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Eckert Psychology & Education Centre
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Raising a Confident Child... Preparing our kids for true greatness
Articles
The Absent-Minded Professor
As a psychologist, I often come into contact with children who are very bright but do not seem to be able to show this potential...
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New Year's Resolutions: How Turtles Succeed
If you’re like me and many people that I know, I find myself setting the same New Year’s resolutions year after year...
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A Theory of Emotions: Part Three
My recent articles for this newsletter have focused on a theory of emotions. The basic tenets of this theory are that emotions are a universal and vital human experience...
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But How Can It Work If I Don't Remember It
Try this experiment… Ask a friend to close their eyes and “notice” what happens while you, in a stern voice, say “No” repeatedly...
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To Test Or Not To Test
To test or not to test…this is a question many parents are faced with at some point during their child’s journey through school...
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Sibling Love
Siblings fight. In fact, 2 to 4 year olds will experience about seven to eight disputes per hour. 3 to 9 year old siblings fight just as much, but...
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Coaching Students with Learning Disabilities to Think Actively
3.4 million Canadians have Learning Disabilities. This means that 25 times more people have LDs than Autism Spectrum Disorder, 64 times more people have LDs than prostate cancer...
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Anger: Friend or Foe?
It was a warm, sunny day, a real gift for us snowbound, housebound Canadians, and my daughter and I headed out to hang with family friends for an impromptu lunch...
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Exercise and the AD/HD Brain
I don‟t know if your children‟s school made the same change as my daughters,‟ but this year they have scheduled Phys. Ed. first thing in the morning...
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The Forgiving Habit
As parents we are constantly faced with the difficult and opposing reality of wanting to shield our children from all harm...
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Ladders and Walls in Motherhood
How many times has this happened to you… you are going about your day when all of a sudden your cell phone rings? You pick it up and on the other end...
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Parenting Struggles 101
Most parents struggle when it comes to handling difficult encounters with their kids. There are three major reasons for this...
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Why is Assertiveness Training Important for Kids?
With increased awareness and information provided on bullying in schools, we may be ....
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Why Is Temperament Important for Parents to Understand?
Have you ever wondered why the parenting strategies you use with your children work ....
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When Children Put Themselves Down
Angela MacPhee, M.Sc., Registered Psychologist
Kimberly Eckert, M.Sc., Registered Psychologist
“I hate school! I’m so stupid! All the other kids are smarter than me! I’m never going back!” Kate screams as she storms through the door from school, tossing her backpack into the corner angrily.
“I’m such a loser. I can’t do anything right.” Jack mumbles as he walks slowly to his room.
Every parent can relate to the gut-wrenching, helpless, and desperate feeling that comes when their child feels like a failure at the game of life. When children feel unsuccessful, and believe that they are failures, how is a parent to respond? How can parents help their children to mobilize their coping resources and improve their situation?
Most parents do the thing that comes most naturally. They rush to counter their child’s extreme negative statements with the opposite; extreme positive statements. Dad says “Kate, you are not stupid, you are a very smart young lady. In fact, I think you’re brilliant.” Mom says “Jack, you are not a loser! Don’t say that about yourself, it’s not true! You know you’re great at lots of things!”
We have all made these kinds of statements, and have been on the receiving end of these statements as well. The problem is, although they are usually heart-felt, and made with the best of intentions, they tend to ring hollow and do little to appease feelings of self-doubt and rejection. Why is this?
When we fail, the world provides us with clear evidence of that failure. Kate receives a failing grade on a social studies, math, and spelling test, all in the same week. Jack misses the crucial goal in the lunch-time soccer game, trips over his words in the group presentation, and doesn’t get invited to the party on the weekend. This evidence is tough to ignore. In the face of a failure, especially when failure happens in multiple areas, many children generalize this to mean they are failures.
As adults, we know this is not true. We know that our children have many wonderful strengths to offer the world, and also areas of challenge they must work to improve. Countering their negative statements with positive ones is important and very necessary, as we cannot sit idly by while our children develop untrue negative beliefs about their competence. However, our positive statements must also carry the weight of evidence, must be grounded in truth, and must constrain the problem to its appropriate boundaries.
Perhaps Kate is really floundering at school. Perhaps Jack is really struggling with anxiety, causing him to be withdrawn and awkward. Instead of denying or glossing over these realities, first look for the grain of truth that underlies their negative statements, and acknowledge this (e.g. Kate, I know you have had some upsetting grades this week; Jack, I know you’ve had some disappointments lately). Help your child to bring the problem down to the specifics (e.g. Kate is having trouble with organization and study skills and this is causing her to get failing grades in tests), and away from global statements (e.g. Kate is “stupid”). Provide evidence that proves your point (e.g. Kate got the top grade in her class on her science project when she accessed help planning it in advance). Then, help your child see the problem as temporary and changeable (e.g. Jack is feeling anxious and right now this is masking his skills, but if Jack gets some help for his anxiety, he can begin to show the skills he has) instead of permanent and hopeless (e.g. Jack is a “loser” and “can’t do anything right”). Again, provide evidence to support your statements (e.g. you notice that when Jack is one-on-one with friends he is less anxious and is confident, funny, and engaging, and there are people specially trained to help children conquer anxiety). Make a concrete plan (e.g. Kate will get a tutor, Jack will get some counseling) with your child to make changes to the specific areas that are problematic, providing hope for change.
Going through this process with your children does more than support them through a difficult time. It builds skills that will promote their mental health, coping, and resilience throughout their lives. To become an expert in this process, contact the psychology team at Eckert Psychology & Education Centre.
As with any treatment, it is recommended that you seek the counsel and care of your health care provider before deciding if CAM strategies are right for you. If you want to learn more about the various CAM strategies, contact a qualified physician or psychologist who is knowledgeable in this area and open to having a discussion of the various treatments and there role in your life.
Copyright 2009 - Eckert Psychology & Education Centre