My Blog
Free Image Hosting at www.picturetrail.com
Recent Posts
Navigation
My Categories
Links
Friends
Page 1 of 1
Last Page | Next Page
A Thankful Heart
Aug. 18, 2007
More on the Strong Willed Child

Here is another article on strong willed children. It is very good. I borrowed this one from a blog I love to read for ideas and inspiration. This lady has some GREAT info. on her blog! :-)  (her blog address is www.KeepingTheHome.com)

Here is the article:

Surviving Strong Willed Children

 

NOTE: Boys and girls can both be strong willed, but for simplicity's sake, I'm going to use the pronoun "he" in reference to the strong willed child.

A true strong willed child can be hard to handle. His intelligence tends to be quite high, and he uses it to manipulate others (especially his parents) to get them to bow to his will. He may set up a situation to look different than how it actually happened.

A strong willed child has a picture in his head about how things are supposed to be, and if anyone deviates from the picture in his head, then he explodes. He may first try to be manipulative, and if that doesn't work, he'll resort to bad attitudes and temper tantrums. The temper tantrums may sometimes be very violent and loud.

A strong willed child may also be very active, loud, and messy. He will also try to be "the boss." His bossiness isn't just limited to other children either. A strong willed child will tend to tell a baby sitter "you're not in charge of me." A strong willed child will tend to tell his father in the car "Don't take the highway, I want you to take the frontage road... turn left here... you drove too close to that car...," etc. He may tell his mother “you need to stop putting whey into the oatmeal,” or he may tell her to do something that she was on her way to do anyhow, which makes it look like she is doing what he said. For example, the mother may be getting ready to vacuum, so the strong willed child says “mom, you need to vacuum the floor now.”

Spankings with strong willed children may appear ineffective. In fact, many a strong willed child may turn around and laugh at you when you spank him. If you find that you have to use mark-leaving force in spanking your strong willed child, then you need to seriously limit spankings. A spanking for most strong willed children is only helpful when used very sparingly, and mark-leaving force should never be used.

Strong willed children are often major "look at me" socialites, thus isolation or facing a boring wall can be a good punishment. If the SW child gets too violent with facing a wall, then he may need to be put into a safe room by himself until he calms down, then brought out to face the wall again. This scenario may need to be replayed a dozen times in a row, before he actually stands and faces the wall like he was supposed to.

Strong willed children often require a LOT of do-overs. For example, if a non SW child slams a door, you can usually say “Please do not slam the door. Now go back to the door and open it and close it properly this time,” and the compliant child does it. The SW child will often walk over (with a bad attitude) and reopen the door and slam it again, and maybe even harder than the previous time. Keep having him do it over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over again, until he does it properly, AND with a good attitude. Don’t ever give up before he does. You must win each and every battle. You must outlast him every single time. You must show that your will is stronger than his. While you’re possibly enduring hours of your SW child doing what seems like endless do-overs, remember to keep your patience. Don’t show that it’s stressing you out, or taking up your time. If your SW child senses that it’s upsetting you, then he may continue to cause problems, because he is controlling your emotions, and hence, is back in charge again. (Remember, with strong willed children, being in charge is their goal.)

When you punish a SW child, you need to keep an even tone of voice and a regular facial expression. Don’t show happiness or sadness. Don’t look excited or mad. Just look and sound normal, if not a little bored. Make it appear to your child that his do-overs and timeouts and such are not bothering you at all, and that you are continuing to live your life regardless of having to punish him. If he thinks that punishing him inconveniences you, he’ll likely make sure you punish him longer and more often, because then he is controlling YOU. A SW child will gladly go through punishment if he can use it to make him feel like he is in control of someone.

A strong willed child can be trained into compliance, but his heart is an entirely different issue. You may have trained your strong willed child to obey you when you tell him to do, or not do something, but he probably does it with a bad attitude, and sometimes a tantrum will ensue as well.

Strong willed children may at times refuse to "remember" how to do certain tasks.

