Confronting poor behaviour can be daunting
This is something that parents face regularly. One of the questions parents ask is how do they deal with this issue and at the same time do not damage their relationship with their child? Firstly, let me assure you that your child innately knows that you love them unconditionally. Sometimes how we act can confuse them, but they do believe in your absolute love for them.
Even if you lose your temper and react too much, the child still recognises that you love them. Having said that, less damage is caused by setting up a situation where you let the child know how disappointed you are in the behaviour, as it has impacted on some aspect of your family life etc.
Consider the following tips to help deal with confrontation and still keep the relationship between you and the child, a happy one.
- Choose a calm time to talk about the incident that is upsetting you. Reacting straight away can cause you to over react and anger interferes with rational conversation. If the matter is right in front of you say. " I'm upset, we will talk about this a little later."
This gives you time to be more rational when talking to your child. It also allows time to calm down and perhaps see the situation with less hostility. Sometimes, you have time to gather more understandings around the situation reducing the problem and your anger. Be consistent and still follow through with a conversation. Have the discussion with your child with no one else around, in a quiet space and where the child is more inclined to listen. This is all about setting the best scene to get the best results from the conversation.
- Choose a morning time to talk about the matter if possible, as a child's attention span and calmness is at its peak. Otherwise try at night when putting the child to bed. This is often a personal one on one time which the child enjoys. "I would like to talk to you about something that happened today that has upset me."
Once the issue is understood and resolved in some way, it is most important to acknowledge the process that you just went through and affirm the child for being part of it. "Thanks for working through the problem that was upsetting me. Together we were able to sort it all out".
Keep in mind that once the resolution is made in solving the problem it is important to move on, affirm the child when it doesn't happen again and give the child the benefit of the doubt that they can solve problems well.
When working with children over issues, I found it most important that the child knew the issue was now behind us and our relationship was back to normal. This is all about the child feeling valued even though mistakes happen all around us from day to day.