Your Baby – July 2019

(Dana P.) #1

20 | JULY & AUGUST 2019


Image: Gallo Images/Getty Images

DO WE WANT to teach our kids to obey
us? Is that what we think discipline
is about? Perhaps we could consider
another strategy, says Gail Friend, neuro-
linguistic programming practitioner and
life coach.
“Discipline is not only about managing
what you see as misbehaviour. It’s about
every interaction you have with your
child. It is having a communication
structure in your home that can be used
as a frame of reference to teach your
children how to think and self-manage,”
Gail says.
The experts say discipline is really
about guidance. It is a way to keep
children safe as they find out about
the world. They need to learn how to
manage their feelings, impulses and


Giving meaning


to discipline


actions, so they can learn and get on
with others. Discipline is also about
helping children learn the values that are
important to your family.

DON’T GIVE CHILDREN LABELS
Teaching your children to make good
choices because they want to do the right
thing and not just to avoid punishment
develops true self-discipline.
Sure, it can be frustrating when you’ve
asked your three-year-old to put on their
shoes for the third time, or when your
18-month-old decides to scribble on the
wall (again!). But, does it help to label
them naughty?
Young children’s perceptions about
fantasy and reality are not fully
developed, their world revolves around

themselves, and they don’t quite
understand consequences or morality yet.
This does not make them bad or naughty.
It is up to us as parents to teach them and
focus our communication on what we
want them to learn rather than labelling
them as “good” or “bad”, believes Gail.
“When they are defiant, pushing
boundaries and insisting on their own
way, is this really misbehaviour?
“It may feel like that, but it is part
of their developmental phase of
developing initiative.
“Learning how to facilitate this is
the answer. Again, the focus of our
communication needs to be on what we
want them to learn about the situation
rather than on their actual behaviour,”
Gail advises.

Disciplining a toddler can feel like


a battle of wills. Looking at it from


a new perspective may be the answer to


your drama, writes Lori Cohen

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