Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Parenting

3 ways to bring in gentle parenting into your current parenting style

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Jun, 2023 12:19 PM
  • 3 ways to bring in gentle parenting into your current parenting style

Present-day parenting involves asking multiple questions, especially among new-age parents. They spend a lot of time online gathering information about different styles of parenting and their effect on the child in the early developmental stages of their lives.

In this era of excessive information, which can often be conflicting and overwhelming, parents have to choose a parenting style that works best for their child while being compassionate and understanding towards her/him. Gentle parenting is one such approach that parents are increasingly adopting as it focuses more on the child as a capable being and involves a collaborative effort between the parents and the child towards fostering greater empathy, understanding, and respect in the relationship.

Here are three ways gentle parenting can be incorporated into your parenting style:

Separate action from the person:

Focusing on the action rather than the person helps the child understand how to respond better in a situation and to a person. For instance, if a child is throwing a tantrum and making a fuss by screaming, the parent should shift attention from the child to the action, in this case, it's screaming. Instead of telling the child, "You should not scream," saying, “Screaming will not help here. Let us discuss this more,” is a much better approach to defusing the situation.

Modelling plays a key role in understanding emotions:

Parents that express their emotions well and regulate them wisely become great models to help the child understand how to handle their own emotions. Simple day-to-day scenarios can teach children this. For example, a parent can say, “Oh, I was feeling stressed as I was late for my meeting today due to heavy traffic on the road. However, I did self-talk and that helped me not panic while I was late.”

Work collaboratively:

Parents often adopt an ‘instructive’ mode of teaching children certain behaviours, or even while conducting simple tasks like tying laces. However, rather than ordering or instructing them, working together and helping them understand goes a long way. This gives children the freedom to create their paths and ways of doing things.

Children learn by example, watching their parents who are their world for the first few years of their lives. Making them feel loved for who they are makes them stronger and more resilient to the world around them. It also proves beneficial for parents to be more kind and compassionate towards themselves.

MORE Parenting ARTICLES

Experts divided on COVID risk of trick-or-treating

Experts divided on COVID risk of trick-or-treating
Dr. Anna Banerji, an associate professor at the University of Toronto's School of Public Health, says trick or treating should "probably be cancelled this year."

Experts divided on COVID risk of trick-or-treating

Trick-or-What? Pandemic Halloween is a mixed bag all around

Trick-or-What? Pandemic Halloween is a mixed bag all around
Some were looking extra-forward to Halloween this year because it falls on a Saturday, with a monthly blue moon to boot.

Trick-or-What? Pandemic Halloween is a mixed bag all around

Parents, educators push for outdoor learning

Parents, educators push for outdoor learning
With many school plans failing to promise smaller class sizes and epidemiologists noting less infection risk outdoors, an ardent movement of teachers, parents and sympathetic principals are urgently pursuing ambitious outdoor learning plans they hope can be incorporated into the curriculum.

Parents, educators push for outdoor learning

How to get kids to practise mask hygiene

How to get kids to practise mask hygiene
Provinces have different guidelines when it comes to students wearing face masks.

How to get kids to practise mask hygiene

Working families enlist grandparents to help with the kids

Working families enlist grandparents to help with the kids
Gone, for now, are the days when retirees Bill and Mary Hill could do whatever they please.

Working families enlist grandparents to help with the kids

COVID-19 changes school shopping and budgets

COVID-19 changes school shopping and budgets
Vonny Sweetland has yet to decide if he will be sending his 12-year-old sister Josephine back to class in September, but just in case he does, he's been stocking up on supplies for months.

COVID-19 changes school shopping and budgets