How to Handle a Bossy Kid
What to do if the
balance of power is out of whack in your home.
Is Your Child in Charge?
Before she even rolls out of bed in the morning, six-year-old Mary Beth White of Wilmington, Delaware, gives her parents their marching orders. “I want eggs for breakfast,” she announces. “I want to see what you pack in my lunch box. After school, let’s get chicken nuggets. Then let’s come home so I can change into a dress before we go to the mall.”
Her parents, Tom and Jill, have
a challenge on their hands. “In a way, it’s great to have an organized kid
who knows her own mind,” says Jill, who has a younger daughter as well.
“Trouble is, Mary Beth will sometimes go too far. She’ll tell me what shoes
to wear, or insist that I paint the dining room a different color. The other
day she tried to rearrange the furniture by herself. And when she plays with
friends, she has to be the star. If she doesn’t get her way, she gets
angry.”
Some
children are natural-born bosses. They have an innate need to make
decisions, manage their environment, and lead rather than follow. Stephen
Jackson, a first-grader from northern New Jersey, “operates under the
theory of what’s mine is mine and what’s yours is mine,” says his mom, Sue.
“The other day I bought two new Star Wars light sabers. Later, I saw
Stephen with the two new ones while his brother was using the beat-up
ones.”
“Examine the extended family,
and you’ll probably find a bossy grandparent, aunt, uncle or cousin in
every generation. It’s an inheritable trait,” says Russell A. Barkley,
a professor of psychiatry at the Medical University of South Carolina
and co-author of Your Defiant Child. Other children drift into
dominance to fill a power void when they sense their parents are weak,
ambivalent, or in disagreement with each other.
Whether it’s temperament
or temper tantrum at work, too much control in the hands of the young
isn’t healthy for children or the family. Fear is at the root of a lot of
bossy behavior, says family psychologist John F. Taylor. Children, he says in
his book From Defiance to Cooperation, “have secret feelings of
weakness” and “a craving to feel safe.” It’s the parents’ role — not
the child’s — to provide that security.
When a “boss child”
doesn’t learn limits at home, the stage is set for a host of troubles outside
the family. The overly willful, persistent, and inflexible
child may have trouble obeying teachers or coaches, for example, or trouble
keeping friends. It can be pretty lonely as the top dog if no one
likes your domineering ways.
“I see a trend of parents
abdicating their authority,” says Barkley, who has studied bossy behavior for
more than 30 years. “They bend too far because they don’t want to be as
strict as their own parents were. But they also feel less competent about
their parenting skills. And their kids, in turn, feel more anxious.”
How can parents regain respect
and peace without being overbearing? These suggestions can help realign
the balance of power.
1. Unite and Conquer. Strong-willed
kids are often unusually bright, gifted and creative. Their parents need to
be especially thoughtful and on their toes, ready and willing to
actively manage them. Otherwise, youngsters — even toddlers — will
sense an opening. “Bossy kids tend to work more on the mother,” notes
Barkley. “It’s important for both parents to be mindful of their child’s trigger
points, to agree on key rules, and to back each other up.”
2. Say “Yes” When You Can. Children do not
learn in a stressful, angry atmosphere. Before change can take place,
family feuding needs to be defused. Evaluate sources of
conflict. Kids tend to dig in and act defiant when their parents
over-control them, telling them exactly what to wear and eat, for example.”
Be calm and firm about fewer
family rules,” suggests Barkley. “If your child wants yogurt for breakfast
but you’ve made pancakes, let it go
once in a while.” It’s a matter, he says, of “prioritizing the nos.”
3. Pay Attention. Studies show that
demanding and defiant kids receive less affection and positive
acknowledgement — and more punishment — than compliant kids.
Withdrawing from a small tyrant is a parent’s natural response, but it
feeds the child’s fears, resulting in more attempts at control. Kids need to
experience their parents’ love in concrete ways so they’ll feel safe enough
to relax.”
When I give her my full
attention for at least 20 minutes a day, Mary Beth is very attuned to
me,” says Jill White. “That’s when I can get her to think and compromise.
