Archive for April, 2008

OBAMA FOR PRESIDENT

Adrian has been really into learning letters lately.  His favorite letter right now is E, closely followed by B.  He also knows (most of the time) A, M, O, and T.  The other day we were going for a walk and Adrian saw one of those Obama for President signs in someone’s yard.  He stopped and was very excited about all those letters and especially the E’s.  He then went through all the letter is OBAMA, telling me what each one was!  Is this a sign for me as to who I should vote for?

On another note, Adrian has also really been into his stuffed animals too.  He’ll carry at least one around with him almost everywhere he goes.  He’s not particular as to which one, though he still always sleeps with monkey and polar bear.  When we’re at Julian or Linna’s Adrian loves going through all their stuffed animals before nap time and picking out the one he wants to sleep with for nap.  It’s pretty cute 🙂

“Gumma gumma”

Oh what to say…I always feel like there is so much I need to write, yet when I sit down to actually do it I can’t remember anything!  We finally got signed up for a CSA (community supported agriculture) for this summer.  A little late, but we’re in!  Starting in mid-June we’ll get to go to the urban farm on 44th and Bybee to pick up our share of vegetables for the next 22 weeks, all pre-paid for.  It is an excellent way to get our veggies in without paying a fortune, all while supporting our local farmers and being connected to our food source.  We’re very excited about this over here.

One of Adrian’s favorite things to do right now is to make up some word or sound, such as “gumma gumma”, “eebie deebie”, “boodie bodie”… and say it over and over again in a game.  He’s especially fond of doing this when I ask him to do something–brush teeth, go potty, wash hands, get jammies on, etc.  He’ll say, “NO! I want to play gumma gumma!”  It’s kind of funny actually.  I’ll just remind him that he can play “gumma gumma” and get jammies on at the same time, and that usually settles it.  He’ll frequently go through a whole string of phrases at night when we’re going to bed.  Sometimes it’s anything to stall!

Adrian is also getting much more articulate in his language skills.  He’ll now put several complete sentences together.  Like tonight when I was bugging him he said “No mama!  I don’t like that.  Don’t touch my armpit.”  It seems pretty impressive to me for a not-yet-2-year-old.  What can I say, he’s a smart kid!  He did come from me, after all 😉

A potty update and HAPPY BIRTHDAY JESSICA!!!

Yesterday was a breakthrough: Adrian told me that he had to go potty, before he was actually going!!  It was kind of funny, actually.  Adrian was sitting at his little table eating lunch and he says “Adrian no go potty on chair, me go potty in Toilet!”  So we rushed to the bathroom to go.  As I was pulling down his pants he changed his mind and wanted to finish lunch first.  So we came back out to eat some more.  Probably two minutes later he said he had to go potty again, so we went back to the toilet.  We took off his pants and he sat down, then jumped up right away saying “Me need Books!” and he ran into the living room to get a book.  We came back to the potty chair again, he sat down and read a book while he peed.  Pretty exciting.

Part 2 of this breakthrough: We were in the car at a red light a few blocks from home when Adrian tells me he has a poopy diaper.  A poopy diaper?!  For one thing, Adrian doesn’t wear diapers.  For another, he only poops standing up.  And a third, he has never before gone to the bathroom in the car.  I was a little confused.  I asked him if he had to go potty and he said yes.  As I tried to explain that we were almost home and could he please hold it, he ordered me to sing him a potty song.  My first thought was ‘great, a potty song will make him go potty’, but we turned that potty song into a holding-your-potty-until-you-get-to-the-toilet song and he peed in the potty as soon as we got inside.  One day he’ll be on his own!  I know it is in the future!  I even canceled the diaper service today 🙂

Happy Birthday Jessica!!  I’m so sorry I missed it yesterday, it was one of those things where I was thinking about it the day before, then completely forgot to call when it was time.  I hope you had the greatest day, I love you and can’t wait to see you again!

Time-ins–far more effective and loving than time-outs

THE DAILY GROOVE ~ by Scott Noelle
www.enjoyparenting.com/dailygroove

The popular “time-out” behavior management technique is less harsh than traditional forms of discipline, but it’s still a punishment — like a mini jail sentence. Time-outs usually include a shame component as well (e.g., the “Naughty Chair”).

An alternative to time-outs is what you might call a “time-in.” The purpose of a time-in is not to punish but to help the child get centered and enhance the parent-child connection:

  • Rather than being forced to go to a time-out place, the child is invited to join the parent for a time-in (although “protective use of force” may sometimes be required).
  • The parent and child go to a quiet, comfortable place and stay there together.
  • The parent uses the time-in to get centered and create a feeling of unconditional Presence and Connection, which has a calming, healing effect on the child.