For example, washing hair. A strong will child may not like getting his face wet, so he may come out of the shower with hair that is completely dry. The parent brings the child back to the shower, shows him again how to wash his hair, and the child may or may not comply that time around.

At the next shower, he may wash his hair correctly, yet the next shower he acts as if he totally forgot how again.

If you homeschool him, you may bang into this problem - example: You teach him how to do basic addition. He is doing great, he is finishing a 100 problem addition drill sheet in under 5 minutes, and all of the answers are correct. Then, one day you need to go to an appointment, so your husband takes over the math lesson while you're gone. You come home to a husband who looks at you in disbelief, and says "Our child doesn't know how to do simple addition. He couldn't even do 2+3 with me. He is very behind in school. What are you teaching him?" Yes, your strong willed child manipulated his dad, by pretending that he didn't know how to do the addition, so that his daddy would sit down with him, and "teach" him. The child can then control how long of a session he wants one on one with his dad, by deciding when he finally wants to "understand" what his dad is “teaching” him. He is also getting the bonus of possibly pitting his mother and father against each other, with him pulling the strings.

In the world of a strong willed child, it's all about control, and the SW child is determined to have the control. His world is either black or white - this or that. If you deviate from his black or white into a grey area, he will short circuit.

There is nothing wrong with a SW child. Strong Willed is a personality trait, that’s all. A SW child is not abnormal. The parent's job is to train that child and help him in controlling his will. If you have a strong willed child, it’s because God knew that you could handle it. 1 Corinthians 10:13 is clear. You’re not given more than you can handle. A strong willed child left to himself has a large probability of being a criminal when (or before) he is grown, because he will be trying to force others into his will. However, a strong willed child who has patient parents who train him every single day will often pursue power careers such as politics, law, science, or soul winning/missionary work. SW children can grow up to be some of the BOLDEST Christians you’ve ever seen. Training your SW child is so worth the work and anguish.

It is imperative that when the child reaches the logic stage in development (starting at around 10 years old) that you begin teaching him Christian logic. Regardless of the age of your SW child, limit TV, and encourage reading of good books instead. He probably shouldn’t play any video games, or listen to much music other than good classical. Give him a VERY structured day. Even if no one else (including yourself) in your household is scheduled, a SW child thrives from it. At first, the SW child will fight the schedule, but when he sees that the same thing happens at the same time each day, he will eventually "give in," and you will have much more peace in your household. Consistency is the key.

Also be consistent with your SW child in discipline. He needs to be punished for EVERY wrongdoing, bad attitude, etc. Don't let ANYTHING slide. If he thinks he has a 10% chance of getting away with something, he most likely will take that 10% chance.

The SW child also tends to weigh the consequences against the infraction he wishes to commit. Unfortunately, the SW child sometimes decides that the consequence is worth taking, just to commit the desired infraction. Stay consistent, be patient, don't raise your voice, don't raise your hand in anger, and trust in God. SW children can grow up to be some of the most amazing adults around, but they need parents who have a lot of wisdom. The Bible says that if you pray for wisdom, God will give it to you.

Some great books to read about raising Strong Willed children are:

Setting Limits for the Strong Willed Child

The New Strong Willed Child

Aaron’s Way


The first book is secular, but it is VERY well done. I’d consider it the best book on SW children I have read thus far.

The second book was okay, but it didn’t seem that the author had a SW child himself, and the lack shows in some of the writing.

Aaron’s Way is a must read if you have a SW child. A mother of a SW child, and her grown SW son wrote it together. You get a look into a SW child’s mind. You will learn about the inner workings of the strong willed child, and why they do what they do.

I have read many other books on child training and raising strong willed children, but the above three are (in my opinion) the best I’ve come across so far.

