Calmer, Easier, Happier Parenting cover

Calmer, Easier, Happier Parenting

by Noël Janis-Norton

Self-Help
BOOK INFOGRAPHIC Calmer, Easier, Happier Parenting by Noël Janis-Norton TL;DR Replace nagging and punishment with five evidence-basedtools. KEY THEMES ParentingCommunicationRelationshipsDiscipline 28 min read 6 sections Parents seeking... When we continue to do things for our children that theycould do for themselves, we rob them of opportunities tobecome self-reliant and confident.

The Book in Three Sentences

The Five Big Ideas

Calmer, Easier, Happier Parenting Key Concepts

Calmer, Easier, Happier Parenting Summary

The basic premise of Calmer, Easier, Happier Parenting is thatour main job as parents is to transfer the values, skills and habits that are important.

Over the years, Noël has asked parents from around the globe what values, skills and habits they want their children to develop. Regardless of geographical location, culture, religion or socioeconomic differences, these same five qualities are always mentioned:

The first of these five foundation habits—cooperation—is the gateway into the other four habits.

Until children are cooperating, they won’t be willing to do things for themselves (self-reliance) or to be polite most of the time (consideration) or to try new things (confidence) or to stick at a task even when it’s difficult (motivation).

It’s our job to teach our children how to do many things, and then, over time and with enough practice, the skills became habits.

The more we try to make children do things our way, the more we annoy our children and cause them to resent us and resist us.

Descriptive Praise

In all her years of working with families, Noël has foundDescriptive Praise to be the single most powerful strategy for motivating children to want to cooperate and do their best.

Descriptive Praise means noticing and then specifically describing what your child has done that pleases you.

What is effective for increasing motivation and the willingness to take on challenges is focusing praise on the child’s effort, on what the child has done, not on an ability he can’t control or on the final result. (Carol Dweck discusses this at length in her book,Mindset).

Descriptive Praise is about noticing and commenting on exactly what your child has done that is right or just okay, or even what he hasn’t done wrong.

Examples of Descriptive Praise for small steps in the right direction:

Start noticing whenever your child is not doing the annoying habit, and Descriptively Praise the absence of that negative behavior.

A useful strategy when your child does something annoying is to wait a few seconds. As soon as your child stops, or even pauses for breath, jump in with Descriptive Praise.

For total positive effect, turn your Descriptive Praise sentences into paragraphs.

Descriptive Praise becomes even more powerful when you can summarise what you have noticed by mentioning a quality.

A useful way to start a Descriptive Praise sentence is with the words, “I notice…” Children perk their ears up when they hear us saying “I notice…” because that’s not the language we generally use when we are correcting or reprimanding. So when we say ‘I notice’ they soon expect to hear something nice about themselves, and it motivates them to listen.

Focus most of your Descriptive Praise on the habits your children haven’t mastered yet.

How to motivate your child so that you see more of the behavior you want and less of the annoying behavior:

Be sure to address your child’s whingey, impatient or disrespectful tone of voice, even if the words he is saying are reasonable.

Preparing for Success

A think-through is a powerful technique for helping our children remember and follow our rules and routines. It maximises the likelihood of your child cooperating by fixing the expectation or rule in his long-term memory.

A think-through is different from a reminder in two important ways: A think-through happens before the misbehavior occurs. In a think-through, your child is the one doing the talking, not you.

Here are the basic think-through steps for helping your child remember and take seriously an existing rule or routine. Instead of waiting until your child breaks or ignores the rule, we need to be proactive and address the issue with a think-through earlier in the day.

Tips for effective think-throughs:

An ongoing problem needs an ongoing solution. So be willing to do several think-throughs a day for a week or so, especially if you have a child who is often uncooperative or who has a more inflexible temperament.

Examples of think-through questions:

To prevent problems, do think-throughs about the right way to behave. Do the think-throughs at neutral times, long before anything has had a chance to go wrong.

Having clear rules and expectations is another key aspect of Preparing for Success.

Before you can make a new rule to address a family problem, the first step is to get clear within ourselves exactly what we want the new rule to be.

If you have a partner, you need to become a United Front. You both need to agree about what the rules will be and we call this becoming a United Front.

You can change rules any time you need to.

Using think-throughs to establish a new rule:

Instead of explaining the reasons for the new rule, respond with, “That’s a good question. Why do you think we’re making this new rule?”

If your child repeats that he doesn’t know the reason for the new rule, ask him to take a guess.

One important way we can Prepare for Success is to put some time, thought and action into preparing our children’s environment.

Having a list or chart that you can point to is an effective way of preparing the environment to help children remember the rules and routines. Visual reminders can keep you from falling into the trap of repeating yourself.

In her seminars, Noël tells parents that there are four things she wants them to never again say to their children. Those four things are: “Come on,” “Hurry up,” “Let’s go,” “We’ll be late.”

Special Time is most effective when it is frequent and predictable and labeled as that so that your child can expect it. One-on-one Special Time helps your child want to cooperate. It also awakens in your child the desire to imitate the positive habits and qualities and values of that parent.