In Part 2, we’ll take a closer look at the time-in process. For today, give yourself and your child a time-in “just for fun”! Establish time-in as a good thing, not a dreaded punishment.

As implied in Part 1, you must establish time-in as a positive, mutually pleasurable activity for it to become an effective parenting tool.

Don’t wait until your child is melting down to try time-in. Do “practice time-ins” when you think your child would enjoy the connection. And when you’re stressed, treat yourself to a time-in.

Use deep breathing, affirmations, or anything that helps you get centered. You might imagine that your center is like a sphere of light that expands to include your child in its glow.

Experiment with different places and ways of doing time-in. The only “right” way to do it is the way that feels best to you and your child. Focus on your state of being… Stillness. Groundedness. Presence. Openness. Connecting. Oneness.

When it goes well you might say, “That was a lovely time-in, wasn’t it?!” Your child will then associate the word “time-in” with good feelings.

In Part 3, we’ll look at how time-in can replace time-outs when dealing with “problem behavior.”

An Example Time-In

A 2-year-old boy, playing in the sand at a park, gets frustrated and throws a toy shovel at a nearby toddler. Fortunately, nobody is hurt, but the boy’s mother is understandably upset.

Until recently she would have reacted negatively, saying, “We don’t throw things at people!” and putting him in time-out on the park bench. But she’s been practicing time-in and is able to curb her reaction, knowing that time-in will restore her inner peace and effect a better long-term outcome.

As she approaches her son, she’s inwardly soothing her worries about what the other parents might be thinking: “What they think is none of my business… but at least they can see I’m doing something about it.” She takes a deep breath and puts her hand on her heart, as if to switch it on.

Then, with both arms in a gesture of invitation, she reaches out to her son and says lovingly, “Come, let’s have some time-in together.”

If he resists her invitation to time-in, she’s prepared to do whatever it takes to prevent further aggression. She might simply sit on the ground between the two children, facing her son, and begin her centering process right there! If he were “going ballistic,” she might need to physically restrain and remove him to a quiet place. In either case, she wouldn’t make him (or his behavior) “wrong”; she’d let go of all blame (including self-blame) and stay focused on the goal of restoring peace.

But today she is confident that he’ll accept her invitation with little or no resistance, because they’ve been practicing time-in, and she knows he enjoys it. She carries him away from the chaos of the playground to a nearby shade tree, where she sits on the grass and nestles him in her lap.

She doesn’t need to “teach” him that his behavior was inappropriate because she knows he doesn’t behave that way when he’s centered. All he needs to know is the importance of centering, and her actions are teaching that to him.

Since he still nurses, and nursing has always been centering for both of them, their unique time-in ritual has evolved to include nursing when he requests it (which he does). While nursing him, she’s also centering by imagining that each in-breath fills her with love and peace, and each out-breath releases fear and stress.

Relaxed, she vividly recalls some “peak experiences” in which she felt profoundly connected and empowered from within. “That Power is right here, right now, in me, and all around me, in abundance,” she affirms.

She imagines Life Energy visibly radiating from everything in her environment: the trees, the ground, the birds, her son, herself. “It’s all Energy… Everything and everyone is connected,” she thinks.

Soon her son stops nursing and gets up to explore the area around the tree. Still sitting, she leans against the tree and begins thinking of things she’s grateful for and things she appreciates about her son.

Less than five minutes have passed and her heart is overflowing with love!

None of these inner processes are “official” time-in steps; she chose them from many sources, or made them up, and kept the ones that best made her feel centered, present, expansive, empowered, and connected. She expects the routine to evolve as her son grows, and she’s begun improvising variations of time-in to resolve issues that come up with her teenager and her husband, too!

Presently, the 2-year-old looks at his mother, points to the playground, and says, “Go back now!” She sees (and feels) that he, too, is now centered and emotionally stable. She senses that the time-in has “charged his batteries” and expects that will help him interact more creatively now. So she agrees, “Yes, let’s go back!”

And All Is Well. 🙂

Follow-up Questions & Answers

I received many questions about the time-in example in Part 3. Here are some brief answers to the most frequently asked questions…

The preliminary answer to all the questions is best expressed by Albert Einstein’s famous thought: You can’t solve the problem at the level of thinking that created it.

In fact, the main purpose of time-in is to help you establish a state of mind that’s conducive to creative problem-solving. And often that state of mind IS the solution, since children tend to mirror their parents’ states.

Your natural creativity is undermined by conventional, competitive, right/wrong thinking: the view of life as a competition for scarce resources — a zero-sum game that you can’t win unless another loses.

