Read The No Cry Discipline Solution Online
Authors: Elizabeth Pantley
Building a Strong Foundation
25
Daddy and Evan, age 2
have more than 100,000 hours to interact and connect. It would
be absolutely, utterly impossible for all of those hours to be bliss-
fully happy and precisely choreographed. There will be plenty of
rough spots, uncalled-for anger, and mistakes—both on your part
and your child’s. To even attempt perfection would be ludicrous
and stressful, yet as parents most of us criticize ourselves unneces-
sarily over every negative situation.
Raising a child requires that we make many decisions every
single day, from the insignifi cant to the life-altering. Sometimes it
is obvious that you have made the right decision, other times it is
unclear, and from time to time it’s apparent that you have made a
mistake. Nearly every mistake that you make as a parent has been
made by a multitude of parents throughout history.
What is more important than any single action is your overall
philosophy and approach to raising your child. When love is your
foundation, parenting skills are your structure, and your goal is to
raise your child to be a good human being with whom you can
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The Foundation for No-Cry Discipline
have a pleasant lifelong relationship, then it is likely things will
turn out as you hope.
Contemplate your most important goals for your family and
determine which values you will use to guide your decisions. Learn
good parenting skills and use them on a daily basis. And then,
forgive yourself and your children the mistakes that will inevitably
happen along the way.
Relax More and Stress Less
Oh, my! The millions of little things I’ve stressed about during
the past eighteen years! Messy rooms, dirty faces, lost toys, peas
not eaten. Not a single one of these things means anything today.
Those insignifi cant, trivial details certainly make up a large part of
life, but when they cause a disproportionate amount of angst they
conceal the many little joys that children bring into our lives.
View the little things for what they are—little things—and
don’t let them get in the way of taking pleasure out of every single
day of family life.
Mother-Speak
“ I always say ‘appreciate every step of the way.’ Don’t look
ahead and wish the children were older and in school, or
out of school and independent. Don’t look behind and be
sad over the fact that they grew up so quickly. Just enjoy
the moment. Every stage has its pros and cons. No stage is
perfect, and every stage passes eventually.”
—Bonnie, mother to Ariella, age 16; Yonina, age 14; Dovi, age
12; Mordechai, age 10; Yedidya, age 6; and Liora, age 2
Building a Strong Foundation
27
Enjoy the Play More
Be willing to join your little ones in their incredibly enchanting
play a little bit more often. You don’t always have to have one eye
on the clock when you’re immersed in playtime with your child.
Let the answering machine pick up a few more messages. Ignore
the
ding
of incoming e-mail messages on your computer until the
fort is complete, the clay zoo is built, or the book is fi nished.
Mother-Speak
“ I was trying to fi nish all my errands today and clean my
house. As I was trying to mop the kitchen fl oor, my daugh-
ter kept standing right in front of me, making it impossible. I
tried to explain to her that Mommy needed to mop. I tried to
distract her with a toy and take her to another room to play,
but she just kept coming right back. So fi nally I decided the
dirty fl oor wasn’t that important and sat down with her on
the fl oor to read a book with her. After a few more books,
she went off contentedly to play on her own and I fi nished
the fl oor.
“Your comment about not watching the clock while you
play with your child made me think of myself, obstinately
trying to mop the kitchen fl oor while my little girl stood right