If you have a strong willed child, stay the course and trust in God. There is light at the end of the tunnel. :-)

2 CommentsPost A Comment!Permanent Link
Aug. 18, 2007
The Strong Willed Child

I am borrowing this article from a friend's blog (http://www.ipresstowardthemark.blogspot.com/), because it is so good. I have a very strong-willed child, but we have made such progress through simply consistency (must be 100% consistent) and training for expected behaviors before a situation comes up. She is such a wonderful child and a joy. I get comments all the time about what a good girl she is (and she really is!), but everyone seems to think it is by "luck" - they don't realize that there is a lot of hard work involved. You have to work hard for any successes in life, but it is ALWAYS worth it...ESPECIALLY when it comes to your children!! :-)

Anyway, here's the article. It's really good!

The Strong Willed Child

As a former middle school teacher I saw many strong-willed children who had never learned to submit to authority.   They were my most frustrating students and they were such unhappy children.   Their parents did not enjoy them, their teachers were always frustrated with them, other kids were often aggravated by them.  In many ways, I felt sorry for them even though they were in-your-face defiant.   They had no idea how to operate in a world that does not revolve around what they want, no concept of the word "no", an inablility to accept something that was contrary to their will with grace and contentment.   My Dad is like this- an absolute control-freak who must have his way at all times.  He's one of the unhappiest people I know.    I do *not* want this type of life for Mary or Nathan- and as Fairchilds they certainly have a will to control. 


This is why it's so important to us to teach Mary and Nathan obey.   Controlling behaviors that are a little bit cute at 15 months old are annoying at three years old and downright antisocial by the time they are middle school age.   We not only want for them to be happy, content, productive adults but we want for them to feel treasured by their parents.  I know several children who routinely hear their parents complain about them and who feel as if they are their parents greatest annoyance in life.  Their parents don't enjoy spending time with them and the kids know it.  How sad is that?   You can't expect the kids to train themselves- the parents have to help them in this area.   I want to enjoy being with Mary and Nathan- not look at as a drudgery.  I cringe when I hear a parent say that they couldn't stand to be around their kids all day.  What message is this sending to the child?   The only way for Mary and Nathan to truly be happy is to be well-disciplined and that means obeying Mom and Dad.   Without obedience it would be impossible for myself and others to enjoy them and I don't want their childhood to be spent feeling like an annoyance- I want it to be one of being treasured and enjoyed by their parents and other adults who love them (grandparents, etc.)


Mary tends to be my more openly defiant, strong-willed, controlling child.  It means that I can never, NEVER let her win a battle.    If I tell her to put the drum on the second shelf and she cuts her eyes over at me and puts it on the third shelf, that's defiant.  She *knows* what I asked her to do and it's her little way of defying what I told her to do.   Almost complying with a directive is not complying- or delayed obedience is really disobedience.    Sometimes people will comment to me that I don't know what it's really like to have a strong-willed child or that Mary certainly doesn't appear to be strong-willed.   That's because we started working on this at a young age.    She had her first temper fit at around six months old- she was flat out furious at having her diaper changed.   Arching her back, screaming, etc.   We did not allow it to continue.   She went through a screaming phase at around 14 months old that we disciplined for until she submitted to "no screaming" directives from Mom and Dad.   We did not wait until she was a full blown brat at three or four to start disciplining her- she knows that when Mama tells her to do something she better do it because Mama means business.  It is the only thing that has saved her from being an absolute terror.  


Disclaimer- Now, we certainly have not "arrived" and have a long way to go- I realized a few days ago that we need some serious work on "come to Mama"- they are not coming when called the first time which is disobedience.    Nathan and Mary both have some table manners that need to be improved upon.    We surely don't have it all figured out yet.   I can think of several issues in discipline/obedience that need to be worked on right now or in the near future.    The point is that we recognize them and are going to work on them rather then throwing our hands up in the air and passing it off as a "phase" or being "strong-willed" or maybe they'll "grow out of it". 

2 CommentsPost A Comment!Permanent Link
Sep. 5, 2006
some random thoughts on parenting

So, after some discussions I've had over the weekend with friends and family about situations they are dealing with with their kiddos, and how they are handling things, I had a thought...most parents seem to discipline out of one of the following:
1) frustration
2) anger
3) a last resort

That is why their discipline backfires. They don't discipline until they are just frustrated, and then they don't follow through.

