CH 2: What’s Your Parenting Style?

CH 2: What’s Your Parenting Style?

Six Parenting Styles To Pick Or Drop: Find Out Your Parenting Style In Order To Improve On It

THE PARENTING GUIDE : CHAPTER 2


Beliefs and attitudes towards raising a child make up a parenting style. How high parents’ expectations are, how responsive and nurturing parents are, how much freedom children are allowed, define a style. Since a parenting style is not something we choose, but a result of our own awareness, our own history, capacity and values, distinguishing our own style will help improve our parenting. To quickly assess each parenting style, we have rated them based on the four simple descriptors just mentioned.

 

Assessing Our Parenting Style

Personal history can make us repeat our parents’ mistakes or react by opposition, pushing us either way, to one extreme or another. Cautiously and honestly assessing our parenting style can bring consciousness to areas we’ve been neglecting or to behaviors we’ve been causing. This awareness is not meant to criticize us, but to guide us in becoming better parents.

SIX PARENTING STYLES TO PICK OR DROP

PARENTING STYLE # 1

PERMISSIVE PARENTING

SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT

Expectations •••
Responsiveness •••
Nurturing ••
Freedom •••••

Mostly described as indulgent and non-directive, this parenting style may be a choice for people who grew up without structure and limits themselves. Others that may fall right into this parenting style are children of authoritarian parenting, who try to compensate for what they deem as their parents’ failures by not setting limits nor behavioral expectations and indulging their children’s every whim.

 

Permissive parenting may also stem from fear of losing the child’s love. A mother who gives up her career to make her child her main priority in life, may, understandably, crave her child’s approval and constant affection as a reaffirmation of her choices. She may also fear losing the child’s love if trying to implement discipline.

Permissive parenting could surface later on in the child’s life. Usually as a product of divorce, where guilt, fear of losing the child’s love, or competition for the child’s affections, can change family dynamics, distorting earlier pre-established behavioral foundations and leading the way to a severe lack of motivation, of responsibility, of self-control, anger and an array of behavioral problems.

This parenting style does not educate children on proper behavior, leaving them clueless as to how to conduct themselves with others and within society. Ironically, a permissive parenting style imposes the highest and most unrealistic expectations on children, who have to figure out proper behavior on their own, without any guidance from their parents.

The GOOD PUPPY Child Behavioral System can assist parents in keeping a seemingly permissive parenting style while implementing a healthy and solid behavioral structure. While consistently implementing the pre-established consequences, parents can continue a loving demeanor towards their children.

 

 

PARENTING STYLE # 2

POSITIVE DISCIPLINE PARENTING

JUST STAY POSITIVE!

Expectations •••
Responsiveness ••••
Nurturing ••••
Freedom •••

Encouraging good behavior is the proven most effective approach to behavior management. Behavioral issues can come up as a result of many different factors; dealing with them under a positive, instructive and constructive light will help in children’s development, will stimulate reasoning abilities and grow self-esteem.



 

Positive discipline requires good communication, healthy bonding and consistency in limitations, to develop a trusting relationship. This is where a system based on positive reinforcement, incentives and motivators helps set up the healthy structure and family dynamics that drives this parenting style.

Turning negative into positive thoughts, the system includes giving children a chance to make up for their actions. If children hit, they can start by apologizing. If they broke something, they may try to fix it or build something to replace it. If they annoyed someone, they can do something nice for them. There’s no need to cry over spilt milk, nor focus on it until it curds, which only prolongs the negative situation. To address misbehavior with a positive approach, explain silly choices, concentrating on the right action that should have been taken. Always offer children an opportunity to redeem themselves through positive actions. Give them a chance to do something good to get back to green, where they belong; while learning to mend things, situations and relationships.

The GOOD PUPPY Child Behavioral System is the easiest and healthiest set-up for positive discipline from an early age. While simple tools quickly and intuitively introduce the game, the Child Behavioral Journal can be the most important bonding ritual of the day. Designed for early learning challenges, these tools hep children recognize, verbalize and understand emotions, challenges and virtues. Awareness of their own emotions and others’, and how to manage new situations, grows children’s confidence and self esteem.

 

PARENTING STYLE # 3

ACTIVE LISTENING PARENTING

YOU'LL NEED MORE THAN ALL EARS

Expectations •••
Responsiveness ••••
Nurturing ••••
Freedom •••

The first form of communication with children is listening to them. It starts with crying for food, a diaper change or sleep. Listening to your children’s needs and trying to understand their cries for help, should never stop. Once the children learns to speak, parents tend to forget that they are still mostly incapable of communicating properly, especially about abstract matters, such as feelings and emotions.

 

 

Children may display their emotions well, but that does not mean they understand them or that they have the tools to communicate emotions without having to act them out. Even in discovering new emotions, children may feel alone and overwhelmed.

