11 Ways to REALLY Listen to Your Child
The follow post was shared with Minds on Music from Kindermusik educator Vanessa Cabrera’s Language, Music & More blog.
A few days ago I read this: “We were given two ears but only one mouth, because listening is twice as hard and important as talking.”
Well, it’s true! It made me think about how much children have lot to say… a lot! Sometimes adults don’t think that children have anything important to say or that they can’t learn from children. So often times the adult does all the talking. They lecture, preach, or, worst of all, ignore the child. Listening to your children will help them grow up to be adults with increased self-esteem because you made them feel that what they have to say is important.
That said, children are not always sure how to communicate their feelings, so they might say something or act completely different from how they actually feel. Active listening can help you to help them figure it out! Here are some tips to REALLY listen to your child:
1. Stop what you are doing. Don’t be distracted doing something else.
2. Look at your child. Sit at his/her level.
3. Pay attention to your child’s nonverbal language. Does the child look happy, sad, afraid?
4. Be silent. It might be hard, but it is important that they have time to express themselves. It will also give you time to understand the situation before reacting.
5. Use simple acknowledgement responses that show you are listening. “I see.” “Oh.” “Uh-Huh.” or “Hmmm.”
6. Use “door-openers”: phrases that encourage further talking. “Tell me more.” “What else?” “Go on.” “How do you feel about that?” “Then what?”
7. Listen for and name the feelings you think you hear from what your child is telling you. “That made you pretty mad, didn’t it?” “You seem really happy about that!”
8. Use problem-solving phrases when needed. “What do you wish you could do?” “What do you want to happen?” “What do you think will happen if you do that?”
9. Don’t feel that you must advise or help your child come up with a solution all the time. The value of listening is in the listening itself.
10. Let them know you are available.
11. Don’t try to deny, discount, or distract the child from the feelings they are expressing.
Listening helps parents and children avoid the power struggle cycle. Instead of arguing or disagreeing, listen. Show your understanding while maintaining your position. Listening builds stronger relationships, shows respect, and helps the child explore his/her own feelings and thoughts on a deeper level. It builds their sense of empathy.
So, are you ready to listen to your child?
Special thanks to Kindermusik educator Vanessa Cabrera for sharing this post from herLanguage, Music & More blog. Information about Vanessa’s Maryland Kindermusik program can be found at her blog.
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