5
Secret to Love Your Child Unconditionally
"Try
to see your child as a seed that came in a packet without a label. Your job is to provide the right environment
and nutrients and to pull the weeds. You
can’t decide what kind of flower you’ll get or in which season it will
bloom." - Anonymous
Unconditional
love isn't just what we feel. It's what
the object of our love feels: love without strings attached. That means our child doesn't have to be, or
do, anything in particular to earn our love.
We love her exactly as she is.
A tall
order, since most of us have a little list of things we want "fixed"
in our child.
"If
only he'd be nicer to his sister....When will she use the potty?.... He's so
timid and needy... I just want her to sleep through the night...He's great, but
I would have loved a daughter this time....She argues with everything I say;
why does she have to be so strong-willed?...Why does he lose everything?! He
drives me crazy!
It's true,
our children can drive us crazy. But can
you imagine feeling like you just aren't good enough, the way you are? That's not what any of us want for our
child. And the paradox is, it's hard for
any of us to change when we feel defensive. That goes doubly for a child, who
feels more threatened by our disapproval. When your child feels unconditionally
loved, he's more likely to blossom. And you're more likely to see change.
So what can
you do to accept your child unconditionally?
Start with these five habits.
1.
Appreciate your child’s "weaknesses."
Everyone has traits that take special effort to manage. But it gets easier if you remember that human
"weaknesses" can be understood as the flip side of our
strengths. For instance, a child might
be incredibly stubborn, arguing with her parents to get what she wants until
she simply wears them down. While that trait is hard to live with, the flip
side of the trait is dogged persistence.
This is the kind of persistence that will serve this child well if she
grows up to be a scientist, a novelist, and attorney.... indeed, almost any
profession would be served by such persistence.
If this is
our child, we can help her understand that her persistence is an asset, but can
also drive others crazy and make them angry at her. She needs to learn to modulate it and use it,
rather than letting it control her. Helping children to know themselves well
and to manage themselves to best meet their overall goals is one of the most
helpful gifts any parent can give a child.
2. Grieve.
Maybe you wanted a boy but you got a girl.
Maybe you wanted a quiet, cooperative child but you got an exuberant
live wire. Maybe your child has special
challenges that make parenting extra tough.
Maybe you're just sorry she got that tangly curly mop instead of your
silken mane. If there's something you wish were different about your child, he
or she is likely to sense it. The
understanding may not be in words, but in some visceral sense of not being good
enough. The solution is to let yourself
feel those feelings, and grieve. Let it go. Grief burns, but it cleanses the
psyche and helps us make peace with what is. From there, we can embrace our
actual child, not some idea of who he or she should be.
3. See your child's "faults" from your
child's point of view. Naturally, we
assume we're right....which makes our child wrong. But we could see it another way, a way that
is actually much closer to reality: All
"misbehavior" from your child is an SOS. Under your child's
misbehavior there is always a reason, an upset feeling or unmet need. Address that underlying reason, not the
behavior, and you'll see a change in your child -- because you answered her
SOS.
Maybe he'd
be nicer to his sister if he wasn't worried that he's lost his special place in
your heart, and what he needs is more connection to you.
Maybe she
gets so involved in her play that she forgets all about the potty; you've been
using one for years but this is all new to her -- and it sure doesn't seem as
important as whatever she's involved with at the moment. (Might be time to try
one of those potty watches made for kids.)
Maybe she'd stop
arguing if you acknowledged her upset with empathy, so she didn't have to shout
to feel heard. ("I hear how disappointed you are about this,
Sweetie...")
Maybe he
needs your help to learn some better strategies to keep track of things so he
doesn't lose them.
When
children act out, they're telling us -- in the only way they can at that moment
-- that they need our help. When we see
things from our child's point of view,
misbehavior is suddenly comprehensible, forgivable. The blocks to love melt away, and our love
becomes unconditional.
4. Accept Feelings, Limit Behavior. Empathy is unconditional love in
action. Your child feels understood and
accepted, even while his actions are contained.
Reconnect, empathize, and invite him to trust you with the deeper
feelings driving the behavior: “I won't
let you hit me. You must be very upset. What’s going on, Sweetie?”
Listen.
Breathe. Teach emotional intelligence: "She knocked over your tower and
you worked so hard on it, you're mad!"
"You're so disappointed that we can't stay and have dessert at the
restaurant, huh?"
Remember,
empathizing with his anger doesn't mean you endorse his hitting. And acknowledging her strategy for meeting
her need doesn't mean you have to meet her need in the way she's asking. For instance, some sweetness from you might
meet the same need as that dessert.
And empathy
doesn't mean you don't address the behavior.
Later, when everyone is calm, reinforce any limits as necessary and talk
about other ways to handle the situation: “I know it’s hard to stay calm when
your sister knocks over your tower, but you know hitting hurts and it's not
okay. Next time, what could you do instead of hitting her? Let's practice.”
5. Manage
Your Anger. Unconditional love means the
child feels the parent's love without the requirement of the child doing
anything at all -- including behaving.
Did he hit
his little sister? Did she scream
"I hate you!" and slam the door? Did he throw a toy at your
head? Did she throw a fit in the
restaurant? It's hard to feel love for
our kids when they're driving us crazy.
So we lose it. Of course, we know we love them, no matter what. But if you ask the kid, he or she doesn't
feel loved at that moment.
"Of
course!" we might say. "We
WANT her to know how mad we are!! She
can feel our love later!"
But will
your rage really teach your child the lesson you want to teach? When kids misbehave, the most effective
intervention is setting a calm, clear limit and then loving our child through
his upset. When we indulge our anger,
we're modeling inappropriate behavior for our child. And kids do misinterpret our anger. At the best, they assume they're bad people
who can never be good enough. (At worst,
you'd be amazed how many children secretly fear we'll send them to jail or get
a new kid.)
Heavy
lifting? Yes. It does takes daily
practice to build this kind of heart muscle. But there's nothing as rewarding.
These five habits will bring you and your child closer, her behavior will
improve dramatically, and for the rest of her life, she will know that she's
more than enough, exactly as she is.
That's being well and truly loved. Unconditionally.

wow' wonderful.
ReplyDelete