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parents corner

Entitlement

Entitlement

In today’s world of high-tech conveniences like robotics and automation, it can be challenging to provide children with meaningful chores that teach responsibility and service. Growing up, I had a never-ending list of farm chores posted on the fridge, and rainy days felt like a rare escape to explore the countryside. Many children today lack these work-life experiences that once shaped character.

Honest Communication – Feedback and Beliefs

Honest Communication – Feedback and Beliefs

Kids need to hear the straight goods regarding their behaviour, for without parents honest feedback they will continue to develop limiting thoughts and habits. If we are honest without being harsh, if we can share observations in a respectful and compassionate way, children will more likely take the time to truly look at themselves. Without a strong intention for self development, and in the absence of loving mentors, children will still learn, but at a much slower rate. Life’s lessons will tend to be more confusing and more painful. Children can better muster the courage it takes to be vulnerable and open to honest feedback from others when they have a foundation of acceptance and love from their caregivers. Children who learn to value transparent coaching will grow in maturity beyond their years.

Diminishing Rules Theory

Diminishing Rules Theory

Although rules are necessary, they need to be adaptive to our changing situations. Children eventually learn that rules are often modified or ignored. However, for young children rules keep them safe. Don’t touch the stove, don’t talk to strangers, always look twice before crossing the street. Having rules that provide the less experienced a chance to gain experience without dying first, is not a bad thing. So why are rules destined to be broken? Rules are generally simple, like an on - off switch. Yet, most of life’s choices exist somewhere between completely on and completely off.

Rules Part 2

Rules Part 2

Rules, guidelines, loving discipline, and role modelling of exemplary behaviour, is crucial to children’s development. Parents can easily sabotage this process by having double standards. This double standard is achieved by having a narrow set of expectations for our children, and an emotionally justified and much widder set of rules for ourselves.

Parenting and Rules

Parenting and Rules

Most children, adults too, will test boundaries set by parents, or other authorities. We defy rules for many reasons. Establishing independence by resisting outside influences, conforming to peer pressure for social gains, and the all-powerful desire to learn through our own personal experiences. For some of us, assenting to untested rules imposed by others, simply goes against our grain. Children stray beyond their parent’s rules to test if the previous generations restrictions truly apply to them.

Parenting Now

Parenting Now

Today’s parents have new challenges. Previous generations were kept busy feeding, clothing, and educating their kids, while even earlier generations of parents were preoccupied with just keeping their children alive. Parenting challenges that exist today, like learning disabilities, gender identity, ADHD, autism spectrum, along with heightened anxiety and depression, either didn’t exist in the past, or we were unaware of them.

Loving or Limiting Behaviours

Loving or Limiting Behaviours

Loving behaviours are generally respectful, kind, and supportive. They are behaviours that create the greatest good for the greatest number of people. Loving behaviours develop trust, encourage openness, foster mutual benefit, and heal emotional wounds. Ideally, loving behaviours are given with no need for recognition or for personal gain. These conscious choices grow our potential, to bring about the best version of ourselves. It is a loving behaviour when we are present to the moment, aware of our thoughts and emotions, while not making decisions based on our fears. Thoughts become our words or self talk, which become our actions, which crystallize into mindful behaviours. The gift is to grasp the impacts our behaviours have on our lives. To keep building our awareness and gratitude for the fact that we are responsible for shaping our realities through being cognisant of our thoughts, words, and deeds.

Limiting behaviours, on the other hand, often become habitual choices that keep us stuck, that prevent us from reaching our goals, that ultimately sabotage our peace and happiness. Limiting thoughts produce negative inner dialogue, which translates directly to actions or inaction that reflect fears. We may fear our rising potential, lest we be held to a higher standard, or judged harshly if we can not live up to it consistently. Thus, we may unconsciously cling to our old routines. Fear of failure and ridicule may keep us addicted to living below our capacity. So, we advocate our responsibility, blame poor circumstances and others for outcomes we don’t want. Limiting behaviours typically are on automatic pilot, habitually under performing, disrupting our goals and misaligning our values.  It is what we expect, what we have grown accustomed to, the easy path wins again at our expense. Fearing change we seek distractions that help us to avoid the truth that these comfy choices are leading slowly but surely to the demise of our self-worth. Again, it begins with thoughts, words, and deeds. Loving deeds risk effort, sacrifice, and rejection. Loving deeds also define us, build healthy relationships, and provide life meaning and purpose. In order to be more capable of loving behaviours we must replace limiting ones.

