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Parenting Your Partner?
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Almost all excellent parenting tools - listening, naming and accepting feelings, praising, supporting, acknowledging, thanking, showing affection, smiling and laughing, rewarding, giving positive feedback, sharing, boundary setting, speaking respectfully, and setting limits - are also excellent marriage tools. When you use the same techniques on your partner as you do on your child, you are not "parenting" him or her; you are simply using the tools that build excellent relationships. Parenting tools are, for the most part, just good relationship tools.
Friends & Family can sign up at www.dailyparentingposts.com
Copyright © 2017 Sarah Chana Radcliffe
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Posted 8/3/2017 10:26 PM |
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| Parenting |
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How to teach your kids anything and everything...
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Teach your kids how to interact with a spouse by interacting with your spouse. Teach your kids how to interact with a parent by interacting with your parent. Teach your kids how to interact with friends by interacting with your own friends. Teach your kids how to interact with extended family by interacting with extended family. Remember: they're always watching and learning from you.
Friends & Family can sign up at www.dailyparentingposts.com
Copyright © 2017 Sarah Chana Radcliffe
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Posted 8/3/2017 10:23 PM |
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| Parenting |
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Authoritative or Authoritarian?
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Use a warm, friendly voice when engaging in normal conversation with a child. Use a firm, business-like tone when setting limits. The contrast in voice quality is enough to establish your reputation as a benevolent, authority figure, a parent who is authoritative rather than authoritarian. Research shows that parenting that is both warm and firm (a combination called "authoritative") produces the healthiest children.
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Posted 8/2/2017 12:09 AM |
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When your child loses her cool.....
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It's okay for children to act childish since they are, after all, children. Grownups, however, need to demonstrate what mature behavior looks like. Therefore, when your child raises her voice and loses her cool, don't copy her. The goal is to get HER to copy YOU.
Friends & Family can sign up at www.dailyparentingposts.com
Copyright © 2017 Sarah Chana Radcliffe
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Posted 7/31/2017 1:23 PM |
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| Parenting |
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Authoritative or Authoritarian?
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Use a warm, friendly voice when engaging in normal conversation with a child. Use a firm, business-like tone when setting limits. The contrast in voice quality is enough to establish your reputation as a benevolent, authority figure, a parent who is authoritative rather than authoritarian. Research shows that parenting that is both warm and firm (a combination called "authoritative") produces the healthiest children.
Friends & Family can sign up at www.dailyparentingposts.com
Copyright © 2017 Sarah Chana Radcliffe
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Posted 7/31/2017 1:21 PM |
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Posted 7/30/2017 10:48 PM |
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Parenting Post 1
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Welcome to your first Parenting Post by Sarah Chana Radcliffe! There's so much to think about when it comes to family life. Let's start with thinking about YOU! It's important for you to look after yourself so that you can look after your family. When you notice that you are feeling irritable or impatient, take it as a SIGNAL to do something that will restore and balance your energies. Once you have nurtured yourself a little, you'll be ready to nurture your loved ones too!
Friends & Family can sign up at www.dailyparentingposts.com
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Posted 7/27/2017 10:06 PM |
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Parenting Tip #71
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BS"D Parenting Tip #71 Project Kavey Zichron Chaya and Shlomo Boruch presents "Parenting Tips" by Rabbi Dov Brezak Never Satisfied? In these generations we are beneficiaries of the blessing of plenty. We can obtain almost anything our heart desires and in abundance. (To cite one instance in the United States of America there are over two hundred types of breakfast cereals to choose from). Yet we often find our children to be unhappy and dissatisfied. Jealousy and competition are the norm instead of peace satisfaction and appreciation. Indeed our sages teach that the more one has the more one wants. So that the blessing of plenty be a blessing indeed we must help our children shift their focus from what they want to what they have. Sharing and expressing our personal joy with our lot will certainly be a significant factor in effecting this change in our children. To obtain practical applications of this tip along with questions and answers regarding the tip please refer to the expanded version. The expanded version of this tip is available for a 5$ monthly fee. To register for the expanded version please send an e mail with your request to kaveytips@gmail.com
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Posted 2/2/2012 11:46 AM |
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Parenting Tip #70
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BS"D Parenting Tip #70 Project Kavey Zichron Chaya and Shlomo Boruch presents "Parenting Tips" by Rabbi Dov Brezak
The Secret Of Champions
The way we react to a child that is not satisfying our demands and not living up to our expectations depends on our objective. If the child’s failure is our focus we will choose to react with disappointment frustration and anger as these will encourage more of the same. If we truly aspire towards the child’s success, we will patiently and willingly help the child towards success, despite his present failure. The principal way in which to accomplish this is to make it easier for the child to meet our demands and then catch him doing it right.
One father wanted his young son to excel at the sport of bowling. After the pins at the end of the bowling lane had been set up automatically, this father placed several additional pins in the gutters, so that the child’s ball could not miss hitting bowling pins, and the father could point out to him his “success.” This father “taught” his son that he could succeed. When the child grew up, he bowled professionally. Following one extraordinarily successful tour, an interviewer asked him to reveal the key to his outstanding success. “I had a very unusual father,” was his response.
To obtain practical applications of this tip along with questions and answers regarding the tip please refer to the expanded version. The expanded version of this tip is available for a $5 monthly fee. To register for the expanded version please send an e mail with your request to kaveytips@gmail.com.
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Posted 1/25/2012 11:20 AM |
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