Share

Homework-blog

Homework struggles don’t happen in our house. That’s because our family opts out of elementary school homework. “What?!” people say to me. “You can do that?”

Home time is family time. Kids need time to play and reboot for the next school day, not go into overtime. Schooling may be mandatory, but homework isn’t.

When children hit school-age, sometimes it feels as if the school is suddenly in charge of your family life. Night after night parents lock themselves in battles with overtired kids. “You have to do your homework,” we say, even when deep inside we know that the crying, wiggling child stuck in the homework chair desperately needs something else. Time to just be home, relax and play. Help with family chores. Or go to bed. But we think we must uphold homework, so we do. We nag. Cajole. Fight. Beg. And as a last resort, we do our kid’s homework.

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3 Strategies for Parenting Competitive Twins (Or Siblings Close in Age)

Two young boys standing back to back

Twins… double the love, the fun, and the joy!

But sometimes twins can be double the trouble – or at least that’s how it feels when sibling competition kicks into high gear and you’re trying to manage the chaos in “stereo.”

And it’s not just twins. Parents with siblings close in age can experience the same frustration.

So what can you do to help keep the peace and nurture the amazing relationship between your twins or close in age kids?

Try these 3 simple strategies to keep sibling competition at bay…

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Three Little Words to Diffuse Your Next Power Struggle

Power struggles and back talk issues? I hear ya!

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In fact, “I hear ya” is a phrase I encourage you to try the next time your child complains about doing homework, washing the dishes, taking a bath, or – whatever the complaint department problem is at the moment. “I hear ya” is a great way to respond when your child is itching for an argument.

Instead of launching into a traditional parenting lecture like, “it’s part of being a family”, or “your job is to go to school and get good grades”, or “you’ll thank me when you’re older” – just say, “I hear ya. I didn’t like doing spelling homework either” or “I hear ya, emptying the dishwasher isn’t my favorite thing to do either.”

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