In SAVVY, to help children, students and even adults “name their emotions to tame their emotions”, Marc Brackett coined RULER to develop critical and inter-related emotional skills. Honor your feelings, desires and hopes for your child, but help them learn how to express feelings and needs in a way that fits their temperament and personality, not yours. But there is relief in understanding “good enough parenting”.
In SKILLS, I apply RULER to help parents have a discussion with their children about their feelings, needs and values especially in the context of the family’s values. In the immediacy of the situation, there isn’t time to have a feelings, needs and values discussion. But in a quiet moment, parents can help their children “become the best them, not the best you.”
In SOUL, “out of the mouth of babes” is when a child says something that surprises you because it seems very wise. My 6 year old granddaughter had one of those moments of wisdom and pointed out that love for each other and arguing are not mutually exclusive.
In the USA, June 20 is Father’s Day (In Australia, it is September 5). Ten days earlier my oldest child and daughter turned 40 years old. A milestone for her and for me. You’d think that parenting three children would produce a wealth of knowledge on how to handle the following situations (courtesy of my daughter):
There are countless other scenarios that you have experienced as a parent or an observer of parent-child interactions. It is understandable that we want our children to reflect the values and behaviors that we hold dear and have honed in our years of trial and error in our own lives. Here are some Tips if you choose to accept the mission of helping your child “become the best them, not the best you.”
Tip 1
Teach your children “RULER” – Recognize, Understand, Label, Express, Regulate
To help children, students and even adults “name their emotions to tame their emotions”, I wrote about social-emotional learning in the SKILLS section of the September 2013 edition of Tips and Topics.
You can read more about the August 9, 2013 interview with two experts in social-emotional learning: Marc Brackett, Director of Yale University’s Center for Emotional Intelligence; and Maurice Elias, Professor, Psychology Director of Rutgers University’s Social and Emotional Learning Lab.
Marc Brackett coined RULER to develop critical and inter-related emotional skills. When a person creates a mental model of what an experience is, then it’s possible to figure out what one’s feelings and needs. This helps you regulate them.
Here is what the acronym RULER means:
Tip 2
Honor your feelings, desires and hopes for your child, but help them learn how to express feelings and needs in a way that fits their temperament and personality, not yours
This is a hard Tip to live. I speak not from having achieved this, but from a perspective that strives to “help them become the best them, not the best you.” In the heat of the moment of a sibling argument or some undesired behavior, it is easy to try the quick fix to resolve the situation:
Quick fixes are satisfying at the time and give needed relief from the yelling, crying, complaining, arguing and discord. But quick fixes don’t last and it isn’t long before the cycle starts all over again. I know this is easier said than done, but it is worth considering other ways to reach the goal of “helping them become the best them, not the best you.”
Tip 3
Reassure yourself with understanding “Good enough parenting”
Carla Naumburg wrote a short but helpful article on The Gift of the Good Enough Mother – Our Kids Need Us to Fail Sometimes
In the article she reminds us that children actually benefit from imperfect parenting.
“The phrase “good enough mother” was first coined in 1953 by Donald Winnicott, a British pediatrician and psychoanalyst. Winnicott observed thousands of babies and their mothers, and he came to realize that babies and children actually benefit when their mothers fail them in manageable ways. (I’m not talking about major failures, such as child abuse and neglect, of course.)”
I excerpt Naumburg’s article that is about parents, not just mothers on whom the original research in the 1950s was done:
“If our children never have these experiences, and if their every need is met every time, they will have no ability to manage the challenges that will inevitably arise. They won’t learn that it’s ok to feel bored or annoyed or sad or disappointed. They won’t learn, time and again, that life can be painful and frustrating, but they’ll get through it.
As a grandparent, it is easier to have distance from the constancy of parental decisions. Let’s see if I can apply the SAVVY Tips to some of the parenting dilemmas in the SAVVY introduction.
Tip 1
Model how to do RULER
Let’s apply these Tips to the first situation:
Your 9 year old daughter has some friends over to play and they stay for dinner. Your daughter says she’s hungry and wants to be served first. You are aghast, as you want her to be a good host and let her friends be served first.
In the moment, there isn’t time to do RULER. The impulse is to say something like:
Step 1: Here are some suggested better alternatives to say to buy time for Step 2:
Step 2: When there is a quiet moment for learning after the friends have gone home, that is the time to do RULER. Help her:
Tip 2
Identify how to teach parental values while having them fit the child’s temperament and personality
Step 1: Values are discussed to help your child clarify their values in the context of their temperament, personality and the family values. By all means we want to pass on the family values, but the parental task is to ask the questions in any moment:
Taking another situation:
Your 6 year old daughter is slow to clear the dinner table and carry her plate to the kitchen. You want to speed the clean up process so in exasperation, you pick up the plate and do it yourself. You don’t want to be a yelling, nagging parent, but you just taught your daughter inadvertently that if she procrastinates, you will do it for her.
In the moment, there isn’t time to sit down and discuss values. The impulse is to say something like:
Step 2: Here are some suggested better alternatives to say to buy time for Step 3 and 4:
Step 3: When there is a quiet moment for learning after the dinner table and kitchen is tidied up, take the time to have a RULER conversation with your child about procrastination and family values. Help her:
Step 4: Regulate by collaborating on some options:
Living with the grand girls for two weeks provides lots of opportunities to hear cute wisdom “out of the mouths of babes”. It also provides situations like sibling arguing and ‘fights’, teasing, sisterly love and playing and opportunities to think “How did I handle that back in the day?” “How would I do it differently today with 40 years of parenting?” “Should I share my opinions with my daughter and son-in-law or keep my mouth zipped?”
After a particularly contentious sisterly disagreement, it was clear the parents were getting fed up with all the arguing and complaining. Being together 24/7 on vacation has its many fun times but also its moments. My six year old granddaughter loves her big sister though you could doubt that sometimes. After one of their ‘fights’, she wanted to buy something special for her big sister to make amends.
So father and daughter set about finding a nice surprise. That was a loving gesture, but her dad, fresh off the latest sister ‘fight’ asked: “If you love your sister so much, how come you argue and fight like that?”
As quick as a whip, she said: “Don’t you love Mom? Don’t you argue and fight too?”
“Out of the mouths of babes comes much wisdom”. I am always concerned when I hear coupled partners say “We get along so well, we never fight”. Maybe they are so compatible and of one mind that everything smoothly syncs up all the time. Or maybe one or the other is suppressing their feelings, thoughts and desires so much that there can be no empowered meaningful exchange of ideas.
Love and arguing are not mutually exclusive. A six year old knows that.