When we all got together, we talked about how we have plenty of problems ourselves, we don't need to take on our kids problems. I wanted to address this further. Love and Logic has two basic rules. These two rules are gold. They are:
- Adults must set firm, loving limits using enforceable statements without showing anger, lecturing, or using threats.
- When a child causes a problem, the adult shows empathy through sadness and sorrow and then lovingly hands the problem and its consequences back to the child.
I talked in the first blog post about anger. I've been reading more on the
Orange Rhino site and I love it. There are so many great strategies to help through when you get angry so you don't yell. The next step after not getting angry, is to figure out how to let your child own their own problem. That is how to move something from a problem to, as Love and Logic calls it, a "significant learning opportunity." (a SLO)
Sometimes it is easy to come up with how to make a learning opportunity happen. A child forgets their homework, instead of getting mad at them and then rescuing them by taking it to school for them, they deal with the consequences of not having their homework at school. Other times it is a little harder to come up with the logical consequence of something your child did. If a child doesn't clean up something we ask, we are faced with a choice. Get mad at them or find a way to make it the kids problem. I love the idea of doing the job for them, or having another child do the job and then they have to reimburse me or the other child for our labor.
As some of us are entering the age where our kids will be out at night doing things with friends, I like that now thanks to Love and Logic I have a plan to deal with curfew. We discussed this on Saturday, but I thought I would write it down for us to refer to later and refresh ourselves.
The plan for our family will be that there is not a curfew. We will have a quick discussion with our kid about what time to expect them home based on the activity for the night. If there is a change in the activity or location we expect communication. A text is fine, but they need to expect a response text verifying that what they have proposed as a new location and/or time is acceptable. If our child will be home after we go to bed, we will be setting an alarm on our phone, which will be on our dresser. When the child comes home, before the alarm, they will quietly come in and turn it off. If the alarm wakes us we of course have to deal with a broken agreement. The child will soon find out that the next time they make evening plans, we can't let them go. We need our sleep, and because we can't trust them to be home in time to turn off the alarm, they just won't be able to go out this evening.
It is going to be fun to watch how we all navigate this. It sure feels good to be doing it proactively, and in a way that is less stressful. There is something very freeing about hoping your kid makes a mistake so that they can learn from it! Thanks for going along this journey with me ladies!