With time-in, you release that fear-based perspective and connect with abundant Well-Being. You don’t “fix” your child, you get in touch with your Authentic Self. And when you deeply know that All Is Well, your child comes to know it, too — just by being in your Presence.

This is how great performing artists can uplift thousands of people at once. It’s how healers perform “miracles.”

Q: Isn’t time-in rewarding bad behavior?

A: No. It’s simply being kind. When you think outside the conventional box, you don’t automatically perceive unwanted behavior as “bad.” It’s like asking, “Isn’t nursing a crying baby rewarding crying?” Compassionate parents don’t consider crying to be bad, so we don’t worry that we might be rewarding it. Like crying, aggression signals a need to connect with Well-Being.

The child is always doing the best s/he can with the skills, instincts, and level of consciousness s/he has.

Q: How does the child learn that the behavior was wrong?

A: When you embrace the Creative Pleasure Principle, there’s no need to deem any behavior as “wrong,” nor to make a rule prohibiting it. Aggression simply feels unpleasant in comparison to the soulful ecstasy of loving partnership.

But aggression feels better than disempowerment, so the “aggressor” is actually trying (unskillfully) to follow pleasure back to the empowerment of partnership. The impulse is healthy; the expression needs refinement. Time-in facilitates that refinement.

Conventional thinking doesn’t trust pleasure because the culture has demonized it. Too bad, since pleasure essentially drives all of Creation.

Q: Isn’t the “victim” being neglected?

A: To keep the example simple, I wrote that nobody was hurt. Ideally, there would be other competent people on the scene (adults or older children) employing the same principles in partnership with the parent of the “aggressor.” With nobody making anyone else “wrong,” everyone’s creative energy could be focused on restoring the collective well-being.

Q: What if I have two or more kids who need time-in at the same time?

A: The question presumes that time-in is like “quality time” or “special time,” which it is not. Getting your exclusive attention isn’t the primary benefit of time-in, nor is it necessary. Your children benefit simply by being close to your “heart field” — the loving Energy you emanate as you attend to your own Center. (For more info on the heart field, click here.)

If you have additional questions or comments about Time-In, please contact me.

Adrian’s bed

Adrian is in love with his own room and his own little bed in there.  He always naps in his bed when he’s home and lately has been wanting to go to sleep in there at night too.  He’s never actually slept in there at night because he’s always been to excited about it to fall asleep!  Last night though, he did it.  He cried when I tried to take him to bed in our bed, saying “Adrian’s bed, Adrian’s bed in my room…”  So we put him to bed in his own bed and that’s where he slept!  For a few hours at least, until he cried and I came and brought him into our big bed.  I was pretty sad about it, didn’t know what to do.  Dylan was thrilled though!

What else is new…not a whole lot that I can think of.  Adrian still doesn’t tell me when he has to go potty, but he’s pretty good about holding it in until potty time.  He knows when the timer goes off that it’s time to go in and use the pot and he usually does.  He still prefers to poop standing up, but that’s fine too.  Dylan’s truck is in the body shop getting fixed from a few years ago.  We’re planning on selling my car next month, then next year we’ll sell Dylan’s truck and get a family car.  So looks like we’ll be bussing, biking, and walking a lot more now!  It’s good for us though, and certainly good for our finances and the environment, so it’s worth it.  Plus, Adrian LOVES taking the bus.  He asks for it almost every day!

Today’s Daily Groove

THE DAILY GROOVE ~ by Scott Noelle
www.enjoyparenting.com/dailygroove

:: PREsponsive Parenting ::

Raising a child in harmony with human nature is
like driving to a distant city. The road isn’t
straight, but it’ll get you there.

For example, the road to independence as an adult
is via dependence as a baby. Going straight to
independence is a disaster.

You know you’ve veered off course when the ride
becomes suddenly rough, so you steer back to the
smooth road. Responsive parenting is like that:
answering a baby’s cries or a child’s aggression
with unconditional love and nurturing.

But when driving, you *rarely* veer off the road.
You stay *centered* in your lane for a smooth ride!
You stay *attuned* to the road, so you can adjust
course BEFORE you veer off.

In other words, you can PREspond!

Today, if you hit a rough spot with your child,
be REsponsive, but also consider how you might
have PREsponded, and refine your attunement
accordingly.

