Thursday, April 21, 2011

ParenThots - 10 tips for negotiating with your child

ParenThots - 10 tips for negotiating with your child

10 tips for negotiating with your child

CHILDWISE
By RUTH LIEW

WHAT do you do when your child asks for something that is not good for her, or for which she is not ready?

Working things out with children helps foster a positive attitude. They trust adults to listen to them before making them follow their rules. If children do not get a chance to voice their opinions and work out their ideas, they will try to get around authority. Some may do things behind their parents’ backs and tell them a different story.

However, if the issue is related to safety or health, instead of negotiating with my children, I bring out the parent’s mandate, which says: “I am your parent and I have a responsibility to make sure you are safe.” Children accept this, knowing that you care for them.

Here are 10 pointers to help you negotiate effectively with your child:

1. Listen carefully to what they say: Before you jump in to let your child know what you think, listen carefully to what he is saying. Children are not very experienced in using the appropriate language to express their thoughts and feelings.

At times, they may even confuse us with their explanations. If you are upset by what your child tells you, walk away to calm yourself down before you respond.

When children explain themselves, they are looking for understanding. Once they know that you understand them, they will be more willing to consider other ways more positively.

2. Prepare some alternatives: When your child requests for something that you do not feel he is ready for, offer him alternatives, which he may not know about. He can then compare them and list them out according to his priorities. Children work better when given choices. Their confidence grows when they make decisions.

3. Reflect your child’s ideas: Reflecting what your child is saying helps you and him understand what he is really saying. You can even paraphrase his words so that he knows you are listening to him.

For example, he refuses to attend extra tutorials for his UPSR exams because he feels they are boring. Reflect him by saying: “You feel bored having to attend extra classes. You need to attend them only for this month. You will have a long break after your exams.”

4. Be responsive: Look interested. Your body language can encourage or discourage him from communicating with you. Try to maintain eye-contact and show your acceptance. Parents can show support when they are not always trying to compel their children to change their minds.

Children feel less threatened when your body language is positive.

5. Never give in to whining or tantrums: Emphasise to your child that you prefer talking straight and not whining or tantrums. Children who tend to use tears or loud voices should not be given attention for such behaviour.

6. Use encouraging words: Instead of using putdowns or criticisms, try using more encouraging words.

7. Brainstorm with your child: Get your child to join you in making lists of things and ideas to support the points of argument for both parent and child. Children can be guided on the possibilities, and working them into their argument.

Children like being involved. They will offer ideas. To encourage them, parents can hear them out and allow them opportunities to make their ideas work. They may fail before they succeed. With every attempt, they learn better to make their ideas work.

8. Have a trial period: Once you have decided on the plan of action, give it a trial period before confirming that this is what your child will get. For example, if your child has agreed to clean his room during the week without you nagging or pestering, let him do it for a trial week. If he succeeds, you will continue with the plan as agreed by both parent and child.

9. Trust and respect: To have a successful negotiation, there must be mutual trust and respect between both parties. If parents do not feel that their children are capable or responsible enough, the negotiations will not work. Parents must provide the training ground for children to make decisions and take control of their lives.

10. Assess your plan of action: Using charts or checklists, find out whether your plans work. Children can learn to do these evaluations as part of their living skills. They have to monitor the progress. If a plan of action does not work, they will try alternatives until they get the desired results.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

The perils of the American dream

I was browsing the papers today and came across this article

'The perils of the American dream'.


The author did a brilliant job in driving the point home that we are simply too materialistic and becoming entrapped to slavery due to our uncontrollable LUST basically for anything under the sun which has been marketed cleverly!

I'm talking for me here. I still have to go through mental wars, debating whether I need a blackberry or not, when my nokia seems to be able to handle the job of pushing emails perfectly well.

The debate whether I need another vehicle or not, when my faithful 17 year old Mercedes seems to be doing the job more than splendid.

The debate whether I need to get 'American Standard' or 'Johnson Suisse' branded sanitare fittings for the upcoming bathroom renovation trigerred by a leak. Actually I can get away with just fixing the leak/waterproofing and end up spending a fraction of what I'm gonna end up spending, but that's what happens when marketeers are really good. They'll convince you that you really need something your dont.

The debate whether I need to replace my front gate with Balinese type wooden ones, the debate whether I need to replace my alarm system with wireless ones, etc.,etc..

I suppose that's the challenge all of us will go through living in this highly 'wired' society. We will be constantly bombarded with ads which sell us what we don't really need. And the answer to survive this would be to have saving goals and constant debates with one-self. (BEWARE: Dont you dare debate with your spouse BEFORE debating it with yourselves first)

I pray that I continue to have these debates AND sticking to making decisions ONLY after having fulfilled my saving goals. So any spending will be more like a reward whenever a goal has been accomplished.

Wishing you a strong mind and self-constraint. :)


Sunday, December 05, 2010

On Achieving Financial Independence/Richness

One of the main objective for individuals the world over is to become rich. While most do not define it further in terms of exact $ amounts, even worst are those who do not know how that the equation income-expenses=savings is terribly flawed.

The first category will most likely wonder about continuing to dream about becoming rich if they do not define 'rich' in exact $ amount and by when do they want to achieve this.

The second category, if they have managed to define 'rich' in exact $ and by when, may be better-off only if they realize that what was taught by parents and in school, i.e. income-expense=savings will not necessarily get them financial richness. Knowing this alone is not enough, they must have corrected this formula and began applying it on a daily basis.

The sooner individuals learn this, the better it is for them. As they would be able to free themselves from the terrible 'rat race' the financial system puts all financial illiterates into.

I have began my journey of freeing myself and have managed to bring down my personal overheads over the last year by 50% while slightly improving my current life-style.

How did I do this? As mentioned above, 1st, to define how much $ I want and 2nd, erase the previously learnt formula and replacing it with Income-Savings=Expenditure.

I hope this helps and wish you all the best in achieving Financial Independence/Richness.


Thursday, December 30, 2004