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Inspiring Hope for Life & Relationships

This week before Mother’s Day we are examining what characteristics make a healthy mother.  Most moms want to do their best to raise happy well- adjusted children.  We are often blamed for the troubles of our children by the media, psychological theories (thanks Freud) and most of all, other mothers.  The best way to inoculate our families from the harmful effects of the universe is attunement.  No I am not talking about barber shop style acapella singing groups (thank goodness), but really connecting with, or being in tune with your child.  Attunement is being aware of, and responding to your child.  This is not an easy task.  Mothers are famous for being pulled in a myriad of different directions, so staying attuned with your child takes planning and effort.

Keep your eye on the prize: Attunement

Understand that you will be distracted immediately.  During pregnancy, mothers are immediately attacked by other mothers with “well meaning” questions like, “you eat gluten while gestating?”, or or “ breast or bottle?” or “stay at home or return to work?” or “will you deliver naturally, silently, in the woods and plant the placenta as fertilizer, or in a cold hard hospital bed with an epidural that will make your baby thinks it’s a rhinoceros for the first five years of its life?”  It seems that you have to choose a side or all will be lost.  It seems impossible that you can trust yourself and your child to become attuned to be able to decide these big decisions for yourself!  Some of the star performers in the judgey child rearing world make Texas cheerleading tryouts look welcoming.  These mothers have a sort of gravitational pull, like a black hole, and they will suck your intelligent confident self into the abyss never to be seen or heard from again. They will try to make you question your every move from choice of prenatal vitamins to your relationship with your grandchildren.  The mommy wars are fought long and hard, but they are not winnable wars.  A healthy mom knows her prize is not the admiration of other moms, but a happy well-adjusted child.  Avoiding the mommy war is the only way to win it.

When you are attuned with your child, you will not need other mothers to tell you what is right for your child.  You will know by communicating with your child through eye contact, conversation, gentle touch, quality time and simply being engaged.  This is where you recognize facial expressions and gestures and respond to the needs of the child.  That is, as long, as you put down the other distractions.  Yes, that means your smart phone, portable e reader, lap top or other form of cocaine for the mind that we drift toward when we have five seconds of free time.  You child knows when she is talking to you and your reply is “uh huh, uh huh, mmmmmm, just one second…” that you are not really attuned with them.  They know because they perfected the move. Park the gadgets for dinner time, or car time, or time when you could actually have a discussion with your child instead of trolling their Facebook page to see what is going on.

When your child is young and has limited vocabulary, getting down on the floor and playing with your child creates wonderful attunement.  Play along with your child (not sit by the child and read while he plays, that does not count).  Ask your child about the play, ask how they want you to play, reflect what you see them doing while they play.  This kind of activity allows children to know you are engaged in what they are doing and you find them interesting.  Sometime children will appear to be disinterested in attunement.  This is a developmentally appropriate response in tween to teenage years.  It is also a ruse designed to throw you off course.  The thing about tweens and teens is that they still crave your interest and attention.  Now, they may not crawl up in your lap and want to cuddle anymore, but they still want to be heard, seen, and valued.  Do not let these kids push you away.  Stay attuned.  It may be uncomfortable for you, but you are a mother.  And as mothers, it is not our job to be comfortable.

Please stay tuned this week as Natalie and Christy continue to share characteristics of a healthy mother.  As always, thanks for stopping by.

Written by Alexa Griffith, LMHC, LCAC, NCC, RPT

Alexa Griffith, LMHC, LCAC, NCC, RPT is a licensed therapist and Registered Play Therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. Alexa enjoys doing marriage counseling, individual counseling, couples and relationship counseling. Alexa also does play therapy, family counseling, child counseling, and adolescent counseling. Imagine Hope serves the Indianapolis area, including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Zionsville, and Westfield

I think as a society in general, we tend to focus on what we are doing “wrong” as parents. I love what we are doing this week as we focus on what a healthy Mom looks like vs. what we are all doing wrong. Today we are going to focus on discipline.

Discipline is about Teaching, not just Punishment

When we think of discipline we often think of punishment. But the actual word “disciple” comes from the word “discipline” because it is about teaching.

One of the best ways to teach your child is thru positive reinforcement. It is easy to focus on what a child is doing “wrong” when they are having negative behaviors. But if you start focusing on the positive things too (even if you have to dig a little), it will go a long way in helping them to start focusing on doing what’s positive, too. Rewarding positive behavior will guide them into thinking about positive things they can do vs. the negative.

