Saturday, 20 September 2014

How To Make Proper Decisions When You Are A Parent

By Asleen Saturday


Most parents are committed to raising their children in the best possible way, but there are always issues that can leave you confused about which approach to take. When it comes to discipline, for example, is it best to be strict, permissive or somewhere in between? The following will help you decide which strategy you would like to use as you parent your children.

Some parents, either deliberately or without thinking about it, practice what is called permissive parenting. This is sometimes a philosophy that parents hold, but it's just as often a default mode parents fall into when they're not comfortable enforcing rules. While this extreme type of permissiveness isn't all that common, we've all seen examples of it in public. Too much permissiveness can not only make your kids a burden on other people, it makes life difficult for the kids as well. When kids venture outside the home and go to school, meet others and eventually have to find jobs, they find that there are limits and rules everywhere, yet their parents didn't prepare them for this. Even if kids act like they don't like limits, on some level they need them to mature and to feel secure.

Even if kids act like they don't like limits, on some level they need them to mature and to feel secure. Although there are many parenting skills that you may learn, one of the hardest ones to convey to your children is that there are consequences for their actions. Consequences for bad behavior typically range around the removal of certain privileges like surfing on the Internet or having to sit in the room. When it comes to setting up rules in the house, it's best to only create rules that you intend to consistently enforce. Every rule that you set up needs to be adhered to, and not something passing in the wind that may or may not be required. It is so important to always be consistent with the enforcement of your policies, otherwise your kids will not develop a sense of responsibility or structure in regard to the choices that they make.

To be a successful parent, you need to stop trying to organize every moment of your child's life as if their life depended on it. If you want your child to grow up, and be able to make decisions on their own, you need to let them do this early on in life. It is important to give your child a little bit of freedom, allowing them to choose the activities they want to do each day, while you supervise and make sure it runs okay.

You shouldn't have to feel that you have the weight of the world on your shoulders. While this isn't always possible for various reasons, ideally the two parents should be involved in child related issues, decisions and tasks. Even single parents usually have others they can reach out to, whether it's relatives, friends or even a support group. No matter how good a parent you may be, there will be times when you need advice, or a break from the daily grind. The best time to set up a support network is before you desperately need it. If you're not sure about how to handle a certain situation with your child, you should have someone you can consult. Someone else, such as another parent, may have already been through what you're going through and may be able to offer you a tip. Above all, remember that parents are human and make mistakes, so don't expect perfection from yourself. You can only be the best parent you can at any given moment. When you're a parent, it's best to balance out what books, doctors and other sources of information say with your own intuition and experience.




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