When Your Child Has a Strong-Willed Personality: Understand your Child's Needs... Tailor Your Parenting Techniques... Help Your Child
By Carl E Pickhardt and Vince Iannelli
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Carl E Pickhardt
An Adams Media author.
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When Your Child Has a Strong-Willed Personality - Carl E Pickhardt
Strong-Willed
Personality
Il_9781598697636_0002_002 Understand Your Child’s Needs
Il_9781598697636_0002_003 Tailor Your Parenting Techniques
Il_9781598697636_0002_004 Help Your Child Adapt
Carl Pickhardt
Series Editor: Vincent Iannelli, M.D.
9781598697636_0002_005Copyright © 2008 Simon and Schuster.
All rights reserved.
This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any
form without permission from the publisher; exceptions are
made for brief excerpts used in published reviews.
Published by
Adams Media, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
57 Littlefield Street, Avon, MA 02322. U.S.A.
www.adamsmedia.com
Contains materials adapted and abridged from The Everything® Parent’s
Guide to the Strong-Willed Child, by Carl Pickhardt, copyright © 2005
Simon and Schuster., ISBN 13: 978-1-59337-381-8, ISBN 10:
1-59337-381-3.
ISBN 13: 978-1-59869-763-6
ISBN 10: 1-59869-763-3
eISBN: 978-1-44051-578-1
Printed in Canada.
J I H G F E D C B A
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
is available from the publisher.
This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information with regard to the subject matter covered. It is sold with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting, or other professional advice. If legal advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional person should be sought.
—From a Declaration of Principles jointly adopted by
a Committee of the American Bar Association
and a Committee of Publishers and Associations
This book is available at quantity discounts for bulk purchases.
For information, please call 1-800-289-0963.
Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1: Is Your Child Strong-Willed?
The Issue of Want
The Issue of Won’t
The Issue of Why
The Issue of Win
The Issue of When
The Issue of Whose
Chapter 2: Problems Your Child Will Face
Too Powerful?
Too Controlling?
Too Independent?
Too Exceptional?
Too Focused on Self?
Too Intolerant?
Chapter 3: Problems You Will Face as a Parent
Characteristics That Define a Strong-Willed Parent
You Teach What You Are
The Question of Now or Later
Everyday Power Struggles
Grasping for Control
Chapter 4: Adapting and Cooperating—Methods for Parenting
Parental Control—Is It an Illusion?
Cooperation Is Key
How to Motivate Cooperation
Making Cooperative Choices
Subverting Cooperation—and How to Deal with It
Chapter 5: Who’s Running Your Family?
Where’s Your Sense of Priority?
Seeing Nothing but the Negative
Are You Scattered and Distracted?
Focusing on What You Can’t Control
Reactive Instead of Proactive
Chapter 6: How to Get Back in Charge
Work on Communication
Clarify Responsibilities
Do You Have Consent—Is It Even Enough?
Assert Your Authority
Now, Stay Positive!
Chapter 7: Bumps on the Road to Regaining Control
The Intractable Child
How to Retrain the Intractable Child
The Violent Child
How to Encourage Nonviolent Behavior
How to Confront Acts of Self-Violence
Chapter 8: How to Handle Discipline
What’s Your Goal?
Learning to Respect Choice
Make Sure You’re Consistent!
Don’t Make the Situation Worse!
Guidance, Supervision, and Structure
Chapter 9: How to Handle Conflict
The Nature of Conflict
Who’s Responsible?
Conflict Resolution
Conflict Avoidance
Chapter 10: What if Your One and Only Child Is Willful?
Fixing Your Family Dynamics?
The Dangers of Overparenting
Is Your Child Demanding and Controlling Only?
The Power of Being Precocious
Chapter 11: Keep Your Emotions in Check
When Your Emotions Run High
Emotions Are Your Friend and Foe
How to Take Responsibilities
How Can Anger Help You?
