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Today I was working with one
of my clients and we were looking at the issue of helping young
children deal with their frustrations. She was telling me how
her little boy became so frustrated that he would bite himself.
Toddlers often find dealing with their emotions really difficult
because they are developing new skills. Sometimes they can't
find the words to express themselves or they have difficulty
mastering a skill because they lack the physical dexterity required
for completing some tasks. We need to understand why children
have tantrums and change our attitude to them because tantrums
are a horribly normal part of child development. I remember feeling
embarrassed and annoyed when my daughter went through the terrible
three's stage. When I realised why the tantrums were occurring
I was able to minimise them. I noticed her tantrums were usually
pent up frustration so I began to teach her how to deal with
her emotions. Helping children to deal with their emotions is
a valuable life skill that many raging adults have not learnt
during childhood.
There are many ways in which
we can teach our children how to deal with their emotions. Here
are two effective techniques: Firstly we can name the feelings
for them. For example I could say, 'Ryan its frustrating when
the pencil keeps slipping out of your hand.'
Secondly we can teach them how
to use the traffic lights technique. This simple technique works
really well. You draw traffic light on a piece of card, the symbols
are red - intense feeling, yellow - getting calmer, and green
- content or happy. you would ask your child to point to a colour
on the traffic light that demonstrated how angry, sad, frustrated
he was feeling. Lets take the example of Ryan. I'd ask Ryan to
show we on the traffic light how frustrated he was feeling. He
would point to red. I'd say to Ryan, 'Right now you are feeling
really frustrated.' He'd probably point to the red light on the
traffic lights. I'd then encourage Ryan to work on feeling calm
again. I would ask Ryan to pretend that there were five candles
in front of him and ask him to try blowing the imaginary candles
out. I would observe his response until I could see that he was
becoming calmer. Then I'd ask him to show me again on the traffic
light how he was feeling. We'd carry on blowing imaginary candles
until he was back to green on the traffic light.
Finally when Ryan was in a calmer
frame of mind I would teach him how to deal with his emotions
in a constructive manner. By asking open-ended or multiple choice
questions a child can learn how to express his emotions. Helping
children deal with their feelings eventually reduces tantrums
and empowers them for life.
Copyright 2006 Living Your Best
Life
Henri Joyce teaches effective
parenting at the University of Masters, facilitates teleclasses
and parenting workshops. She also offers one-to-one and group
coaching. For more transformational parenting techniques and
to claim some valuable downloads, you can subscribe to her popular
newsletter at http://www.effectiveparenting.co.uk
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