Children are People Not Machines
by: Jeffrey D. Murrah,
LPC
When growing up, my father
frequently reminded me to "pay attention to the
details." That saying became very real to me in the area
of parenting. While raising
children, the details make great differences in
development.
Being that children are people and not machines, the kind
of detailing needed is different. Focusing on the externals of
name brand clothing, perfect hair and having the most extensive
collection of expensive toys are not the kind of attention
needed. Such efforts will result in the child feeling rejected
and learning to substitute material objects and appearances for
love.
Children need the attention of their parents. The areas of
their lives and abilities given attention will develop most. If
the majority of parental attention is given to not standing
correctly or not finishing tasks, these areas will develop
further. In situations where habitual fault-finding occurs, the
child eventually takes all that criticism inside and turns it
on themselves. Such methods often lead to unmotivated children
with low-self-esteem.
Many adult parents still carry emotional scars from harsh
fault-finding from parents. A good common sense rule is, "If
you would not let anyone talk to you like you talk to your
child, you need to make some changes." Sadly, many children
suffer in quiet desperation as victims of harsh treatment, that
the parent justifies by telling themselves "it's for their own
good," or "I only do it because I love them so much." Such
displays are not experienced by the children as "love."
Children need attention given to the details of their lives.
The attention they need the most is from their parents. They
need encouragement in specific and tangible terms. Statements
like, "It puts a smile in my heart, when you show teamwork by
playing nicely with your brother" make a child beam. Find them
doing good things and bring that to their attention. Identify
the specific talent, how it is used and your reaction to it.
Train their young minds to search for their talents with the
same kind of attention to detail that may have previous been
devoted to fault-finding. It also helps to identify internal or
character qualities to praise rather than external
appearances.
By developing these qualities, the child will always carry
those qualities with them, regardless of age. Children do want
to please their parents. The challenge many children face is
that they often do not know what does please their parents.
Focusing on the details when children do good is important.
Such an approach is detailed enough for children to understand
what they did good and how it made you feel. Parents often
devote too much detail to fault-finding. When the attention to
detail is directed to finding good, it results in motivated
children with strong self-esteems. If the devil is in the
details, perhaps the saints are also.
About The Author
Jeffrey D. Murrah, LPC, LMFT, LCDC is The Results-Oriented
Therapist specializing in marriage and family conflicts. Visit
www.RestoreTheFamily.com to
sign up for his free newsletter.
jeff@RestoreTheFamily.com
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