No matter how busy or stressed you are, you need to set aside even ten minutes a day for Special Time with your child.

The most basic aspect of a United Front is not arguing in front of the children.

Whenever there is a new routine or habit you would like your child to develop, there are many crucial questions to ask yourself about the Preparing for Success techniques. Each question refers to a separate technique.

Reflective Listening

Reflective Listening, or empathic listening as it is sometimes called, helps children move through their uncomfortable feelings more quickly and easily, towards acceptance or towards problem-solving.

The Four Steps of Reflective Listening:

Here’s a way that has helped a lot of parents to stay calmer and more positive: visualize yourself scooping up your anger or worry or disappointment with both hands and placing that uncomfortable emotion at the side of the room. Picturing this can clear your mind. And your feeling will still be there, waiting for you, if you want it back later.

Ask yourself what feeling might be driving your child to do what he’s doing or to say what he’s saying.

Tips for success in Step Three:

Giving our children their wishes in fantasy shows that we don’t only care about their behavior. We also care about their feelings.

There is an important difference between children feeling upset and children feeling unhappy.

Here are some effective ways you might phrase a Reflective Listening sentence:

To help a child move beyond the natural human tendency to blame others, we need to make sure that we discipline ourselves so that we ourselves rarely give in to the temptation to blame, accuse, tell off and threaten. We need to lead by example.

Never Ask Twice

The Never Ask Twice method is a simple and effective six-step strategy for getting your children to cooperate ninety percent of the time, the first time you give an instruction and without a fuss.

You can use the Never Ask Twice method whenever you would like your child to stop doing one thing and start doing something else.

Overview of The Six Steps:

Give a countdown whenever you sense that your child will resist your instruction.

How to Stop Misbehavior in Its Tracks

If your child asks you, “Why do I have to?” it is rarely a genuine request for information and most likely a diversionary tactic. If your instruction is a sensible one, your child will usually understand why he should do it, or he can easily figure it out for himself.

Rewards and Consequences

Consequences on their own will not motivate children to want to behave well or to remember to behave well.

Following through is all about what we do after a child does something.

The best rewards are those that are easy and quick and cost nothing.

The easiest, quickest and most effective rewards are our positive reactions to every little step in the right direction: our frequent use of Descriptive Praise.

Another easy, quick reward that reinforces the values and skills that we want our children to develop is smiling and hugging.

Here are ten examples of small rewards that work well to motivate children to improve all aspects of a child’s behaviour and schoolwork:

You can use money to reward good behaviour and good work habits.

Noël’s experience has taught her that children and teenagers who have to earn most of the extras in their life become more motivated, more appreciative and more responsible.

Noël’s recommendation is that children need to earn all or most of their pocket money.

If you choose to use pocket money as an incentive, Noël recommends giving the reward daily by marking on a chart each day the amount of money that they have earned, even if you only hand over the money once a week.

Tips for effective Rewards and Consequences

An action replay consists of you and your child replaying the scenario, but this time he does the right thing straight away, without any misbehavior or fuss.

Do action replays after any misbehavior, large or small, to give your child practice at doing the right thing.

Another effective consequence is what Noël calls sitting apart. Sitting apart is similar in some ways to a time-out, but is much more manageable.

What is the same about sitting apart and a time-out is that your child has to stay sitting in one place. His freedom of movement is temporarily curtailed. What is different between sitting apart and a time-out is that the sitting apart happens in the same room where you are.

Sitting apart is an effective consequence because children do not want to have to stay in one place.

The usual guideline is a minute for each year of the child’s age.

If the misbehavior for which you want to do a sitting apart happens in public, you can wait and do the sitting apart as soon as you get home. Or you can take your child to the car temporarily, and do the sitting apart right there.

If your young child keeps getting up from whichever part of the room you have designated as the sitting apart place, keep putting her back immediately and Descriptively Praise her a lot whenever she stays there, even for a few seconds.

Once your child has completed the sitting apart by sitting quietly until the timer goes ding, he has to tell you in his own words and in a full sentence why you gave him a sitting apart.

Remember to Descriptively Praise something about his reply.

If after the timer goes ding, your child is still so angry that he is not yet willing to speak sensibly or to do the action replay properly, just set the timer for another minute or two of sitting apart.

Getting Ready in The Mornings

Mealtimes

Start each meal for all family members with a First Plate, on which you will put tiny amounts of five to eight different foods that your child has been known to eat on occasion but does not like. The amount of each food needs to be so tiny (for example a quarter of a pea) that it has no discernible taste! Only after your child has eaten everything on his First Plate will you then give him his second plate, which is a smallish amount of whatever you have made for dinner that your child does like.

Sibling Relationships

Screen Time

Birth to three years old: Screens aren’t recommended. Three to eight years old: Up to half an hour a day in front of a screen. From eight years old through to adulthood: One hour daily of leisure screen time (except on special occasions, eg. going to the cinema or watching a football match on television).

Homework

To help children get the maximum benefit from their homework, divide each homework task into three distinct stages:

Tidying Up and Looking After Belongings

Household Chores

Playing Independently

Bedtimes and Sleep

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