Positive Parenting

Start on a new note. Help your children nurture their inner goodness.

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Start on a new note. Help your children nurture their inner goodness.

What do we typically do when we find our children doing something we don't approve of? We become reactive parents. We criticize, complain, compare (How dare you do this? Your sister never put us through this), we're sarcastic (You must be so proud of yourself) and catastrophize (You will never be able to get through college admissions). Often, we pepper our reactions with lectures and nagging sessions. When none of it works-and predictably so-we end up screaming and dole out a punishment. And our children react with an equal measure of negativity, through rebellion, anger, resentment and a 'can't-be-bothered' attitude.

Not only do these reactive strategies fail, I think they can be quite damaging for our children's growth. Buddhist Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh put it beautifully when he described how each child has both negative seeds-of anger, despair, hatred, fear and violence-and wholesome seeds-of love, happiness,  compassion and forgiveness. According to him, what will blossom depends on the seeds we nurture.

Try a new approach

A parenting and educational approach that's gaining a large following internationally, called the Nurtured Heart Approach (NHA) by Howard Glasser, is very much in keeping with this Zen approach. I have been using it with my own children and the kids I work with, and it has worked wonders. The three main aspects of this approach are:

  • Refuse to energize negativity.
  • Relentlessly energize their positives.
  • Reset: Do not react negatively and stay calm when the child does something wrong.

Let me explain how this works: Parents following this approach commit to not saying or doing anything that may fuel negativity in the child (refer to the reactive measures mentioned earlier). And any time the parent feels that she/he is becoming reactive, she/he resets, moves away, refusing to energize the child negatively. But the parent has to make sure she/he does this w...

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