March 28, 2007

Different Styles Of Parenting - Which One Is Best

There are 4 parenting styles: authoritarian, authoritative, permissive, and uninvolved. Which one is most suited to your family? Read on to find out.

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Parenting Styles - Overcoming Your Differences

Tip! With a better understanding of yourselves, you will know where you come up short. Seeking more knowledge on that should help you at being better at your own parenting styles.

If you spend any time in the parenting section of the library or your local bookstore, you will find hundreds of books on disciplining and raising your children. All the leading experts have their own ideas about what works and what doesn’t. As a parent, you have your philosophy that you bring to the table. Most of your thoughts come from what you learned as a child. You either liked the way your parents raised you, agreed with some of it and disagreed with the rest, or didn’t like any part of your parents’ ideas. Then you talk to or watch other mothers you know and these ideas get added to the mix. You take the best from all these sources and you set off to be the best mom you can be.

And then something happens that interrupts your plan for raising your children. Dad has a whole other set of ideas and plans for raising his children. Most of the time, dad’s ideas have not come from the many books on parenting he reads or the oodles of fathers he brainstorms with. His ideas, too, come from the way in which he was raised as a boy, but sometimes Dad operates on auto pilot when raising and disciplining his kids. Even the best and most agreeable parents sometimes disagree. So what do you do when your two philosophies clash?

Tip! When looking to improve on your parenting styles you can find a lot of input in articles on the topic specifically, as well as stories of family lives, and probably also a lot of those similar to you in a number of online communities focused on families. A good place to begin reading though is where you are now.

1. Talk it out when the children are not around. You’re in the middle of dinner, and the children are refusing to eat. They are crabby and testing your every nerve. Dad can see that you are stressed so he decides to take matters into his own hands. He yells with his loud, booming voice, “Eat your food right now or you will go straight to bed.” The kids start crying. You are even angrier now because you can’t stand yelling. You feel it is an ineffective way to discipline the children, and you believe it scares them. Wait until the children go to bed and have a talk with your husband. Explain to him exactly how you feel about yelling. Listen to his side of the story and why he chose to do what he did. Do your very best to understand him and acknowledge his feelings. Then decide together what would work better for everyone in the future.

Tip! By having complete different parenting styles, we were sending mix messages to the children, and in my opinion it had proved destructive to the kids. I did not check out my wife’s parenting style before I had married her.

2. Decide how important an issue is to you. My friend’s husband takes his little girl to swimming lessons every Saturday morning. After swimming, the little girl is starving. Dad’s way of ending their fun time together in the pool is to let his daughter pick something to eat from the vending machine. My friend does not want her daughter associating fun time with Dad and junk food. She believes they should come home so her daughter can eat something healthy. Sometimes each parent needs to decide how important an issue really is to them. If Dad rates his need to buy his daughter a junk food treat after swimming at an 8, and Mom rates her need for her daughter to eat healthy at a 6, then Dad wins. You learn to give in on issues that aren’t extremely important to you.

Tip! ) As a couple, write down two or three real-life examples of situations where your parenting styles have differed and you have found yourselves arguing (or not arguing and simply feeling resentful and disempowered) about a parenting issue.

3. Understand that differences can be good. Believe it or not, children can benefit from differences in our parenting styles. As long as children are being loved and treated with respect and fairness, it can be good for children to learn to adapt to different childrearing approaches. No two people in this world are exactly alike. Some parents are very flexible and some are quite structured. Some parents are playful and others are more serious. There are quiet and mild-mannered parents and loud and boisterous parents as well. Step back and appreciate your differences. Children who are exposed to diversity have a tendency to be better rounded and adaptable.

4. Combine your viewpoints and get on the same page. The single most important thing you can do for your children and for your marriage is to get on the same page when raising and disciplining your children. Being on the same page does not mean you necessarily agree on everything. It means you support one another as parents. If Mom says there are no privileges until homework is done, the rules are the same with Dad. If Dad says curfew is at 11:30 PM, then Mom enforces this curfew. Take the time to work through your differences and put together a plan that both of you can be happy with. Decide what the house rules are going to be and how the children will be disciplined when the rules are broken. Then stick together and provide a united front for the benefit of your children.