To replace limiting behaviours it is vital to understand how they are built and what sustains them. Our most persistent choices develop into behaviours which create mental and emotional pathways, neuro networks that are either strengthened or weakened, based on use. The more we behave in a certain way, the stronger that behaviour becomes. Questioning the rational behind how we behave, is a grand step towards self-awareness. Knowing our intentions, what motivates us, and the values that we wish to extend to the world, keeps us mindful of our loving or limiting actions. If we assess that our intentions are not honourable, respectful, or loving, we can choose the opposite course. Choosing alternatives due to our increased awareness, weakens the behaviours we wish to eliminate, while strengthening our contribution to others and ourselves.

Neurologically, taking on new behaviours often feels like bushwhacking through a dense jungle. Eventually with repetition, the paths we chose becomes more worn, until with consistent practice it evolves into a superhighway. Traveling well used highways requires less effort, and its familiarity gives us relief. Thus, new pathways when persistently practiced, transform from donkey trails to super freeways. Learning to perform a parallel stop on skis, is an example of this transition. At first it is a little scary and requires your full attention, the neuron pathways are new, and not well traveled. After much practice, through failed and successful attempts, those neuron pathways become smoother, faster and require hardly any mental effort. It has developed into a dependable skill.  Telling the truth is another example, where the more we focus on being honest, the easier and more effortless this behaviour becomes.

Limiting behaviours are built on erroneous thinking, bogus assumptions, negative conditioning, and low self-esteem. They are sustained due to lack of awareness and inaction to challenge our false beliefs. Limiting behaviours survive because we allow them to. We make excuses that this is not the time to change, or we falsely accept our inability to adjust. We lie to ourselves, telling stories to accommodate the excuses that support the limiting habits that are stopping us from getting what we want. There comes a time, in our lives, when all our excuses run out. When we are unwilling to continue this limiting path, no matter how well traveled, no matter how accustomed we are, we can not accept these behaviours any longer. That time typically occurs when the pain of our poor choices is more painful than the fear we have of changing. Examples of limiting paths or dysfunctional behaviours are endless. Eating when we are not hungry, being impatient, being over-reactive, putting our needs ahead of the needs of others. Poor self care, fear of failure, and degrading self talk, are just a few. The list is endless, as is the list of behaviours that contribute to our well-being and the greater good of others. Like, kindness, compassion, growing competencies, acquiring knowledge, and gravitating towards reality, even when illusion is more convenient or comforting.

Habitual behaviours like overeating or overreacting are challenging to change as they have become superhighways, completely familiar, well entrenched routines that seem effortless, like a well practiced ski stop. At one time the overeating made us feel better, so we made that action a regular practice, until it became habitually an unconscious response to stress. Chronic overeating may still give us pleasure, a distraction from our pain, yet it comes with a price tag that taxes our health, emotions, and relationships.

Limiting behaviours cause feelings of being out of control, guilt and shame over a path which is luring us away from our goals. The distraction has become a dysfunction, it goes fast, but in the wrong direction. We may wrongly accept this path as genetically determined, or our fate. The guilt comes from us knowing deep inside that this notion is simply not true. We start realizing that ‘we get what we allow’. Permitting unhealthy or hurtful choices is the habit we no longer can afford. The truth is that we all have issues and behaviours that are not loving, logical or sustainable. Most of us are at various stages of transforming issues that no longer benefit us, our family, or our community. Most of us have issues, regardless of our age, that have become chronic limiting behaviours that run silently in the background, like a virus hacking our progress, and our dreams. So, how do we replace limiting with loving?

