Can effective parenting training help create
a harmonious household?
A parent, whether single or with a partner, is often blamed for
anything that goes wrong with their children. Blame for the perceived
wrongdoings of our children is probably one of the hardest burdens
that we as parents have to carry.
The truth is that parents these days are time poor and their children
are, more than ever before, influenced by many powerful outside
sources. Most parents are doing the best they can with the knowledge
they have. For the majority of people, this knowledge is based
on how they were parented themselves. But times have changed, what
worked for their parents and for them as children may not work
now for their own families. Many people find that relying on what
they learned from their own experience isn’t sufficient.
With just about everything that we do in life, we learn from our ‘mistakes’.
Some of our mistakes are easy to move on from, others can last
a lifetime and cause untold heartache.
Most people are born with parental instincts so parenting does
come naturally to a certain extent. But who among us can say that
they have not made mistakes? The evidence of some of our hasty
parenting decisions can be in the form of defiant, uncommunicative
or sullen children and teenagers, and these mistakes are not easy
to live with.
Is there a better way? Yes, there is. Learning to become an effective
parent can save a great deal of heartache. Effective parenting
is a learned skill and like just about everything else that we
do, the more we practice effective parenting techniques, the better
and more effective we become at parenting.
Effective parenting training gives us a better understanding of
the complexities of our family, the pressures that our children
face in the modern school setting, and the added pressure from
part time work that many young people experience. It teaches us
how to listen, understand and communicate with our children so
that we do not make things worse, whilst still understanding that
every child, family and situation is unique.
In short, effective parenting training takes some of the guess
work out of parenting and provides strategies and tools that can
be used to create a more harmonious home. If things are pretty
good at home, proactive parenting is even better!
Wishing and hoping won’t help.
How can effective parenting training (EPT) help?
- EPT gives parents the opportunity to stop and look at their
home situation from a different perspective. What were your
goals when you started your family? EPT is a big step towards
achieving those goals.
- EPT can help parents identify if they are working with or
against each other. How do they reach consensus?
- EPT provides guidelines for putting things into order at
home – creating a ‘bottom line’, revisiting
values and establishing rules, boundaries and consequences.
This step alone is critical. Too many rules become unworkable
but rules and boundaries provide a baseline for the whole family
and a structure with foundations for feeling safe with everyone
knowing what is expected of them.
- Rules, boundaries and structure are meaningless to children
and teenagers without loving, sincere and effective communication.
EPT will teach parents how to listen and communicate effectively
rather than inflaming situations.
- EPT will assist parents in understanding what their children
need to experience in order to feel loved. Most parents do
try to show their love but do not understand that what is perceived
as love to one person may be quite different to another.
- Parents will understand how their children learn. Once again,
because we are unique individuals, we all learn differently.
This understanding can provide the parent untold and unique
opportunities to help their children gain confidence at school.
With these tools and a firmer foundation upon which to move
their families forward in a positive direction, parents and their
children will feel empowered.
Children are resilient and forgiving and they do want to feel
the love their parents have for them. It is essential for their
growth into healthy young adults. Where there has been continuing
conflict you can be pretty sure that some of those loving feelings
have been lost. They can be reestablished. There has to be at
least one ‘adult’ in a situation to turn things around;
someone who is willing to take the responsibility to get things
moving in the right direction.
Beginning parents will probably have a good understanding of
some of the pitfalls in modern parenting – prevention is
so much better than any cure!
It isn’t easy being a parent but with understanding, knowledge,
tools and guidance, it can be done. The rewards are enormous! |