Posted tagged ‘positive parenting’

Bully-free parenting

December 5, 2011

Parents can teach children to choose wisely by being kind and firm, saying as little as possible and using natural and logical consequences that are related, reasonable and respectful

Thanksgiving Day can last all year round

November 21, 2011

Having family dinner or breakfast three or more times a week connects families AND it insures kids receive better nutrition.

Family dinner benefits kids socially, psychologically and physically. How can you go wrong? Start with the goal of having one family dinner a week. Use a family meeting to get the kids involved in planning, preparing and cleaning up the dinner so it doesn’t all fall on mom’s or dad’s lap. Encourage your kids to cook something for the dinner, either with you or independently, depending on the age.

How to manage carnal emotions & behavior

May 23, 2011

1. Have fun together. I’m not sure how cat owners can hunt, catch and kill with their owners. However, parentis can transform their relationship with their children by investing five to 15 minutes a day of positive time with their children, with no electronics, nagging, or criticism.

Encouragement is the fuel that powers children, tweens & teens

February 10, 2011

“A misbehaving child is a discouraged child,” and “A child needs encouragement like a plant needs water,” according to Rudolf Dreikurs, MD, an Austrian physician and child-whisperer. When yelling, punishment and bullying my children failed, I started to read Dreikurs’ book, “Children, the Challenge,” published in 1960 with Vicki Soltz, RN. It took months, even [...]

Use the crate when dogs and kids make bad choices

January 17, 2011

Dogs and tots-to-teens can benefit from containment in a crate, playpen or bedroom. They feel safe in their space. It gives contemplation time for parents and young people. Positive discipline always looks for the three Rs — related-respectful-reasonable [Jane Nelsen Ph.D.] — in a natural or logical consequence. It works for dogs and humans. When Lily doesn’t come when she’s called, she gets put on the leash because she has demonstrated she can’t be trusted.


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