To stop limiting behaviours we must acknowledge the pain it is causing us and change our mental and emotional relationships to those thoughts. Example: replacing our relationship with food as being a comfort and distraction during stressful times, to food being a means to nurture health and vitality. Two vastly different relationships resulting in opposing approaches and outcomes. For lasting positive change to occur, we must challenge the truth of our thoughts. It is vital to coach ourselves to become increasingly more aware of our thoughts that develop our negative internal dialogue, that produce the same old disappointing reactions to life. It is important to understand that we are all dysfunctional, even the most experienced and evolved people have issues. As Bruce Lee said, “Only the fool doesn’t know that they are a fool.” We all do foolish things, so exchange the guilt, shame, and self-loathing for compassion and acceptance that we will screw up. Failure is integral to learning, learning is essential to loving. The goal is to learn from failures, ours, others, and to adapt. Treating ourselves like a cherished friend that we forgive and love unconditionally is tremendously helpful. Once we recognize our issue, it is time to replace that unwanted superhighway with a new healthy path. The new behaviour will likely be difficult at first. New paths are a struggle, or they are an adventure, depending on one’s perspective. Yet with each attempt, gradually our minds remap, and our neuron pathways become stronger while the old behaviour due to lack of use becomes less attractive as an option, eventually it fades and becomes obsolete.

Example: we feel anxious and our habit is to eat, medicate, or isolate, to avoid our discomfort. However, we are becoming more aware of the connection of our anxieties to our thoughts, so we challenge our thinking. Is food the right answer now, or is there something else? By challenging limiting habits, we attend directly to the issue, our anxiety. We ask ourselves, is it true, or a fabrication and often an exaggeration of our fearful thoughts? Now, when stress emerges, we can internally acknowledge our issues. We may choose to substitute overeating with going for a walk, breathing, meditating or journal writing. The dysfunctional path will die a quicker death when we refuse to accept that it is an option. Replace degrading thoughts with more truthful and kinder and inspiring thoughts about who we wish to be. Replace unhealthy habits with our first instinctively healthy alternative. With every dysfunction that we successfully transform, future issues are overcome due to our Zen like commitment to loving rather than limiting ourselves.

Masterful people are mindful of their thinking, weeding out the negative while nurturing the positive. Their actions reflect their beliefs and values, as personal integrity grows, so does self-worth. They know themselves more intimately, therefore they welcome rather than fear change. They embrace difficulty, and the growing pains that yield insights and courage to achieve their vision. The more we embrace change around our dysfunctional pathways, the more skilled we become at learning and loving. We become the master architect of our lives, by connecting to our logical minds and our loving hearts.

Namaste

Instructor Chris


Helping Children to Value Wisdom

Helping Children to Value Wisdom

Wisdom - how do we learn and earn insight, and how do we encourage children to value applied knowledge? Stories are common about children seeking wisdom from their parents and grandparents, or a young entrepreneur getting mentored by a seasoned businessperson. There are also contrasting stories where parents, teachers, and coaches are mocked for being outdated and possessing little relevant value. In some cultures, parents and grandparents are revered elders. These elders may not dress in the latest fashion, listen to modern music, or speak the nuances of their children’s generation. Typically, elders are less comfortable with computers and do not understand the endless references of social media that entertain our youth. Their value and connection are not about fitting in, being accepted, or in having common interests. Elders create connection through shared life experience and undying kindness. Elders connect with love and respect, even when that love and respect is not reciprocal.

An important question is, do your kids value your counsel, do they seek the wisdom of others and their challenging perspectives? In order for parents to nurture children to value information, candor, and experiences that will illuminate wise actions, we need to become a treasured mentor or elder.  It would be remiss to believe that children only want quick answers. They need relationships with elders to develop trust in themselves, to know that they are capable of wisdom. From interactions with elders, they learn the importance of unbiased information, opposing viewpoints and pausing to check in with their emotions. Elders provide a safe place for youth to touch base with their love and logic. These relationships create resiliency and confidence in youth, so that they begin to understand that all we can do is our best, in each moment and in each decision.

