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The no-cry discipline solution

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Descripción

Libro The no-cry discipline solution. Sinopsis libro, reseña libro. Winner of the Disney’s iParenting Media Award for Best Product

Have the Terrible Twos become the Terrifying Threes, Fearsome Fours, Frightening Fives, and beyond? Elizabeth Pantley, creator of the No-Cry revolution, gives you advice for raising well-behaved children, from ages 2 through 8

In The No-Cry Discipline Solution, parenting expert Elizabeth Pantley shows you how to deal with your child’s behavior. Written with warmth but based in practicality, Elizabeth shows you how to deal with childhood’s most common behavioral problems:

Tantrums
Sleep issues
Backtalk
Hitting, Kicking and Hair Pulling
Sibling fights
Swearing
Dawdling
Public misbehavior
Whining … and more! Libro The no-cry discipline solution.

1 valoración en The no-cry discipline solution

  1. Bookennials

    I picked this up in hopes of adding a few tricks to my arsenal for dealing with our 2.5 year old. Turns out we’d figured out some of the strategies on our own, and they have indeed worked for us, and there was other good food for thought, as well.

    Part one discusses the foundation for building the behaviors you want to see from your child. There’s a very handy chart describing various bad behaviors from teenagers that most of us hope to avoid, and related things you can do with your toddler, preschooler, and young child to potentially start good habits early and avoid the negative later, slowly escalating responsibility and expectation appropriate to their age.

    Part two describes the no-cry discipline parenting «skills and tools.» As far as I can tell, this mostly involves avoiding situations that will cause your child to be vulnerable to tantrums. Make sure they’re sleeping well, fed, and entertained. (I have mixed feelings on that last part, which I’ll get back to at the end of the review.) She also emphasizes being positive and consistent, but also flexible, and not just with the kids. As parents, we need to cut ourselves some slack, cooperate with our children as they figure out the world, and be realistic.

    Part three is all about parental anger. (Oh boy.) It’s real, it’s common, and it can inadvertently make things worse. She offers techniques for dealing with this anger, but even more helpful than that (for me) was the dose of perspective she offers. Children are childish — they can’t help it. Adults can, and as a parent you have to motivate yourself to do so. Every parent has angry outbursts at some point, but keeping them uncommon will do a lot toward preserving your relationship with your child (and your sanity). Sometimes you just have to let things go.

    Part four might be the most useful of all. It’s broken into sections headed by possible problems you might be dealing with, like the child is biting, not wanting to get in (or out) of the bathtub, etc. For each, she talks about the possible underlying causes of the problem (so you can address those), plus lists of good and bad approaches to working through the situations as they occur. She always offers multiple responses, but generally speaking, they involve cooperating with the child, trusting them, and empowering them, while redirecting them to get the job done.

    Ok, about the entertainment thing… a while back, I read Pamela Druckerman’s Bringing Up Bébé: One American Mother Discovers the Wisdom of French Parenting, and one of the many things that struck me was how (as American parents) we tend to be in our children’s faces all the time, entertaining them, sharing their experiences (saying «whee!» every time they go down the slide), and making sure we always have a toy or bag of Cheerios in our bag to placate them at the first sign of boredom. French parents don’t do this, the idea being that the children will learn to entertain themselves. And they do. It’s one of the reasons their toddlers behave well and sit at the table for the duration of a restaurant meal while we end up taking turns with our spouses, one eating the meal while the other walks circles around the place with the kid.

    I’m not saying one culture is better, but it struck me how some of the parenting issues that crop up are cultural byproducts. If you’re reading Pantley’s book and looking to deal with your 3yo at this point, maybe your best bet is bringing along the bag of toys to entertain them at the grocery store. But, if you’re reading this preemptively, if your child is only 6mo, it might be worth checking out Druckerman’s book and considering other points of view. Her book is a memoir and not a rigorous parenting study, but there are still things that I’d consider incorporating into my parenting from an earlier time if we had another.

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