12 Steps To Follow For Raising Kids

Share Post:

Parenting advice from years ago; it is still very relevant today for our consideration:

12 steps to follow for raising kids by ANN LANDERS:

1. Do not attempt to mold him in the image of yourself, your father, your brother or your neighbor. Each child is an individual and should be permitted to be himself.

2. Don’t crush a child’s spirit when he fails. And never compare him with others who have outshone him.

3. Remember that anger and hostility are natural emotions. Help your child to find socially acceptable outlets for these normal feelings or they may be turned inward and erupt in the form of physical or mental illness.

4. Discipline your child with firmness and reason. Don’t let YOUR anger throw you off balance. If he knows you are fair, you will not lose his respect or his love. And make sure the punishment fits the crime. Even the youngest child has a keen sense of justice.

5. Remember that each child needs TWO parents. Present a united front. Never join with your child against your mate. This can create in your child (as well as in yourself) emotional conflicts. It can also create feelings of guilt, confusion and insecurity.

6. Do not hand your child everything his little heart desires. Permit him to know the thrill of earning and the joy of achieving.

Grant him the greatest of all satisfactions, the pleasure that comes with personal accomplishment.

7. Do not set yourself up as the epitome of perfection. This is a difficult role to play 24 hours a day. You will find it easier to communicate with your child if you let him know that Mom and Dad can err, too.

8. Don’t make threats in anger or impossible promises when you are in a generous mood. Threaten or promise only that which you can live up to. To a child, a parent’s word means everything. The child who has lost faith in his parents has difficulty believing in anything.

9. Do not smother your child with superficial manifestations of love. The healthiest love expresses itself in day-in, day-out training, which breeds self-confidence and independence.

10. Teach your child there is dignity in hard work, whether it is performed with callused hands that shovel coal or skilled fingers that manipulate surgical instruments. Let him know a useful life is a blessed one and a life of ease and pleasure-seeking is meaningless.

11. Do not try to protect your child against every small blow and disappointment. Adversity strengthens character and makes us compassionate. Trouble is the great equalizer.

12. Children learn from example. Telling him something is not teaching him.

Like what you see? Share it!

Learn More...

Related Posts

You are a Person, NOT a Diagnosis

Far too often in society, people use their diagnosis to define themselves. Self-labeling is a bad thing, here’s why. We have no perceived negatives such as stigma, prejudice or discrimination, attached to the term “survivor’. We like to think of the diagnosis as a short-hand way of helping describe a general concern or condition; however, it is not the be-all,

Read More »

Incorporating Play Therapy into your Therapy Sessions

Play Therapy is not just playing. Play therapy offers alternatives to everyday counseling. Play therapy is a structured, theoretical based approach to therapy, it builds on the normal communicative and learning processes of children and teens. At CPC, we strategically utilize play therapy techniques to assist children and teens in expressing what is troubling them when they cannot find the

Read More »

Grief During the Holiday Season

The following guidelines are appropriate for recent loss as well as for loss experienced years ago. Additionally, they are suitable for children and adults. ​ Do’s and Don’ts Do share positive tributes and stories. Even in not-so-good circumstances there are positives to be found and acknowledged about the loved one and their life. Do pay attention to the children who

Read More »