Aug
29
2016

Teaching Our Children About Truth, Kindness, and the Reality of Being Nice

Can We Handle It?

Teaching Our Children About Truth, Kindness, and the Reality of Being Nice

The Truth About Truth and Kindness

I recently read a post by Elizabeth Gilbert author of Eat Pray Love about the lessons she struggled to learn regarding being nice over telling people a needed truth. She explains in withholding truth you are demeaning or infantilizing people and keeping them from important growth.

As a therapist I often have to expose difficult realities and although I try to be gentle in my approach the insights can be hard to swallow for the recipient. I have the benefit of a therapeutic relationship, cultivated trust, and the fact that people are often seeking truth by entering therapy. But even in these relationships — and of course in my personal life — I've been guilty of choosing kindness over truth in my support of someone. It is sometimes out of politeness, fear of hurting someone, fear of being rejected, and it is even a bit cultural — we Canadians are known for our niceness. Think of the times you have nodded emphatically with your friend over her misplaced anger towards her partner, workplace, neighbour...., and therefore, failing to help her take responsibility for her own glaring part in the situation.

With parenting, we want our kids to learn to tell the truth but we really want them to be nice, don't we? As Gilbert once learned from her ethics professor, "Most of us grew up in families where our parents demanded the truth, but they couldn't deal with it... and so we all learn how to lie." As it turns out, we can't handle the truth. So when our kids share that they find their judo teacher mean, they don't want to play with the other kids, or that we yell too much.... it all becomes silenced. The fact is that the judo teacher isn't addressing students respectfully and it needs to be said, that those kids are too rough and are acting mean spirited, or that we are yelling too much and should look at that. Only practicing kindness when the truth is needed is like sticking your head in the sand. Rachel Simmons, author of Odd Girl Out says that “when kindness comes at the expense of truth, it is not a kindness worth having...”.

The truth is hard to share but we need to teach our kids about this complex subject and help them be kind while honouring truth.

WHERE TO START:

  • Encourage critical thinking skills and assessments of situations with self, friends and even adults
  • Don't make your kids hug people they don't want to hug
  • Think carefully about your child's NO, what it means to them and how you can support them
  • Let them be themselves without guilting them to be someone they aren't
  • Celebrate problem-solving, sharing insights and speaking up
  • Teach Emotional Intelligence

THE OBJECTIVES:

  • Healthy boundaries in relationships
  • Authentic friendships with substance
  • Letting go from the unrealistic expectations of others
  • The ability to begin and end relationships in a healthy honest way (thinking of the on and off again dragged out break ups that this could save)
  • Saying “no” and feeling okay about it
  • Learning and practicing important safety of listening to our instincts and not choosing a perceived kindness/politeness over a gut feeling that says the situation is uncomfortable or dangerous

Many of us are still trying to learn these lessons in our 40s. My Mom has felt some liberation in her 60s about having better boundaries with more self-protective truths and she wishes she learned to say a healthy no earlier in her life.

The applications are endless and important to ponder. Kindness is of course important, as Gilbert says both truth and kindness are “top-notch, A-grade, golden ticket qualities.” Make kindness and truth part of your mantra but when they struggle to co-exist, think beyond the moment and what will be the most beneficial, you will find you often land on the fact that the kindness resides in the truth.

I also provide free relationship tips and articles on my Facebook page and on my website. You can also follow me on Twitter and join the conversation about healthy living and healthy relationships.

 RELATED: Why We All Need Love and Compassion

Aug
01
2016

The "Homework" You Should Be Working On Over The Break

This is a bigger predictor of success in life than academic or SAT scores

The "Homework" You Should Be Working On Over The Break

This is a bigger predictor of success in life than academic or SAT scores. | Parenting | YummyMummyClub.ca

We live in a busy society. I know I am not alone when I feel guilty for having down time. I think I should be doing something. This fear of sitting still can also be projected onto our kids, and not enough value is placed on having a true break. Homework over the break is used as a measure to ward off idle hands, brains, etc. However, hammering the books is the last thing my teacher friends suggest over the summer. They want the kids in their classes to enjoy and experience a break and the experts agree with so many cautions being written about the over-scheduled child.

Perhaps it is the type of work we are encouraging. If there is to be homework this summer, don't let it be times tables and memorization; try working on activities that increase your child's emotional intelligence; their ability to be aware, understand and control their emotions and understand and awareness of those of others. This is truly the people growing lessons but sadly declining skills. The skills of empathy, self-regulation, problem-solving strategies and impulse control are very important, in fact self-regulation alone is a bigger predictor of success in life than academic or SAT scores. In Dr. Michelle Borba's book, Unselfie: Why Empathetic Kids Succeed in Our All-About-Me World, she states that loneliness, stress, depression, anxiety, bullying, cheating and racism increases when empathy wanes. The good news is that all of these skills for life can be taught and incorporated into things you are already doing and easily practiced.

Six Easy Ways to Practice Emotional Intelligence:

1. Openly discuss that feelings have ranges.  As a school social worker, I have used this activity with students, but it is easy to use at home; simply ask your child to give different names for primary emotions. Angry could inspire words like mad, frustrated, irritated, furious, etc. Do the same for sad, happy, and scared. This helps kids evaluate the degree they were feeling that emotion and a greater vocabulary to discuss feelings.

2. Watch the movie Inside Out with your kids and discuss feelings, how we control them, and how emotions can be mixed like bitter sweet.

3. Show a balance in your own emotions. Emotions are neither good or bad. Model this yourself! Grinning and bearing all activities might not help our kids learn to express their negative feelings in a healthy way. Our kids pick up on our disingenuous enthusiasm and suppressing the negative feelings isn't good for our us or our health. Since we don't want to raise inauthentic kids we have to be honest and healthy in our expressions and not try and fake it through summer activities. Author Ann Douglas suggests finding what you do like about an event that doesn't focus on your suffering. For example, perhaps you enjoy watching your kids have fun at the kids birthday party or treasure their effort and tenacity on the weekend long soccer tournament.

4. Read and relate. This is an easy way to help kids grow in their empathy skills and emotional comprehension. Pick a book with some emotional context, talk about the perspectives of the characters, how they can relate and what they would do if it was them. You can do this for movies, for people watching or family interactions. Author Amy McCready of The Me, Me, Me Epidemic suggests encouraging older children to become teachers and mentors. One idea might be a camp counsellor.This helps your child work on understanding their students perspective in order to properly teach the subject or get buy in on the activities. 

5. Play is an excellent place to work on a myriad of skills including working on empathy, working through emotions and problems solving. Games like red light, green light help kids practice controlling themselves, but changing up the rules and making green stop, helps kids additionally practice going against the known habit. Interrupting a habit is a huge skill, just ask any of us trying to quit something or change a behaviour. Also make time for unstructured play which is additionally important in developing these skills.

6. When it comes to extra sibling time together over the summer months, conflicts can arise and when it does, make sure you coach not referee. When the conflict comes to you use this simple technique suggested by parenting educator and author Sandy Blackard: listen, describe each point and then turn the problem-solving over to them.This provides a learning opportunity for the children to hear from another's perspective and solve their own problems together without your intervention.

This is the homework to practice over the break. Developing emotional intelligence will serve your child well for life giving them range, problem solving skills, empathy, and self control.

RELATED: Holding it Together When Your World is Falling Apart

I also provide free relationship tips and articles on my Facebook page and on my website. You can also follow me on Twitter and join the conversation about healthy living and healthy relationships.