Elders have common traits that distinguish them as being a valuable asset to the next generation. Elders make themselves available. Elders create time to listen and have no time to judge. They share experiences, painful failures, and riveting adventures effortlessly. Elders don’t just share ideas; they involve youth by wrapping them up in the gift of their vulnerability.  Elders question youth in supportive ways, putting aside their personal agendas. They are inquisitive and caring and willing to let youth go through the pain that hones wisdom over time. Elders accept youth as they are, and where they are at. Despite setbacks, they trust in children’s greatness, which unlocks imaginations, stirs hopes, and expands dreams.

It would be unfair to characterize elders as superior beings who have all the right answers. One size fits all solutions rarely exists. Being the keeper of wisdom is not a pretense elders can afford, nor is ego. Youth sees through such facades. Elders are ordinary people who provide extraordinary service by being present, honest, and open to those around them. Elders don’t quit, even when the seeker does. Persistently patient, they instill positive belief, because that is what they give over and over. Given the chance, young people seek truth above shallowness; popularity, meaningless distractions, or relationships formed for only their personal gain.  Naturally, this perspective is not true of all youth, yet in their own time, most youth will rise to meet the challenges, especially when patient elders believe in their highest potential.

It is a common sentiment that parents feel like imposters when they step into the role of being an elder. When someone is trusting you with stuff that is real and raw about them, they have dispelled the notion of you as an imposter, for they have chose you as their elder. We too must rise to the occasion and believe in our ability to have something of value, to share. Regardless of culture, social status, religion or era, kids need elders and elders need the eager hearts and minds of children who will complete this beautiful cycle of wisdom and become elders themselves.

The highest form of wisdom is kindness.

Instructor Chris


Developing Minds

Developing Minds

When our kids goof up, telling them to use common sense, or stating that the answer is obvious, is rarely effective. Parent’s life experiences combined with a mature, more developed brain, assist us in identifying relevant factors for discerning appropriate courses of action. Often parents forget or are unaware that the child’s mind is not fully formed and unable to draw upon the conclusions that the typical adult takes for granted. Coupled with significant less life experience, (a 5 yr. old has only 60 months on the planet) obvious, is simply not obvious. Therefore, comments regarding obvious, and using common sense is felt by our kids as judgemental, overly critical, and personal. This kind of parental feedback is rarely viewed by children as having a positive intent.

As author Wayne Dyer says, judging others does not define them, it defines us.

Judging children or others may feel like a means to educating them, we think we are instilling a much-needed course correction. However, especially for children, being judged as wanting, this does little to illuminate the logic of a problem, it only adds to their insecurities.

When a parent reads anger on an individual’s face, it seems so obvious. For the child, who’s brain does not register facial expressions or social cues, obvious seems more like magic. In time most developing minds will learn these subtle intricacies, but what about the kid’s self-esteem during this process? The developed mind can learn to read people more carefully, children can learn to cope, adjust, and adapt to information that is not intuitive for them. However, these mental connections are difficult for the child if the brain wiring is not yet complete. This is as true for a toddler as it is for your teenager.

As parents we are trying our best to guide and support, sometimes a little understanding can help with our compassion and more effective parental strategies. Here are some interesting points for parents of teenagers or emerging teens:

Regardless of your teen’s success in school or their I.Q. sound judgements are not something they can excel at, at least not yet. The rational part of a teens brain has not fully developed. In an adult we utilize our prefrontal cortex, the brain’s logical aspect to make choices. This part of the brain allows us to respond to situations and draw rational conclusions. The wiring of the prefrontal cortex enables us to make tangible connections between our behaviour / choices and likely consequences. In other words, adults have the ability to engage good judgement and to develop common sense strategies.

Teens process information differently using an emotional part of the brain, the amygdala. The connections between the emotional part and the decision-making center of the brain are still developing. That is why when teens have overwhelming emotional input, they can’t explain later what they were thinking. They weren’t thinking as much as they were feeling. The rational part of a teen’s brain will not be fully developed until the age of 25 -30.

