1. Pay full attention. This is your time to listen to your child. It’s a gift to both of you. The shopping list and that problem at the office can wait. Your child knows when you’re really listening. She may not show it, but it breaks her heart when you pretend to and don’t. Turn off your cell phone. Really. She will remember for the rest of her life that her parent turned off the cell phone just to listen to her.
2. Acknowledge and reflect his feelings, without judgment or suggestion. "You sure are angry at your brother” and “You seem worried about the field trip today"are conversation openers, “You just have to make the effort to get along with your brother!” and “Don’t be such a baby about the field trip; of course you’re going!” are conversation closers.
3. Empathize instead of probing. "Tell me how you feel" is not empathy. Empathy is mirroring whatever she's already showing you. “You seem sad this morning” or “You’re very quiet tonight,” followed by a warm smile will encourage her to open up more than badgering her with questions.
3. Empathize instead of probing. "Tell me how you feel" is not empathy. Empathy is mirroring whatever she's already showing you. “You seem sad this morning” or “You’re very quiet tonight,” followed by a warm smile will encourage her to open up more than badgering her with questions.
4. Don't put your child on the spot. Kids often open up more when we aren't looking directly at them. Your child may feel more comfortable talking while driving in the car, doing dishes, or walking down the street. Sometimes when we turn the lights out at night, kids pour out their souls to us in the dark.
5. Help your child process his emotions with empathy. Empathy is like a mirror you hold up to your child. Your acknowledgment and acceptance of what he’s feeling -- even those more disturbing emotions like jealousy and anger -- helps him to accept his own feelings, which is what allows them to resolve. Most of the time, when kids (and adults) feel their emotions are understood and accepted, the feelings lose their charge and begin to dissipate. We don’t have to act on those feelings, or even to like them, merely to acknowledge their presence.
Repressed feelings, on the other hand, don't fade away, as feelings do when they’ve been acknowledged. Repressed feelings are trapped and looking for a way out. Because they aren’t under conscious control, they pop out unmodulated, when a preschooler socks her sister, or a seven year old has nightmares, or an eleven year develops a nervous tic.
Accepting his feelings and reflecting them does not mean you agree with them or endorse them. You’re showing him you understand, nothing more, and nothing less. And if you’ve ever felt understood, you understand just how great a gift this is.
6. Close your mouth. You may have to put your hand over your mouth. There are teachable moments, but kids learn most from the opportunity to hear themselves talk and come to their own conclusions. If you give in to the temptation to lecture, your child will clam up. If you want to let your child know you're listening, make short sounds: "Mmmm....huh....wow!..."
7. Don’t start solving the problem. The point is to let him get past his upset so that he can begin to think about solutions himself, not to solve it for him. When he expresses his feelings about something, you'll want to listen and acknowledge, rather than jumping in with solutions. That means you'll have to manage your own anxiety about the issue.
8. Don’t start by trying to change the feeling or cheer her up. I promise you, empathizing with the bad feeling is the fastest way to let it dissipate. Arguing her out of the bad feeling just invalidates her, or pushes it under to resurface later. That doesn’t mean you magnify or wallow in the negative feeling, just that you acknowledge it and honor her experience. Once she has a chance to notice, accept, and maybe express the feeling, she’ll feel ready for "cheering up" in the sense of a change of scene and topic.
9. Keep the conversation safe for your child by managing your own emotions. Don't take it personally. Breathe. Detach. Above all, if you start feeling responsible (“I could have prevented this!”) or terrified (“I can’t believe this is happening to my child!”) get a grip and put your feelings aside. This isn’t about you, right now, and your upset won't help. You can process later. Remind yourself that this too shall pass, and that what's most important here is helping your child work through these difficult feelings and possibly come up with a plan of action that works for him.
10. Match your reaction with his mood. Your third grader’s being a bit downcast because his team lost the soccer game doesn't merit a reaction from you as if someone had died. Conversely, mechanically parroting "It can be hard when your boyfriend splits up with you" is likely to evoke hysteric rage from your fourteen year old. You empathize so your child knows you understand what's she's feeling, but you also communicate your wordless confidence that this too shall pass, and some day life will be good again.http://www.ahaparenting.com/parenting-tools/communication/brilliant-listener
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