However, let’s talk about negative behaviors. We can’t focus on the positive all the time. A healthy Mom thinks of consequences that are logical and that fit the crime. Natural consequences are the best- if you don’t do your homework, you will get a bad grade. If you don’t eat your breakfast, you’ll be hungry by 9:00 (they will live!). But if natural ones don’t exist, logical are the best. If you don’t come home by curfew, you won’t go out tomorrow night because you are not showing you are responsible enough to go out. If you slug your neighbor instead of using your words, you won’t play with your neighbors for a week to give you some time to think of another way to handle the situation. Remember, logical and natural are the best.

The most important thing to remember with discipline is being consistent and following thru. Say what you mean and mean what you say. If you tell them there will be a consequence and you don’t follow thru, they will quit believing you and won’t care about the consequence. Now there are times where you need to be flexible and open, but for the majority of the time, stick to your guns!

And lastly, don’t forget to teach. Talk to your kids about the consequences of their actions. Share with them an appropriate story from your childhood that may help them understand how your mistakes made a difference in you. Or how your good choices helped you in the end.

Remember, it’s not all about punishment, it’s about teaching (remember disciple).

My hat goes off to every Mom reading this. Our job is among the most challenging! Every day our heart walks out the door and we pray for it’s return. Hopefully, some positive discipline will make your job (and their lives) a lot better.

Thank you for reading and Happy Mother’s Day!!!

Adapted from “Positive Parenting” by Natalie Chandler. To read the entire article go to http://www.imaginehopecounseling.com/nkcblog/?p=450

Written by Natalie Chandler

Natalie Chandler, MA, LMHC is a therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. Natalie enjoys doing marriage counseling, individual counseling, and couples counseling. We also specialize in family counseling, child, and adolescent counseling. Imagine Hope serves the Indianapolis area including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Westfield, and Zionsville

Speak your child’s love language!

Speaking your child’s love language, whether it’s physical touch or quality time (or any of the 5), helps to restore tenderness in the relationship.  This is important, regardless of what relationship you are trying to nurture.

If your child or teen has behavior problems, many times parents will stop doing special outings or use a lack of quality time as a form of “punishment” for bad behavior.  While we aren’t recommending that you take your kids to Disney following concrete evidence that they have been stealing from the neighbor, it’s important to keep discipline and showing love separate.  Don’t use a withdrawal of love to punish, and don’t use a child’s love language as a reward towards good behavior. 

Showing love to your child needs to be it’s own separate entity!

How do you nurture your relationships?

Adapted from Scott Sells book, “Parenting Your Out Of Control Teenager” and “The Five Love Languages for Kids” by Gary Chapman.

Joleen Watson, MS, NCC, is a therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. She enjoys doing marriage counseling, relationship counseling, couples counseling, and individual counseling.  Imagine Hope also specializes in family, child and adolescent counseling and serves Indianapolis area including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Noblesville, Zionsville, Westfield, and Fishers.

A New Approach to Criticism

Most of us have that one family member, coworker, or aquaitance that just cannot help but say negative comments.  We usually avoid that person like the plague! One of the most common challenges I see to relationships is how people express concerns or displeasure without being critical.  I have never met anyone, especially teens, who do not shy away from criticism.  It can cause communication to immediately shut down.

As parents and partners and friends, we still need to express ourselves and communicate.  We cannot avoid conflict, but we can learn to express our needs and feelings without judgement or attack.  So how can you have a difficult conversation without sounding critical?