So, what can we do besides being more aware of the teenage mind?  

·        Try discussing the -what if game- if I do this action what are the possible consequences. With your help and insights, your teenager can improve impulsive thinking, and link their actions to logical outcomes.

·        Coach children that they are resilient and capable in making wise choices, especially with experience and counsel. This shows faith in their abilities and encourages them to discuss their life and difficult choices with you.

·        Show an interest in the things that interest your kids, this indicates to them that they are important to you. This bolsters self-esteem and autonomy in decision making.

·        As with your partner/spouse, ask your kid if they want you to respond, or if they just want you to listen. Trying to fix their problems with sermons leaves them out of the equation for addressing life’s lessons. They are more likely to share their life with you if you ask them lots of questions to access their ideas and wisdom.

In conclusion, replace judgements with, listening, supportive discussions and patience. Whenever possible be proactive and discuss up coming choices before they become highly emotional. If it turns into an emotional crisis, create an emotional safe place for them. Remind them that they can play a positive role in bad situations. Our brains are amazingly fluid, and wisdom flows better when it has a foundation of love and support.

Have a great fall/winter!

Namaste,

Instructor Chris

 

*supportive research from University of Rochester Medical Center


Celebrate & Challenge Children

Celebrate & Challenge Children

Parents prioritize many aspects of their children’s growth.  Like a nurse triaging, parents will select what is relevant or crucial for their child’s continued growth. We tend to know our kid’s strengths, and it is helpful to acknowledge and build upon those competencies. Sometime, their weaknesses are not addressed or challenged in ways that provide tools for meaningful change.  Conversely, our children’s weak areas may become too much of a focus, and thus their self image is based on their flaws. A balance needs to be struck between identifying and accepting weaknesses and acknowledging and being grateful for strengths. If there is an imbalance, I would emphasize building from the child’s strengths to improve weaknesses, even if those strengths are not always being applied. Building from strengths is leveraging on a more positive self-image, and typically yields greater results.

In addition, it is often best to praise effort over achievement. “You participated with heart and courage – over – You scored the most goals, or you’re the most flexible dancer. Linking approval and self-worth to effort, persistence, and having a positive attitude promotes a more sustainable self image. Whereas, only praising achievement creates a self image based on comparisons to others, rather than on self improvement. Even the most talented child will find others who are more talented. Like a dog chasing its own tail, they seek an unattainable goal of being the best to secure love and approval from their tribe.

Parents, teachers, and children’s comfort zones can get in the way of addressing personal growth issues. Parents need to be brave beyond our need to be liked and challenge our kids to be better. We may feel in time our kids will absorb the understandings and skills that they currently lack. Why stir the pot?  Why bring up uncomfortable issues? Because, when we do not stir the pot, stuff gets burned. Our kids are going to get burned in life, it is inevitable. When we tackle the tough personal issues together, the difficult lessons in life are more easily absorbed. We can help kids to look forward to constructive criticism, to value self knowledge and growth, even if it is initially painful. How? By loving kids unconditionally while we challenge them to address their insecurities or weaknesses.  Celebrate their strengths with an air of humility and gratitude. Celebrate and challenge, ingrains an attitude in the child that values themselves while equally valuing continuous growth.

Schools attend to the whole child, yet typically this environment favours academic excellence over self awareness and communication skills.  Children can focus on school with far greater attention, when they are feeling safe physically, emotionally, and socially.  When a child is distracted by insecurities, like being physically bullied, excluded, or generally unaccepted by their peer group, academics will not be a priority for them.

Even, the socially gifted and naturally confident kids will benefit from addressing their weaknesses or challenging their understandings that are limiting them in life. Therefore, I feel Life Skills or Philosophy Concepts are so relevant to children’s development.

Here is a concept to explore with your children.

Life is not fair, it is life, with ups and downs. With a great attitude you can be grateful for the ups and learn from the downs.