Watch Emotional Escalation
Avoid Overreactions
Willpower to the Rescue
Appendix A: Helpful Websites
Appendix B: Helpful Books
Appendix C: Helpful Support Groups
Introduction
by Vincent Iannelli
Although parents often seek help when they have a picky eater or poor sleeper, they often try to go it alone when their child has discipline and behavior problems.
They may stick to their own previously tried and true discipline techniques or go from one breakthrough
program to another, without any success.
Unfortunately, while many kids are easy to discipline, eager to please, and sometimes do well even as you make parenting mistakes, with the strong-willed child you have to be more flexible and adapt your method of parenting to your child.
This can be quite surprising to the new parents who read about all of the traditional parenting techniques and thought they were prepared to their raise their child. Parents who already have one or more easygoing children and then have a strong-willed child come along can be in for an even bigger surprise as they continue to try the discipline methods that worked with their first children but no longer seem to be working anymore.
Their initial surprise quickly leads to frustration, as their strong-willed child almost seems to take over the family. His tantrums and demands may get so bad that it makes eating out at a restaurant, going to a store, or even visiting family or friends a big chore.
It is at this point, but hopefully before, that parents seek help. When Your Child Has a . . . Strong-Willed Personality is a great resource for parents who need help parenting their strong-willed child.
In addition to helping you understand why your child may be so strong-willed, Dr. Pickhardt shows you how to get back in charge of your household. His book teaches you how to handle discipline, conflict, and how to avoid overreacting when your strong-willed child doesn’t listen.
From the basics of what to say during a tantrum and how to help your child work in a group of children to teaching your child to be more patient, When Your Child Has a . . . Strong-Willed Personality will give you all of the tools you need to parent your strong-willed child.
While it is the perfect book for strong-willed children and other hard-to-discipline children, including kids with ADHD, it is also a great resource for any parent who wants to learn more about basic discipline techniques and avoid overparenting.
Chapter 1
Is Your Child Strong-Willed?
Ten Things You Will Learn in This Chapter
• How to tell if your infant may be a willful child.
• When children start to act out, purposefully, and why.
• What happens when a stubborn child and stubborn parent clash.
• How following through on your word is extremely important.
• About the four propositions of independence.
• How distraction can be a valuable tool.
• About the hidden meaning behind the question why?
• How a willful child often only gets worse with age.
• How to deal with your child who demands immediate gratification.
• About first-born children and their interesting perspectives of family
The Issue of Want
To begin to appreciate how willful children can be a handful for parents, it may be helpful to consider the six Ws of willfulness—want, won’t, why, win, when, and whose. Around each of these issues, parents of a willful child frequently find themselves hard-pressed.
Although most parents know the basics of what their baby requires—food, rest, diaper changes, comforting, playtime, sleep, soothing words, affectionate touch, for example—only the baby knows exactly when he wants those needs met. Some babies are flexible, easily scheduled, and soon satisfied, quickly coming to adjust to the timing, kind, and amount of parental care being given. Living on parental terms seems to work okay for the child because, by and large, the child goes with the parental program without complaining.
Other babies, however, are less content with this standard schedule. Operating on their own schedule, they loudly let it be known when a want is unsatisfied, and they signal intense and protracted distress until it is met. They also signal to parents that a strong-willed child has arrived into their care. She just keeps fussing and crying until we give her what she wants. She won’t give up!
In willful children, where there’s a will, there’s a want.
Now parents wonder, Maybe we shouldn’t respond to every cry if the more often she complains, the more often we give her what she wants. After all, we don’t want to spoil her. Besides, she’s supposed to live on our terms. We’re not supposed to live on hers.
So the parents decide to let the infant cry herself down after they have already settled her in bed three times, and after half an hour of wailing, the exhausted child finally does give in to sleep. Now she’s learned who’s in charge,
conclude the parents, although it sure is hard hearing her be that unhappy for that long.
DOES THIS SOUND LIKE YOUR CHILD?