 

I have been very blessed to have gleaned some wonderful parenting advice from several sources: the Raising Godly Tomatoes website (www.raisinggodlytomatoes.com), Michael and Debi Pearl's writings (www.nogreaterjoy.org), and some wonderful ladies on some Christian message boards I frequent. The reason these people are so successful is because their discipline is training-based, not anger-based. They are also proactive, rather than reactive.

Almost every bit of parenting you see is reactive. Only reacting to problems, never training to help resolve things before they become an "issue."

This is why the "Raising Godly Tomatoes" style of parenting (training, teaching, tomato staking, etc.) works so much better than most of what you see carried out by most parents.

I am so thankful to be able to learn from these wonderful parents who seem to be doing things "right." Things are going so well with our DD, and it is by and large due to the wisdom I have gleaned from more experienced parents. If it weren't for the Raising Godly Tomatoes website, I think I would be having a lot more difficulty with her right now. But since we are teaching and training, rather than just picking her up and popping her on the rear when we get fed up with her [Roll Eyes] (like most people do) and then sending her to another room to get her out of our hair (like most people do) - we are seeing tremendous results.

Anyway, I just wanted to share this "lightbulb" moment I had of why Raising Godly Tomatoes parenting is so much more effective than frustration-based parenting.

Elizabeth, who runs the Raising Godly Tomatoes website, is doing a wonderful job by teaching us younger womaen who to lovingly parent our children, and how to teach them to be loving, considerate individuals.

1 CommentsPost A Comment!Permanent Link
Aug. 12, 2006
Teaching Children to Pray

Sometimes people ask how to teach their children to pray, or teach them about the Lord during the day, so I thought I would share our experiences.

My 2yo DD has already learned to pray "spontaneously" on her own.

We talk off an on throughout the day about how good God is, and how he takes care of us and provides for us, etc. (in terms a 2 yo can understand). When it rains, we thank God for the rain. If someone is sick, we pray for them, and when they are healed, we give God the glory for it. Since DD recently had a nightmare or two, we pray for God to give her "happy dreams" each night, and then in the morning I ask her how she slept and we thank God for taking care of her. We talk a lot about how God loves us, and we love Him. How He gives us things and takes care of our needs. Etc., etc., etc. We also read Bible stories and talk about them. All of this is done in brief sessions, whatever holds a 2 yo's attention span. We also keep her in "big church" with us, so she is exposed to the whole service. We sometimes explain what is going on (if they're having prayer, or we explain during the singing that we're worshiping God, etc.).

It is so nice to start seeing fruit from these things. For instance, one day when it rained, DD was the first one to say, "It's raining, Mommy!! Thank you, God, for the rain!" [Big Grin]

Recently her grandmother was in the hospital. We held hands and prayed for her. She told me later that "God will take care of Grandmama." The next day when she went home from the hospital, I told DD that she was feeling better and was going home. DD said, "God healed Grandmama. He touched her heart."

She has been doing similar things like this a lot. I even hear her pray for her dolls and stuffed animals. She will say, "God, please help giraffe-y to be happy." or "God, tiger hurt his knee, please touch his knee."

This morning, she fell and hit her mouth on her bed and cried. She told me that God would heal her. Then she went in the room where her Daddy was and told him that she would pray for God to heal her mouth. She stood there and said, "God, please touch my mouth." Then her Daddy reminded her to say "Amen." She also was telling me this morning that God loves her, and Jesus loves her, and Jesus is God. I know she doesn't understand all of it yet, but she is learning, at her own pace according to her age.

These moments are so sweet and so special.

Anyway, I just wanted to encourage those of you who have wondered how to teach the little ones. Just talk about these things all day long. Share the things you pray for, and share the answers to your prayers. Let you children know how God provides for you in all of the many ways that He takes care of us. Let them hear you praying, and thanking God. They will learn, and they will also learn to trust God.

