Photo Credit |
1. Give unconditional love: Let your child know
you love her no matter what by giving lots of hugs, kisses and cuddles. Also,
tell her you love her. When you do have
to correct behavior make sure she knows that it is her behavior- not her- that
is unacceptable.
2. Pay
attention: Make eye contact and take time to give your child your undivided
attention. If you are in a time crunch
suggest a later time that you could give your undivided attention. The child will start to feel better about
themselves because you are sending the message that you think she is important.
3. Teach
limits: Set some reasonable rules. Be
clear and consistent. Your child will feel secure if she knows what is
expected.
4. Support
healthy risks: Let your child explore
something new. She could try out a new
food, a new book, a new toy, or a new friend.
She might experience failure but without risk she cannot succeed. Try
not to rescue or intervene if she gets frustrated. If you jump in every time
she gets upset with trying something new she will get the message that she is
not capable. You have to balance you
need to protect her with the need she has to take on something new.
5. Let
mistakes happen: Failures are ways to
help build your child’s confidence by helping her see what she could do
differently the next time. Admit when
you make a mistake. Your child will
understand that it is okay to make mistakes because we all make them and we can
all learn from them.
Photo Credit |
7. Listen well: To help your child know that her thoughts and feelings matter you must stop and listen to what she is saying. You may have to help identify her emotions by saying, “I understand that you are sad when mommy has to leave.” In this way you validate her feelings. When you express your own emotions she will gain confidence about expressing her own.
8. Resist comparisons: Making comparisons, whether good or bad will affect your child. Positive comparison will make it hard to live up to and negative comparisons can make her feel bad about herself. Focus on what makes your child unique and tell her you appreciate that about her. When you do that she will value that about herself too.
9. Offer empathy: If your child is upset because she cannot draw as good as Suzie can let her know you understand her frustration and then talk about one of her strengths. Help her to see that we all have strengths and weaknesses and that she does not have to be perfect to feel good about herself.
10. Provide encouragement: When you encourage you acknowledge progress, it’s not just rewarding achievement. You send the message that you are proud of them. But when you praise she can feel like she is only “good enough” when she does something perfect. Give praise judiciously and offer encouragement liberally.
Building self-esteem takes time and effort but doing so will help your child have protection and resilience for what life has to throw her way.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.