  • Focus your conversation so that it solves problems instead of laying blame.  Placing blame is usually completely unproductive and usually irrelevant to the topic at hand.  It is pointless to blame yourself or the other person in your relationship for the behavior at hand. Focus on the desired behavior and how you can both get to the place you want to be.
  • Discuss the behavior and not the other person’s character.  Its easy to go to name calling or judgements when addressing your concerns.  Its easy to call your husband lazy if he walks right past the laundry basket you set out for him to take upstairs.  Its easy to say your child is inconsiderate when they waste all the food you cooked for them from scratch. Its easy, but harmful and will not solve them problem nor invite the person to participate in solutions.  Who wants to work with someone who thinks bad things about them?  Focus on the behavior.  Set up reminders or tell the person what behavior you want without attacking their character.
  • Pick your battles.  You do not have to accept every battle you are invited to.  If you have children, you are invited to a lot of battles!  You can simply ignore behavior or statements unless they go against your personal or family values.
  • Limit your speeches.  Unless you are getting paid to give a speech, avoid it.  Most of our friends and collegues and all of our children are not interested in our long winded speeches. The longer you talk at the other person, no matter how well intentioned, the more likely you are going to sound critical and judgy.
  • Be a good role model.  Gandhi famously said, “Be the change you wish to see in the world”. The same thing apples to relationship communication.  Show your friend, coworker, lover, and child how you want them to behave and communicate by providing shining examples with your own behavior.  We cannot expect the other person to speak calmly if we yell.  We cannot expect respect if we do not show it.  We cannot expect hard work if we do not give our full effort too.
Enjoy the changes in your relationships you will see as you continue to nurture them.  Be sure to check out more tips this week from Natalie and Joleen.  As always, thanks for stopping by!
*Source: Parenting Your Out-of-Control Teenager by Scott Sells, Ph.D.

Written by Alexa Griffith, LMHC, LCAC, NCC, RPT

Alexa Griffith, LMHC, LCAC, NCC, RPT  is a licensed therapist and Registered Play Therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. Alexa enjoys doing marriage counseling, individual counseling, couples and relationship counseling. Alexa also does play therapyfamily counseling, child counseling, and adolescent counseling.

  • Opportunities to Build Trust

Trust is an essential ingredient in every relationship. Trust is extremely important in marriages, romantic relationships, with your children and other family members. When the person you’re in a relationship with feels a lack of trust with you, they lose hope and a sense resentment starts to build.

How do you begin to build trust with this relationship? First, start by modeling it. Do you personally display trustworthy behavior between you everyone you come into contact with on a daily basis? It doesn’t matter if it’s your spouse or if it’s a co-worker. Are you demonstrating trust in every aspect of your life? Secondly, do you follow-through on things you state you’re going to take action towards? If you commit to doing x, y, and z, do you do it? When you follow through with your word it creates trust with others.

If you are able to do these things, the people in your life will respond well to you when you’re trying to connect with them or hold them accountable for their behavior.

  • Emotional Warm-Ups

Think of this like jumping jacks. Before you can do some heavy exercise, you have to start small and get your blood pumping. Relationships work the same way. If there’s any distance or disconnect between you and another person, you must start small if you eventually want to start repairing the relationship.

What do emotional warm-ups look like? Again, think small. Leave a positive hand-written note, send a nice text, give a compliment. You get the point. From here you can start building up to a short conversation with your significant other, watching a tv show together with your teen or phone conversation with the friend you haven’t spoken to in months. Eventually you may reach your desired goal.

Remember, you cannot start at your end goal. Look for smaller victories when you’re trying to nurture relationships. If you start bigger, you’ll probably find yourself frustrated and more apt to throw in the towel too soon.

I hope you’re finding these tips helpful and useful. Please check back in tomorrow for more tips to nurture your relationships. Thank you for reading!

*Source: Parenting Your Out-of-Control Teenager by Scott Sells, Ph.D.

Written by: Tamara Wilhelm MA, LMHC, LCAC

*Tamara enjoys doing marriage counseling, individual counseling, & couples counseling  at Imagine Hope. We also specialize in family counseling, child & adolescent counseling. Imagine Hope serves the Indianapolis area, including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Noblesville, Zionsville, Westfield & Fishers.

We all have moments where we stop and think “I should call and check on so-and-so to see how they are”, or “I should really make an effort with this person to do more”.  Life often has a way of getting in between relationships—whether they are friendships, your family, or even your marriage.

Relationships don’t just happen.  They take time, effort, love, patience, sacrifice, and nurturing to keep them in existence and to help them grow.  This week at Imagine Hope we are talking about the importance of nurturing relationships, and steps you can take to better any relationships that you may not be giving your full time or attention to.

How has the relationship been deprived?  Relationships often suffer because we don’t make them a priority.  Think about how much time you invest in things such as watching your favorite television shows, surfing the internet and social media, cheering on your beloved sports team, etc.—then compare that with the amount of time that you devote to your spouse, children, family, or friends.  If you aren’t devoting time, the relationship often won’t survive.

Are you communicating with this person?  The more you communicate, the stronger the relationship will become.  Make sure to be honest, open, and kind—even when there are disagreements.  Are you able to approach difficulties with a positive attitude and find compromise?  Can you support one another emotionally while still maintaining your own point of view?  If your relationship is deprived of communication, it won’t grow and will cease to exist eventually.

