One of the tough things about parenting is that it is your duty to help your child develop in the right direction. Indulging a child’s bad behaviour or laziness lets the child down because the rest of the world will be far less ready to bend. None of us want to spend our lives instructing, limiting and guiding our children, but a certain amount of it is essential. Nobody comes out of the womb a fully educated and civilized human being!
So how do you change your child’s behaviour without being in a constant battle, which is equally ineffective?
The technique I use is called Future Perfect. You focus on the pattern that you want to see in your child and praise them for their progress towards it, even if really they have a long way to go! It is even more powerful if you compare them to other children.
For instance, you might want your children to be in the habit of helping to clean the house. Now you can pay for that or demand it each week, but I would suggest trying Future Perfect. To do that, you get everyone cleaning the house, one way or another. Once some cleaning has been achieved, you say something like “you know my friends are amazed by helpful you guys are. They can only dream of getting their children to help the way you do.”
Now your children will psychologically align helping around the house with being amazing children who are better than other children (and more loved because of it). And it will be true too!
I call it Future Perfect because initially you might need to swallow a bit as you say it. But you will be amazed by how your children come to identify with these things and get pleasure from them. So it is good in every way.
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David Morgan is CEO of Oxford Learning Solutions, publisher of the Easyread System. Easyread is an online course that helps children with dyslexia, auditory processing disorder, and highly visual learning styles improve their reading and spelling through short daily lessons. Find out more at www.easyreadsystem.com or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/easyreadsystem
David,
This is a brilliant strategy and it really works. I have been using this type of strategy with my son since he was a toddler with very good results. For example, I would praise him for being so patient while I unloaded groceries from the car while he was still strapped in his car seat. He became very proud of himself for waiting until all the groceries were unloaded before being let out of his car seat. That translated into being proud of himself for being able to wait for other things too. Now he regards himself as a very patient person as compared to other children his age. And he is!
I have always found that praise for good behavior — no matter how long you have to wait to “catch them being good” — is far more effective than scolding for bad behavior.
Thanks for your insights.
Carol
Hi Carol — Great to hear that David’s not the only one! We’re hoping the strategy catches fire. Think how much easier parenting could be… Sarah at Easyread