Recently I told her, ‘We have a problem. You like to pick out your
clothes, but I want to decide what you wear to church. What should we do?’ On
her own, she suggested Mary Beth days and Mommy days.”
4. Make Respect
Reciprocal. Exquisite manners are essential for family diplomacy.
Modeling “please” and “thank you,” and showing a child by example how to
suggest and request rather than bark orders, preserves everyone’s ego.
It also builds the social skills needed to keep authority figures and friends
happy.
Try asking your child to do you
an easy favor. Then reward it with a hug and words such as, “Thank you. I
like it when you listen to me.” Good manners and compliance will
become associated with pleasure.
5. Secure Your Status. Even as you try to
be attentive, respectful and accommodating — to a point — don’t
surrender your parental command post. Instead, sit tall in the saddle,
as one mom put it, by using body language and eye contact that tells your
child who’s in charge. Also, rope off adult privileges: “That’s
Daddy’s chair. Please choose another.”
Enforce rules swiftly and
surely. “It’s bedtime in 30 minutes. Finish your game so we can share a
story.” Refuse to engage in further debate, and simply turn off the lights at
the appointed time. Bossy children can turn out to be popular, determined
leaders, or unhappy, fearful loners. They look to their parents to be
parents — the people who will show them how to tap their potential.
Judsen Culbreth, former
editor-in-chief of “Parent & Child” and “Working Mother,” conducts
workshops for parents.
http://www.rd.com/family/how-to-handle-the-family-power-struggle/
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out of
whack
no longer correct or working
properly
give
somebody their marching orders
to order somebody to leave a
place, their job, etc.
nugget
a
small round piece of some types of food
star
a
very famous, successful, and popular performer
innate
inborn;
present from birth
operate
to
work
saber (especially UK
sabre)
a
heavy sword with a curved blade
beat-up
old
and damaged
bossy
fond
of or prone to giving orders
trait
a
characteristic or quality that distinguishes somebody
psychiatry
the
study and treatment of mental illness
drift
move
from one state to another
void
a
large empty space
ambivalent
unsure;
uncertain or unable to decide about what course to follow
temperament
a
prevailing or dominant quality of mind
tantrum
an
outburst of anger, especially a childish display of rage or bad temper
craving
a
strong desire for something
boss
somebody
dominant
overly
too
much; to an extreme or excessive degree
willful (especially
UK wilful)
stubborn;
stubbornly determined to act on a desire, regardless of the opinions or
advice of
others
top dog
the
most important or powerful person
domineering
tyrannical;
trying to control other people without thinking about their feelings
parenting
child-rearing
overbearing
bossy;
arrogant and tending to order people around
realign
to readjust; to straighten something
again
strong-willed
determined
to prevail in the face of difficulty or opposition
on your toes
alert and ready for action
toddler
a
young child who is learning to walk
trigger
a
stimulus that sets off an action, process, or series of events
stressful
causing
or involving mental or physical stress
feud
a
prolonged disagreement, dispute, or quarrel
defuse
to
make a situation less tense, dangerous, or uncomfortable
dig in
to take up defensive
positions
pancake
a thin flat round
cake
let go (of something)
to surrender; to stop holding
something
prioritize
to rank things according to
importance
defiant
deliberately
and openly disobedient
compliant
obedient; ready to conform
tyrant
dictator; an authoritarian person
attuned to
familiar
with
pick out
to
choose or select
on your own
without help
exquisite
excellent;
perfect and delightful
bark
to
give orders, ask questions, etc. in a loud, unfriendly way
ego
self-esteem
compliance
the
practice of obeying rules or requests made by people in authority
attentive
helpful;
making sure that people have what they need
in the
saddle
in a position of authority and
control
rope off
to
separate an area from another one, using ropes, to stop people from entering
it
fearful
nervous and afraid
loner
somebody
who likes being alone
tap
to
make use of a source of energy, knowledge, etc. that already exists
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Monday, 10 November 2014
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