Share this wisdom with your kids when things are obviously going well. When they are not in crisis mode, the message can be more easily digested.  Also, review this wisdom when things are obviously horrible. Encourage them to adopt a great attitude where they can choose to learn from any difficult challenge.

We can ask our kids whether they want to be bitter or better? Life will undoubtedly give all of us the opportunity to experience both, it is our choice of attitude that makes all the difference.

Namaste

Instructor Chris


Guiding Without Imposing

Guiding Without Imposing

Children are our privilege not our legacy. Directing our children to live a life that fulfills our desires and diminishes our fears, is a recipe for growing resentments.  We can however, aim to inspire them with our philosophy and lead them with our positive life choices, while still respecting that they are unique individuals. Having kids abide by our rules while they reside with us, can be partnered with respecting their unique perspectives, desires and expression in life. 


Our kids will see life through their own lens, and  are happiest if they are allowed to follow their hearts, passion, and individual beliefs. Wise parents resist molding their children into mini versions of themselves, rather, they encourage independent thinking and authentic expression of self, realizing that this path enhances potential greatness and inner peace.

Namaste,

Instructor Chris


As We Grow - Our Children Grow!

As We Grow - Our Children Grow!

Our children learn tremendous amounts from us parents, even things we do not want them to learn. They learn from our blunders and struggles as much as our successes. Typically, they learn most from our actions. Our day to day behaviours have the greatest impact on the views our children have about life and about themselves.  Children learn from parents about how they should behave in order to be accepted. From parents they glean their values, and moral compass. Parents instill in their children what is important. Based on parents’ words and behaviours, kids formulate what is possible for them to achieve.

 If we dream small and set low expectations for ourselves, safe as that may be, our kids will probably aspire to having low, easily attainable goals as well. Even if these goals are realized, self satisfaction is rarely achieved by reaching for mediocrity.
Children more readily aspire to loftier goals when optimism, courage and insight is role modeled. By setting the bar high for our own self growth, we create our greatest potential. Thus, our children learn not to limit their own abilities, but rather to seek their highest potential.

As parents grow personally, so will their children.

Instructor Chris


Emotional Intelligence Affects Immune System

Emotional Intelligence Affects Immune System

During this time of heightened health concerns, we look to strengthen our immune systems. The obvious practices, like getting adequate rest and quality sleep, along with a healthy diet, are vital for a strong defense system.  During this adjustment to a pandemic, the very things that we employ to keep our kids and ourselves strong and resilient now, undoubtedly are healthy lifestyle habits that impact quality of life at any point in time. 

Emotional awareness and increased understanding of how to deal with uneasy emotions, is crucial to creating a healthy chemical state. Letting our kids know that under stress our brains kick in the Sympathetic Nervous System (SNS), which focuses heavily on negative occurrences for survival. Events that are unexpected, or that are not our preferences suddenly become major agitators. Coupled with ignoring or denying our feelings, kids and adults may dwell in the SNS state which creates a negative cycle, both chemically, thought wise, and in reactive behaviour.

Giving our kids and ourselves time to connect with our emotional content helps us to keep our brains in the Parasympathetic Nervous System (PNS). The PNS will help us to keep perspective and to flow with chemicals that draw us more towards the positive attributes of life. Emotional awareness and engagement of our PNS can be aided through ‘walks and talks’, meditation practice, or unscheduled check ins with children or partners on their most positive and most unsettling emotions for that day or week. Pauses and focusing on slow intentional breathing also activates PNS and thoughtfulness. Emotional intelligence can be heightened by incorporating family time to discuss dreams and nightmares, fears, and hopes. After a family meal, sitting on the end of child’s bed at bedtime, or those moments when the child’s need is clear that difficult emotions are on the rise, provide that much needed time to download feelings first and then to apply love and logic to our go forward plans. This attention to our emotional state sends the message to our children that emotional awareness and learning about ourselves by dealing positively with our feelings, is a healthy practice.

Namaste,

Instructor Chris