Parent’s want their children to grow up self-confident and capable. Sometimes without even realizing it, your responses may be doing the exact opposite.
“Mom, I’m starting a new piano song! Will you sit by me?” my youngest son asks.
Parent’s want their children to grow up self-confident and capable. Sometimes without even realizing it, your responses may be doing the exact opposite which lowers your children’s self-esteem.
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“Mom, I’m starting a new piano song! Will you sit by me?” my youngest son asks.
I walk in and sit down at the piano bench. When he starts new songs, he likes me nearby.
A
bright smile flashes across his face and he starts playing. After a few
mistakes his smile fades and a frown appears. I sense his growing
discouragement.
From
my perspective the song is quite simple, it is easy for me. I almost
say, “Oh come on this is easy, you can do it.” Instead I pause and
think, “What I say will make my son feel encouraged which helps his
self-esteem grow or cause discouragement which can lower his
self-esteem. The choice rests with me.”
Parent’s want their children to grow up self-confident and capable. Sometimes without even realizing it, your responses may be doing the exact opposite which lowers your children’s self-esteem.
Saying “It’s easy”
When
your children are struggling with a task, it may seem easy to you,
however, it is not necessarily easy to them. When you say, “That is
easy, you can do it.” You are trying to motivate and encourage them, yet
it causes your children to think, “Something must be wrong with me
because it’s not easy to me, therefore, I must be dumb.” This causes
your children to feel discouraged and want to give up. It decreases
their self-esteem.
Instead tell them, “This can be tough or this
is difficult.” Then if your children complete the task, they tell
themselves, “I did something hard.” If they cannot figure it out, at
least they know it was tough to begin with. This approach helps children
stay encouraged and increases their feelings of self-worth.
Doing too much for them
Your
children want to do tasks on their own. This gives them a great sense
of accomplishment and helps them feel good about themselves. You may
feel one way to show your love is doing things for your children. This
robs them of the opportunity to learn life skills and the satisfaction
of feeling independent. It sends your children the hidden message, “You
are not capable.”
Instead
of doing too much for your children, break the task into smaller more
kid-friendly tasks. This gives your children the chance to feel the
personal satisfaction of completing it on their own. Their self-esteem
will soar.
Freaking out when they make mistakes
Mistakes
are part of life – we all make them. You may feel you need to rescue
your children from making mistakes or help them avoid making mistakes.
This does not help them – it cripples them for life.
Your children will make mistakes and the way you respond either helps
your children learn and grow from the mistake or teaches them mistakes
are bad. Mistakes are painful, but they can cause great growth if
handled in a healthy way. Don’t rob your children of the opportunity to
rise to the occasion, admit they are wrong, fix the problem, and feel
great about themselves.
Instead of freaking out when your children
make a mistake, teach them how to make amends and be accountable for
their actions. This promotes a healthy view of mistakes and allows your
children to feel good about who they are.
Many parents do not
realize these three parenting responses diminish their children’s
self-esteem. If some of these ideas are new to you – take heart because
reading and learning shows you are interested in improving as a parent
and doing the best you can.
Credit : Familyshare.com
3 ways you unknowingly destroy your children’s self-esteem
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