Because willful children are so strongly wed to what they want, they will often be impulsively shortsighted, focusing on immediate desire instead of long-term interest. It is the parent’s job to extend the willful child’s vision, to think ahead about possible costs and risks, to delay what is wanted and consider what is right and wise.
But this is usually a mistake. For the baby to feel firmly bonded to parents, to feel empowered to express a want and know that it will be met, and to predict that parental care is there when needed, parents need to meet the baby’s needs any time the infant has the will to express an identifiable want. During the first year of life, rewarding a willful want with the desired response is not spoiling the infant; it is helping that hungry, lonely, hurting, or frightened little child to feel attached, secure, trustful, confident, and effective.
The Issue of Won’t
By age two, most children normally begin opposing parental rules and requests by delaying or refusing to do what they are told to do or not to do. This obstinacy is an act of courage—the child’s daring to resist the most powerful people in her world. Appearing to test adult authority, the child is really testing her growing power of personal choice.
In most cases, if parents continue to be firm and insistent in their request and don’t overreact and fuel the child’s refusal by getting upset, the boy or girl learns to go along with what parents want most of the time. The willful child, however, is more intense and more dedicated to refusal, often surprising parents at the way he digs in his heels and makes a scene when he decides not to do what they ask and they continue to insist. In willful children, where there’s a will, there’s a won’t.
Beware similarity conflicts between stubborn parent and stubborn child, each refusing to give in to the other or back down. The harder the parent refuses, the harder the child learns to refuse in return. Better for the parent to disengage and think of another, less confrontational approach to take—like talking out and working out the conflict instead of stubbornly going toe to toe.
Won’t
Can Wear a Parent Down
It is the intensity and persistence of the willful child’s won’t
that wears parents down, sometimes causing them to relent. And when they relent, the child feels more empowered. Parents may get too tired to keep after the request they made after the child delays or refuses, or they may feel uncomfortable in conflict, and so they back off. And when they do, the child learns that delay and refusal work. For parents, the lesson is simple: Don’t request what you are not prepared to pur- sue to fulfillment. Mean what you say. Carry through with what you say you want.
A willful won’t
can also take other common forms. The willful child often won’t admit making a mistake, won’t admit having done something wrong, won’t apologize for doing wrong, and won’t accept constructive criticism for mistakes or correction for misbehavior. Leave me alone! I don’t want to listen to you! I don’t want to talk about it!
But parents must be steadfast: You can put off the discussion, but you cannot make it go away. Before you get to do anything else you want to do, we will need to have our talk.
Four Propositions for Independence
At a very young age, a willful child can come to four very significant understandings about parental influence: the four propositions for independence. These propositions are:
• My parents won’t always stick to what they say.
• My parents can’t make me.
• My parents can’t stop me.
• My choices are up to me.
Each successful won’t
only encourages the child to feel more confident in his or her power of resistance. Of course, understanding these four propositions for independence is empowering at any age, but the willful child tends to learn them very young. Then, when parents punish refusal, the willful child loses the skirmish, but wins the battle. Punishment just certifies the child’s power to disobey. It is better for parents to let the child know that disobedience is a choice the child is free to make, but not a choice parents are willing to live with. You can choose to delay what we want, but you can’t get out of doing what we want, because we will keep after you and after you until it gets done. And before you get anything else you want from us, we will get what we want from you.
A BETTER PARENTING PRACTICE
When a child under the age of three refuses what you ask with a won’t,
use distraction and then return to pursue what you are after. Distract the child from the negative situation into doing something positive with you (thus breaking the child’s negative mindset) and then, after a few minutes of pleasure or play, return to your original request.
Repeat this procedure as often as necessary to gain the child’s consent.
Try This Method—Distract-and-Return
So how are parents to deal with a willful won’t
at the tender ages of one to three? Distract-and-return is best. Instead of arguing with your child or insisting that he do what you want when he refuses, distract the child to something positive. Come look at this.
Come play with me for a minute.
Then, having restored a positive context to the relationship, return to your original request in a few minutes and see if your child is not more inclined to cooperate. If so, reward his compliance