Tip! So, if you find yourself in a cycle of arguing about competing parenting styles, set some time aside to sit down and do the following exercises together. It may be more fun than you think and I know that you can turn your parenting conflicts into parenting successes with a little bit of work.

Lori Radun, certified life coach for moms. Get her FREE monthly ezine for moms who want healthier and happier lives at http://www.true2youlifecoaching.com.

© 2005 True to You Life Coaching, LLC

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Poker Parenting: 4 Ways Poker Skills Produce Parenting Thrills

Tip! Each parent gets to practice his or her own parenting skills.

Even as a busy parent, I’m sure you’ve seen a poker show on TV or at least heard your friends or relatives talking about it. You might even be someone who’s caught up in the poker craze of the past two years, riding the wave of a steep learning curve. As an avid poker player and father of two, I realize more each day how my poker skills help me raise my kids. Want to know how? Here are four ways to turn your poker skills into parenting thrills:

Tip! Never let your child’s misbehavior get you down. Boost your parenting skills by using this secret formula.

Play the Hand You’re Dealt
No Limit Texas Hold Em is exciting to play because any hand can win. And that’s what separates a professional from an amateur — the ability to win pots with bad hands.

The same is true for fatherhood. The “hand we’re dealt” is the family environment we grew up in. Let’s face it — none of us grew up in an ideal environment, just as none of us gets dealt a pair of aces every hand. But the beauty of No Limit Texas Hold Em — and fatherhood — is that any hand can win; it all depends on how you play it.

Tip! Even those who are superbly confident in their work or social situations, often teeter on the edge when it comes to their parenting skills.

Give Action to Get Action
In poker, you should occasionally play hands you wouldn’t normally play, in order to “give action” to other players. Then when you have a good hand and bet, those players are more likely to give the action back to you.

So what kind of action are you giving your kids? Do you play games they like to play, even if they seem silly? Do you regularly attend their school events? Are you there during difficult times? Even if you’re not interested in the activity, your involvement shows genuine interest in your children. They might not understand that message, but they will feel it, and that’s much more important.

Tip! A lot of parents’ parenting skills come from their own experiences in growing up. They pass down the identical ideals and traditions that their parents instilled in them.

Look for Diamonds in the Muck
We’re never quite prepared for the shocks and challenges that life deals us. Our daughter, Ashley, was only two when my wife and I discovered she had diabetes. Our lifestyle changed dramatically as we learned to control this disease.

What can parents do when experiencing a bad beat like this? Look for diamonds in the muck. In other words, look for the positive in a negative experience.

One of the positives of Ashley’s diabetes is learning to be disciplined and have self-control. She can’t simply follow her impulses to eat whatever she wants, whenever she wants. As a diabetic teenager someday, that discipline will help her when she is studying in high school.

Tip! You can’t go to the store and buy parenting skills, you can’t download it form the internet in a neat package, this is something you must become skilled at and gain.

The Thrill (and Chill) of Going All In
“I’m all in” — three words every poker player loves to say. It’s do-or-die when you commit all your chips. So what does going all in as a father mean? It means making an all-out commitment to your kids.

Dropping them off or picking them up from daycare or school. Eating some dinners together as a family each week. Helping them solve problems with their friends. What commitments do you make on a consistent basis?

Fatherhood brings lots of work and responsibility, so going all in can be chilling — a daunting task with little reward. If you think of all the little ways you’re building a relationship with your kids, going all in is thrilling — and many of the rewards come years later. But that kind of sums up parenting doesn’t it?

To learn more about relating poker to parenting, research on fatherhood, and fatherhood organizations, go to http://learninginterface.com/ and click on Tele-seminars. Treat yourself or a father you know to Mark’s tele-seminar on June 16, a unique Father’s Day gift.

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