While practicing active listening, parents need to guide children in the identification of emotions. This will help children understand their emotions, while learning to verbalize them.

Active listening means listening literally and reading between the lines. It entails looking at verbal and visual communication patterns and trends. It means letting children talk before speaking and letting them lead the conversation, to truly understand what they’re trying to tell you.

GOOD PUPPY Child Emotional Tools are the perfect conversation jump starters. Emotions Dice get children talking on a roll. Keep the Emotions Chart somewhere visible as a reference and communication tool.

 

PARENTING STYLE # 4

AUTHORITATIVE PARENTING

NOT THE AUTHORITARIAN PARENTING STYLE IT SOUNDS LIKE

Expectations •••
Responsiveness ••••
Nurturing •••••
Freedom •••

Authoritative Parenting, a very different style from Authoritarian Parenting, is a delicate balance of discipline and nurturing with high expectations that earn trust and freedom. A good recipe for independent, well-balanced children with a strong self-image and little trouble adjusting to new or demanding situations.

 

 

This parenting style offers children structure and discipline within a forgiving, nurturing and supportive environment, allowing them to thrive at their own pace. Highly responsive, while not overprotective, parents allow children to discover and grow their natural abilities instead of trying to have them fit a mold.

GOOD PUPPY Child Behavioral Tools allow for the establishment and maintenance of structure and discipline. The system quickly becomes second nature, giving children a sense of autonomy. The Child Behavioral Emotions Tools help in communication and bonding from a very young age, building a closer relationship between parent and child.

 

PARENTING STYLE # 5

AUTHORITARIAN PARENTING

SOMETHING TO RECONSIDER

Expectations ••••
Responsiveness ••
Nurturing ••
Freedom •

Usually culturally passed on, Authoritarian Parenting is the style of choice for children of toxic parenting. Phrases such as “Because I told you so” are a product of this parenting style. This attitude expects children to adhere to rules without understanding them, usually driven by fear. The only thing children are learning is to respect authority and to follow orders. These children’s minds are not being nurtured. Without information nor the education on decision-making, these children are not learning to use critical thinking. Their frontal lobes are not being trained and this will only prepare them to look for figures of authority to make decisions for them.

 

 

Verbal and sometimes physical abuse can be present in this one-sided, totalitarian and emotionally neglecting upbringing. Children will usually rebel by teenage years, rarely developing a loving family relationship.

What we lived and learned is what we have acquired to pass on. Avoiding our parents’ trespasses, while transmitting that which served us well, is part of the filtering an adult needs to do when parenting. Jumping from Authoritarian to Permissive Parenting will only create a new and different set of problems. A parent, consciously aware of his or her authoritarian upbringing, would be better off looking for balance through a more supportive and nurturing parenting style, such as Authoritative Parenting or Wiki Parenting.

The GOOD PUPPY Child Behavioral System can bring some much needed peace, reduce violent situations and help create a more stable environment for children being raised under this highly demanding parenting style.

The use of GOOD PUPPY Child Behavioral Emotions Tools can help not only children but also parents, understand their emotions and reactions a little bit better. The more conscious parents are of their own actions and their repercussions, the more aware they will be when choosing the parenting style that best fits their child’s unique personality.

 

PARENTING STYLE # 6

WIKI PARENTING

A SOMETIMES EXHAUSTING BUT REWARDING STYLE

Expectations •••
Responsiveness •••••
Nurturing ••••
Freedom •••

Consistency creates stability and is a key factor for building the solid structure children seek. Imagine that structure as an invisible house. If you tell the child that the door is here, the window is there, and where the walls are, the child can imagine the invisible house and play along. The clearer you make that invisible house, the easier it will be for children to adjust to it and find their place within it. If you start changing the position of the walls, the door and the window, children will not be able to keep re-imagining the house in order to follow the changing parameters and, eventually, the house will crumble.

 

 

In Wiki Parenting, any question deserves an answer and no question gets judged. The length and detail in which to go into should be tied to Active Listening. Answer the child to the point that he or she understands. Learn when to stop and don’t bore them with details. If you watch and listen, they will let you know when they’re happy with the answer and when enough is enough.

Wiki Parents are always open to explain new words, new concepts, new ideas, why the sun is yellow or why we need to wear clothes. Do not confuse this approach with Permissive Parenting. An explanation does not mean rules don’t apply. Rules are not imposed; they are well explained and understood.

A Wiki Parent provides all the information required by the child to agree to behavior changes in order to give him or her the best chance to cooperate and all the tools to build a healthy code of ethics.

The GOOD PUPPY Child Cognitive Behavioral System is the perfect companion to Wiki Parenting. The behavioral tools allow for a friendly family game of discipline while offering playful tools to create plenty of bonding opportunities. GOOD PUPPY Child Behavior Emotional

 
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