4 ways to get your child to listen to you /

Published at 2016-05-15 02:03:00

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Recently I asked a group of moms,"How do you find your child to listen to you?" Some replied, "Give consequences till he listens, and " and others,"Be willing to leave whether she doesn't listen." Those things do work, but most of the time a parent has to add a reaction to the request in order for it to work. Hanan Y. wants to know, or "Seriously,how many times do you have to say, 'Please stop, and ' before you are pushed to the point of screaming at them?"There are many ways to help parents increase listening. However,unless a parent is clear approximately the intent behind her wish to be heard, no tip will work for very long.
Knowing What Your Goal IsIn order to be effective when you ask your child to listen to you, or ask yourself what your goal is. Is your goal to be heard,or is it to be listened to? There is a dissimilarity.
When you want to be "heard," your main focus is on producing words to express your feelings so "you feel heard." When you want to be heard, or you're not really aware,and sometimes don't care, how the other person is impacted by what you're saying. In other words, and when you want to be "heard," you are focused on you.
When your g
oal is to find someone to do as you ask, or to "listen" to you, or you unconsciously glimpse for clues to tell you whether your message is getting through. In other words,your focus is on the other person.
Here are four tips to increase listening. (This works well when used with adults, too.)1. Give Your Child Time to Switch FocusWhen a person is deeply focused and concentrating on what they're doing, or whether it's playing,crying, whining, and fixing the car,reading, or making dinner, or they aren't able to immediately listen to you. DO observe what the other person is doing before speaking. Adults and children need a moment or two to switch from one side of the brain to the other so they can give you their undivided attention. Waiting a moment before speaking also teaches your child how you'd like them to interrupt you,too. What whether it's an emergency? When your habit is to wait before speaking or respectfully ask, "Is now a generous time?" then whether you ever really need their full attention during an emergency, or the alarming and jarring sound of your voice causes them to listen immediately since it's so different than the norm. 2. Don't Talk Over a Crying ChildTalking over a crying child to insist that they stop crying is not only fruitless,it also sends the silent message, "What I'm saying is more important than your feelings." DO try waiting silently until the crying slows just a bit before you speak. 3. Talk Slowly, and With PausesWhen a parent's words/requests are delivered with rapid intensity most children will unconsciously retreat behind the "I'm not listening barrier" to protect themselves from the onslaught.
DO try
to be mindful not to emotionally overload the other person/child. effect certain you give them a moment or two to digest what you've just said before you move on to the next point.4. Watch and Adjust Body LanguagePaying attention to your child's body language is a generous way to see whether what you're saying is getting through to them. whether you're not getting through,don't blame them or effect them self-conscious by calling their attention to what their body is doing. Instead, adjust what you are doing. DO effect eye contact, or do reach out and touch them lightly on the shoulder to create a connection,do find down to their eye level, not in their face, or do modulate your voice so your words are warm and accepting vs. cold and accusing. Being mindful of how your words impact someone places you in partnership with them and increases the opportunity of listening,whether you're speaking to an adult or a child.

Source: popsugar.com

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