As parents, it is part of our job to direct our kids and, as needed, to confront them. Neither of these go well with yelling and frustration. If you power up, so will your child. A way to avoid such power struggle is to use active listening after directing or confronting. If your child stalls or refuses your direction, assume that there is a reason. Using active listening will help you understand where her bluster came from. The bluster is actually evidence of an emotional fever, because it's not usually like her. Active listening is your go-to when you see her emotional fever. Once her fever is calmed, you can go back to your direction or confrontation, but without the power struggle
Tools for Academic Success
Add Transition Time to your Home Schooling
Awlays start where your child is
Stay at home school made easy.
Managing Stress & Encouraging Resilience in Your Family
Budget Needs First, then Wants
Expanding Your Parenting Resources
Failure? Or Blessing in Disguise
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What You Pay Attention to Grows
Be Aware of School and Social Influences on Your Child
Developmental Stage Influence on Parenting
Building Character--Who Will Your Child Become
Choose Process over Outcome
Parental Respect Is Earned
Helping Your Child Thru Transitions
Number 1 of Top 10 Parenting Tips
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Ahh, That New Bundle of Joy
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