Michael Gross is the Victorian Speaker
of The Year for 2002, a former teacher of fifteen years, and a father
of three teenage boys. He has written sixteen books, and over three hundred
newspaper columns on parenting and raising happy, confident children.
Ever had a child who keeps asking for a favour or a treat
until they get the response they want?
These kids generally use one of two strategies. They may
either nag or hound you until they get an affirmative or they will seek
out an adult who will give them the answer they want.
The first method, which is based on persistence, is generally
very effective to use with tired parents and sole parents who are more
susceptible to this type of behaviour
'All right have the at ice cream. Anything for some peace
and quiet' is a response that most people who have spent time around children
are familiar with.
The second method is a little more devious but very effective
and usually occurs in dual parent families. You know the situation. A
child's request for a treat, favour or outing is turned down for good
reason ('No Jessica you can't have an ice cream now. Wait until after
dinner') but the child goes to the other parent who may well give them
the affirmative they are seeking.
Minor happening but very irritating. These situations
can drive parents crazy and are indicative of two people are operating
on different parenting planes. If it happens every now and again then
it is no big deal. However if one parent is always granting a child his
or her wishes without consultation or thought of how the other parent
thinks or what they are doing then it is probably time to step back and
reflect on how you can both work together. If it happens frequently your
child will learn how to play one parent off against the other or manipulate
situations until they get what they want.
It sounds sinister but it is not. It is just how we human
beings tend to think and behave. Most of us learn intuitively who to ask
at work for a favour and who will give you a negative response.
This type of parental manipulation can occur for many
reasons. Either it is due to different standards of behaviour or thoughts
about bringing up children or a lack of understanding about what has happened
in a child's day. Regardless of the reason it means that parents need
to communicate between themselves and also get the message across to their
child or children that it is taboo to keep seeking out a parent until
they get the response they want.
Parents should be firm with child who goes to another
parent in search of a yes after they have received a knock back from another.
'Where did you get that ice cream from? I already said
no.'
'Daddy said I could have it?'
'I am sorry but you should not go to daddy after I said
No.'
The other technique that you can use which is very effective
if one parent is a jellyfish and gives in all the time is to defer to
the other parent whenever they ask some a little tricky.
'Okay Jessica, I'll just check with dad and I'll get back
to you.'
This strategy can be a little wearing and even artificial
but it is helpful in bringing the other parent into the act and also demonstrates
that you are double not a solo act.
Most dual parents play good cop/bad cop where one is more
the disciplinarian or hard-line manager and the other is the play director.
That tends to be the way of families. This is wearing on the bad cop so
it helps if you can swap roles occasionally (or even backbones) and give
the other parent a break.
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