Keep reading this week as we provide additional tips and ways that you can nurture relationships in your own life.  Thanks for reading!

 

Source: Parenting Your Out of Control Teenager by Scott Sells, PhD

Written by: Christy Fogg, MSW, LCSW

Christy Fogg, MSW, LCSW is a licensed therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group.  Christy enjoys doing marriage counseling, individual counseling, couples and relationship counseling.  Christy also provides family counseling, child counseling, and adolescent counseling.

Imagine Hope serves the Indianapolis area, including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Zionsville, and Westfield.

Lessons From Kids Movies- Brave

December 17th, 2012

Kids movies can have great life lessons. This week each of us will be reviewing kids movies that we have found to teach some helpful things to remember about life. Some of these might be great to watch as a family and talk about the lessons afterwards!

Brave (Disney Pixar)

I am always up for a good princess movie, but this one had me leaving the theater deep in thought about how I parent my daughter. Merida is a free-spirited princess who’s mom is trying everything to reign her in to be the kind of princess that she wants her to be. Mom’s perfectionistic standards are met with rebellion.

Throughout the movie you watch the mother-daughter battle play out and see Merida constantly feel not good enough in her mother’s eyes. Their bond breaks as the queen dictates the path she lays out for her daughter, but is later rekindled as you see her mother lighten up and start to rely on Merida for help in a tough situation. By the end they are a team and their love for each other is shown when Merida stands up for her mom.

As a parent it is always hard to keep balanced expectations of your kids. You want them to follow a certain path, but it is not healthy to force and control their every move. Brave reminds us of the dangers of being a controlling parent. Children will rebel and will run away from rules when they are strictly rigid and set by perfectionistic standards.

Boundaries are needed and a huge part of parenting. It is also important to let your child develop their sense of self and identity within those boundaries. This gives them ownership and buy in with their life’s direction. When it is all mapped out for them, they often rebel, or the opposite, lack ambition for anything because they don’t know how to when all has been done for them.

Next time you find your self setting limits with your kids, think about who they are and what they want to become. Consider them having some say so in their life’s goals. It can totally change your parent-child relationship!

Check in for more lessons tomorrow. Thanks for reading!

Written by Teri Claassen MSW, LCSW, LCAC

Teri Claassen MSW, LCSW, LCAC is a licensed therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. Teri enjoys doing marriage counseling, individual counseling, couples and relationship counseling. Teri also does family counseling, child counseling, and adolescent counseling. Imagine Hope serves the Indianapolis area, including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Fishers, Noblesville, Zionsville, and Westfield.

It’s difficult to get your teenager to open up if you don’t show interest in what is important to them.

One way to show interest is to find out what they are “into“.  Do they like music?  Are they artistic?  Do they excel in sports?  Find out what interests your teen has and ask them questions about it.  It’s important to do this in a non-interrogating way, but rather through showing genuine interest.  After all, if it feels forced, your teen will pick up on it right away!  Don’t give up after one try.  Your teen may act annoyed or disinterested in your questions, but keep at it!  Eventually, they will realize that you mean what you say and you are truthfully interested in their life.

Above all…. Don’t criticize them for the things they are interested in or the things that are important to them once they share with you. All this will do is cause them to shut down again.  Ask open ended questions and give them a chance to respond.  (e.g. Leave your opinion out of it… especially if it isn’t positive!).

Finally, ask your teen to teach YOU something!

Parenting is filled with teaching (another part of the many faces of parenting).  But when is the last time you asked  your teenager to teach you something about their life you aren’t knowledgeable about?  Perhaps your teen is into a sport you aren’t familiar with– Ask them to teach you how it is played!  Maybe your teen is into a “phase” that is different from what you went through as a teen– ask them about it!  This shows your teenager that you really do want to learn about them and what is important to them in their life.  It’s like meeting them on their level, instead of conversation being about school and other “responsible” things.

We hope you have found some of this week’s tips helpful… See you next week!

Joleen Watson, MS, NCC, is a therapist at Imagine Hope Counseling Group. She enjoys doing marriage counseling, relationship counseling, couples counseling, and individual counseling.  Imagine Hope also specializes in family, child and adolescent counseling and serves Indianapolis area including the surrounding areas of Carmel, Noblesville, Zionsville, Westfield, and Fishers.

 

 

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