Deut. 6:4-9
"4Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD: 5And thou shalt love the LORD thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might. 6And these words, which I command thee this day, shall be in thine heart: 7And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up. 8And thou shalt bind them for a sign upon thine hand, and they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes. 9And thou shalt write them upon the posts of thy house, and on thy gates.

0 CommentsPost A Comment!Permanent Link
Apr. 3, 2006
A Great Church-Training Tip

My DD is only 2 years old (28 months, to be exact), and she really does a good job of behaving in church for the most part. I have always been a believer in keeping her in church with me from the beginning, so that she can learn how to behave in church (instead of going to the nursery and learning to act like a heathen!  LOL!). She does pretty well. She has done much better since I resigned my position as worship leader and am therefore sitting with her thoughout the service. She has responded very well to my correction and training in church since that time, and she seems to be enjoying being in church more. This has really reinforced to me that I have made the right decision by resigning my position.

 

Anyway, at our new church things are a little more casual, and there is more room between the rows of seats for her to "roam." So sometimes she ends up roaming into the aisle next to the pews. I kept correcting her, and she would try to behave, but she just wouldn't be paying attention and would forget and wander into the aisle, or go dancing in the aisle.

 

Finally I came up with a plan! I found a roll of blue masking tape (the kind you use for painting, which removes very easily with no residue) and put it in my diaper bag. Now, if she is having a problem staying where she should, I pull out a piece of blue tape and place it on the floor and tell her not to go past that line. I usually will put one at each end, so she has very clear-cut boundaries. It works great. She knows not to go past the line and (almost) never does, and she will ask before crossing the line to go sit with grandparents or put in offering or whatever. Just having the visual boundary makes it a lot easier for her to know exactly where she is to stay. It works way better than a verbal boundary, and it keeps me from having to repeatedly correct her during the service.

 

It's great! Try it!

 

0 CommentsPost A Comment!Permanent Link
Mar. 1, 2006
VERY convicting tapes - The Godly Home

I got The Godly Home tape series from Charity Ministries after reading about it on a message board I frequent. I was so surprised when it came - it was 16 tapes in a nice plastic case!   :)  

 

The tapes are wonderful - so very convicting about putting our children in priority and loving them, about raising Godly children, etc., etc.

 

I have been convicted over and over while listening to these tapes. I have literally fallen to my knees in prayer and conviction over some of the sermons.

 

I am going to seriously cut back my Internet/TV/phone time. I have been needing to do this, and God has really shown me how much time I spend doing these things, and how little value I seem to be placing on my child/husband/home by making these other things too much of a priority.

 

Anyway, just wanted to tell y'all about these tapes. You can also get them in CD format, but they the CD is MP3 format so you would have to have an MP3 player or listen to it on your computer.

 

Here's the link:
www.charityministries.org/tapeministry/index.cfm

 

There is no set amount. You just send them however much of a donation you can afford. If you can't afford anything, they will send them for free. They are run strictly on donations, so that whoever wants or needs their teachings can have access to them.

1 CommentsPost A Comment!Permanent Link
Jan. 11, 2006
Consistency Wins the Battle

    Well, I know I'm supposed to be consistent, but sometimes it is such a challenge to be totally consistent. I have been working on not giving DD a command unless I'm willing to back it up. Too often, I'll ask her to do something, then when she appeals, I realize it wasn't such a big deal and I let her off the hook. Problem is, she's thinking that she gets to call the shots all the time.

So, I decided to buckle down and stick things out until she obeys, and until I see an attitude change. This is going to be a challenge for me, to stick it through all the way.

Yesterday went really well. She had to stand in the corner twice, and I was surpised she actually stayed in the corner without making a big issue out of it. The second time, she was just too wound up and throwing a big fit over nothing. I finally told her to go stand in the corner. She thought it was fun because the corner is a new thing. She stood there and sobbed for about a minute, then she totally calmed down. So I let her out of the corner and she was like a totally different child. I couldn't believe how that helped her to calm down so well. I hope it works that well next time. She has really been throwing a lot of fits lately.