Pleasure-oriented PREsponsiveness can turn your
parenting journey into a JOYride! 🙂

http://dailygroove.net/presponsive

Feel free to forward this message to your friends!
(Please include this paragraph and everything above.)
Copyright (c) 2008 by Scott Noelle

“Inspiration & Coaching for Progressive Parents”
http://www.ScottNoelle.com
http://www.EnjoyParenting.com

On Praise and Appreciation

This one made me feel happy today:

On Praise and Appreciation

“Don’t throw out the baby with the bathwater.” So goes the saying, and when applied to parenting it seems more poignant than ever. The question of whether or not parents should praise their children for “good” behavior is an issue to which that saying certainly applies.

The “bathwater” aspect of such praise is its tendency to undermine unconditional love. When praise is only given under certain conditions, it makes the child feel more loved when they behave according to the parents’ standards, and less loved (or even “bad”) when they behave differently. The brilliant work of Alfie Kohn makes this and other negative aspects of praise as plain as day.

The “baby” aspect of praise is appreciation, which is a powerful mode of thought that inspires and uplifts both the appreciatee and the appreciator. The root of the word appreciate is the same as root of praise, meaning to prize, cherish, honor, or value. And what child would not benefit from being prized, cherished, honored, and valued?

But many well-meaning parents, for fear of harming their parent-child relationships with the bathwater aspects of praise, throw out the baby of appreciation and lose a great opportunity to uplift and be uplifted. The pretzel logic of that fear goes like this: “I don’t want my child to think my appreciation is conditional, so I won’t appreciate him/her under any conditions.”

A better alternative is to practice the art of unconditional appreciation. In other words, make a deliberate effort to look for ways to appreciate your child no matter how s/he is behaving.

I don’t mean to suggest you should express appreciation for behavior that you don’t like: “Wow! You poured paint all over the brand new carpet! Good job!” But I am suggesting that you will always find something that you can sincerely appreciate if you are looking for it.

For example, you might find that you appreciate your child’s passion for experimentation, even if you’re mad as hell about the condition of the carpet. (Notice I said mad about the carpet, not at the child. Also, it is entirely possible for you to experience the painted carpet situation 100% joyfully, but I digress…)

If you contrive appreciation because you think you “should” — even though you are feeling unappreciative — it does no good for either one of you. Your appreciation will be more sincere and authentic if you do it for selfish reasons: because YOU feel better when you are appreciative than when you focus on what you don’t appreciate. Let appreciation’s positive effects on your child be a fringe benefit — the icing on the cake.

When you find appreciative thoughts hard to come by, just appreciate anything you can, even if it’s unrelated to your child. You may find relief in thoughts that begin with “At least…” For example, “At least the can of paint that got dumped on the carpet is the one I was going to get rid of anyway,” or “At least the color of the stain will match the curtains.”

Lastly, remember that the power of appreciation is not so much in its verbal expression but mostly in the positive “vibe” you emanate when you are in an appreciative state. Loving words may trigger good-feeling thoughts in your child’s mind, but your good vibrations will be directly felt. So don’t worry if can’t think of anything to say or do that is overtly appreciative. Just appreciate.

Children who are used to being appreciated most of the time don’t “need” praise, and neither will they be particularly vulnerable to its ill effects. Likewise, children who are used to feeling loved don’t need to be told they are loved, but when you form a habit of being appreciative, it’s hard not to say “I love you” at every opportunity.

Tabasco Sauce

We were eating pizza last night and Adrian wanted to try some of Dylan’s Tabasco Sauce.  We told him it was hot, and he wanted to try it anyway.  So Dylan put a tiny dot on Adrian’s pizza and let him try it.  I think it was a little hotter than Adrian expected!  Oh he screamed!  We felt so bad for him…he just kept screaming and saying ouchie, clawing at his mouth.  His whole face was bright red.  Eventually we thought of giving him a popsicle (a pedialite one left over from when he was sick) and that made him feel a lot better.  This was almost as bad as at the Mexican restaurant in Seattle when he snatched some of the spicy fish off my plate…  I guess now Adrian knows just how hot Tabasco Sauce really is!

“o”

As those of you living in Portland know, it has been a crazy weather week.  A few days ago it was hailing and even snowing, then today it was beautiful and sunny.  It’s supposed to be close to 70 on Friday!  I attribute it all to global warming…

Adrian has started saying “o” instead of “yes”.  It’s very cute.  I don’t know why he does this, but it has been one of his favorite words lately.  He also likes to say “I don’t like that” when I’m doing something he doesn’t like.  It sounds so grown up!  He’s been growing so fast the past few months I can hardly even keep up sometimes.  He loves having a room of his own here and really likes his bed in there.  He now wants to read books and nurse in his little bed before moving into our bed for the night.  I don’t know what I’ll do when he wants to sleep in there at night!


April 2008
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