Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Eeny, meeny, miny, moe,
Catch a tiger by the toe.
If he hollers, let him go,
Eeny, meeny, miny, moe.
      (a popular children's counting rhyme, used to select a person to be "it" for games)

        和中国的锤子剪子布一样,这首流行的美国童谣真是解决小朋友纠纷的好东西,虽然终极的公平还有待监管,但起码它体现了公平的标尺,提供了简单易行的公平的平台,大多数时候小朋友还是欣然接受的。这两天哥哥妹妹对这歌谣钟情不已,连挑个球挑根铅笔都要叨叨一遍。哥哥是个实诚孩子,有一是一,妹妹可就小滑头了,为了最后停在自己中意的选项上,最后一句基本上就是嘴动手不动了,于是这样就名正言顺地得到了自己想要的东西。

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

8th Anniversary

Candle, music, wine and bubble bath ... 8th Anniversary ...

有孩子了难得有机会浪漫,浪漫都变得羞涩,不像从前那么自如了,看来还得经常演习。

老公问我,在一起十三年了,如今的生活是你当初想要的吗?

我说,当初我没想过未来要任何一种生活,只想过要什么样的一个人。人在,家在,一箪食,一瓢饮,不改其乐。

切,真以为自己是颜回啊!

好吧,只要这八年抗战胜利之后不是开始内战 :-)

介个就算是我们的 Anniversary Gift 吧!撒下一些音符的种子,有一天也许会开出几朵可人的小花!
Baldwin Ellington 396 Grand

Thursday, May 24, 2012

谁帮谁的忙?

        晚上睡觉之前,两个小朋友一人守一个大洗衣筐,干劲十足地挂妈妈刚给他们洗好的衣服。地上衣架堆了一堆,已经撑好的衣服另一堆,妈妈坐在中间叠裤子袜子,顺带吆喝叫好搭把手。爸爸路过,面露喜色,不吝赞扬两个宝宝帮妈妈干活。“停!夸错了!”妈妈立马纠正,不要搞错,“要夸宝宝会自己叠衣服,妈妈是在帮他们的忙!”

      “爸爸,你的衣服是你自己叠吗?”爸爸落荒而逃:-)

Friday, May 18, 2012

Ten Keys to Successful Parenting (ZT)

It is important that we discipline in a way that teaches responsibility by motivating our children internally, to build their self-esteem and make them feel loved. If our children are disciplined in this respect, they will not have a need to turn to gangs, drugs, or sex to feel powerful or belong.
The following ten keys will help parents use methods that have been proven to provide children with a sense of well-being and security.

1 – Use Genuine Encounter Moments (GEMS)

Your child’s self-esteem is greatly influenced by the quality of time you spend with him-not the amount of time that you spend. With our busy lives, we are often thinking about the next thing that we have to do, instead of putting 100% focused attention on what our child is saying to us. We often pretend to listen or ignore our child’s attempts to communicate with us. If we don’t give our child GEMS throughout the day, he will often start to misbehave. Negative attention in a child’s mind is better than being ignored.

It is also important to recognize that feelings are neither right nor wrong. They just are. So when your child says to you, “Mommy, you never spend time with me” (even though you just played with her) she is expressing what she feels. It is best at these times just to validate her feelings by saying, “Yeah, I bet it does feel like a long time since we spent time together.”

2 – Use Action, Not Words

Statistics say that we give our children over 2000 compliance requests a day! No wonder our children become “parent deaf!” Instead of nagging or yelling, ask yourself, “What action could I take?” For example, if you have nagged your child about unrolling his socks when he takes them off, then only wash socks that are unrolled. Action speaks louder than words.

3 – Give Children Appropriate Ways to Feel Powerful

If you don’t, they will find inappropriate ways to feel their power. Ways to help them feel powerful and valuable are to ask their advice, give them choices, let them help you balance your check book, cook all our part of a meal, or help you shop. A two-year-old can wash plastic dishes, wash vegetables, or put silverware away. Often we do the job for them because we can do it with less hassle, but the result is they feel unimportant.

4 – Use Natural Consequences

Ask yourself what would happen if I didn’t interfere in this situation? If we interfere when we don’t need to, we rob children of the chance to learn from the consequences of their actions. By allowing consequences to do the talking, we avoid disturbing our relationships by nagging or reminding too much. For example, if your child forgets her lunch, you don’t bring it to her. Allow her to find a solution and learn the importance of remembering.

5 – Use Logical Consequences

Often the consequences are too far in the future to practically use a natural consequence. When that is the case, logical consequences are effective. A consequence for the child must be logically related to the behavior in order for it to work. For example, if your child forgets to return his video and you ground him for a week, that punishment will only create resentment within your child. However, if you return the video for him and either deduct the amount from his allowance or allow him to work off the money owed, then your child can see the logic to your discipline.

6 – Withdraw from Conflict

If your child is testing you through a temper tantrum, or being angry or speaking disrespectfully to you, it is best if you leave the room or tell the child you will be in the next room if he wants to “Try again.” Do not leave in anger or defeat.

7 – Seperate the Deed from the Doer

Never tell a child that he is bad. That tears at his self-esteem. Help your child recognize that it isn’t that you don’t like him, but it is his behavior that you are unwilling to tolerate. In order for a child to have healthy self-esteem, he must know that he is loved unconditionally no matter what he does. Do not motivate your child by withdrawing your love from him. When in doubt, ask yourself, did my discipline build my child’s self-esteem?

8 – Be Kind and Firm at the Same Time

Suppose you have told your five-year-old child that if she isn’t dressed by the time the timer goes off, you will pick her up and take her to the car. She has been told she can either get dressed either in the car or at school. Make sure that you are loving when you pick her up, yet firm by picking her up as soon as the timer goes off without any more nagging. If in doubt, ask yourself, did I motivate through love or fear?

9 – Parent with the End in Mind

Most of us parent with the mindset to get the situation under control as soon as possible. We are looking for the expedient solution. This often results in children who feel overpowered. But if we parent in a way that keeps in mind how we want our child to be as an adult, we will be more thoughtful in the way we parent. For example, if we spank our child, he will learn to use acts of aggression to get what he wants when he grows up.

10 – Be Consistent, Follow Through

If you have made an agreement that your child cannot buy candy when she gets to the store, do not give in to her pleas, tears, demands or pouting. Your child will learn to respect you more if you mean what you say.


http://positiveparenting.com/BePositive/ten-keys-to-successful-parenting/