Also, at naptime she decided to really just defy me. She refused to lay down. So, I stayed in her room and insisted she lie down until she finally complied. (She wanted to play, even though she was super tired.) Then she refused to close her eyes. (I think she was going to get back up and play as soon as I left the room.) I told her to close her eyes and she refused. I kept insisting, and I stayed there until she did. Normally, I would have just given up on the eye closing, since she was already lying down. But it finally occurred to me that if I let her get by with it, I was letting her get by with disobedience and a rebellious attitude. So I stood there until she obeyed, then I waiting a minute longer to make sure she would keep obeying. The really amazing thing was that once she finally decided to close her eyes, her whole attitude seemed to change. She became more peaceful, because she was no longer rebelling. I finally saw some fruit of my labors.

Now, I'm more determined to keep being consistent. I think if I do we will begin to see an end to this bad attitude. I have already gotten most of the tantrums under pretty good control. It doesn't happen near as often as it used to.

5 CommentsPost A Comment!Permanent Link
Dec. 15, 2005
Sleep training success

My DD has pretty much always been a really good sleeper (once we got past that difficult newborn stage). She loves to sleep! (she's just like her Mommy in that way)

 

But here lately she just wants to lie in bed talking, singing, and playing for an hour or two instead of going to sleep. I've shortened her nap time, and moved it back a little earlier, thinking that would help. She will sometimes cry, and I'll go in and sit in the rocking chair and hold her for a little while, but then she's back to playing again.

 

Finally, last night, she was fussing because she knocked her Aquarium Wonders sound and lights machine halfway off due to kicking it. I went in a scolded her about playing so much, and for some reason she wanted me to sit in the rocking chair but not hold her. Well, that ended up being the perfect solution. I sat there, and whenever she started talking, playing, or sitting up, I told her to lie down and go to sleep. It only took a couple of times for her to settle down. She tossed a little bit, but she quit talking and being wound up, and fell asleep pretty quickly.

 

I quickly decided this was an excellent approach, and I would keep it up each night as long as I need to. :-) I'm so happy to have found this solution. She gets herself so wound up, but once I got her to be still, she settled down very quickly.

 

Tonight she's doing pretty well so far. I haven't even had to go in there yet. Yay!! :-) I love when the Lord reveals something to me that I have been asking wisdom for. It excites me so much!! God is so good to always take care of us. :D

0 CommentsPost A Comment!Permanent Link
Dec. 15, 2005
Teaching Thankfulness

Well, I only have one child, but I think we're doing a pretty good job of teaching thankfulness.

I read a post on a message board a while back about someone whose children were extremely thankful. They would always thank their mom for everything. Instead of whining when they left the park, they would say "Thank you Mama for taking us to the park!"

We started from a very young age teaching DD to say thank you for everything. For the longest time, we would just tell her to say thank you and she would repeat us. Now she says it all the time on her own accord. And when we're out and about she extends her manners to friends, family, and people we don't know (such as waitresses, cashiers at the grocery store, etc.). We have also done the same thing with "excuse me." (We work on please, but it has not become automatic with her yet.)

We get lots of compliments and smiles when people see her being so polite. She just turned 2 a couple of weeks ago.

At times it can feel weird, because you'll do something like give her a cookie, and then you tell her, "Say 'thank you, Mommy.'" And then make her say it. Then I am sure to tell her "you're welcome." (gotta show her my side of the manners) But the payoff is when it starts to become a habit and lifestyle for your little one. I think just saying it starts to lead to a more cheerful heart. Also, you have to be sure that you are leading by example. Let your child hear you thanking and praising others. And talk to (or in front of) your child often about the things you are thankful for (including him/her and his/her father). Find little things to be grateful for, and be sure you share these things with your child. Our most powerful influence is leading by example.

We also talk to her often about how good the Lord is, and how He takes care of us, and how thankful we are for all that He does. This is building a trust and faith in the Lord in her little mind

 

What we do has worked wonderfully with our DD. But you just have to be consistent and keep after it.