Barking Up The Wrong Tree August 22nd, 2022 ---------------------------------------------------------------
Before we commence with the festivities, I wanted to thank everyone for helping my new book become a bestseller! To check it out, click [here](. --------------------------------------------------------------- Ancient Traditions Reveal 2 Rituals That Will Make You An Awesome Parent ([Click here]( to read on the blog) Weâre often presented with an image of parenting that is a bit too perfect. Like a Norman Rockwell scene preserved in a snowglobe. But all too often parents wake up to realize they were cast in a reality show without their permission. The kids cause more problems in 4 minutes than I could get into in 4 years. You wonder if your genetics have spawned an unholy chimera of you and you partnerâs worst traits. It gets to a point where you wake up to the sounds of screams. Not the kidâs screams. Yours. How are you supposed to teach that little one to be a moral, productive human being when you canât even get them to eat breakfast? (Itâs much better to consider how you could be a better parent now as opposed to during the sentencing hearing.) You read books but the tips from the Parent Industrial Complex donât seem to be that helpful. But if you look a little deeper you realize that... No, you were right the first time. Theyâre not that helpful. [Christina Hardyment]( looked at over 650 parenting books dating back to the 1700âs and found the vast majority of the information they contain wasnât from science or even the hard-won insight of wise moms. Most of it actually came from manuals designed to industrialize the care of kids in eighteenth-century foundling hospitals. Yes, really. Babies should be fed four times a day⦠um, unless the nurses in the ward are too busy. Fine, make it twice a day. Whatever. And, frankly, many modern science studies arenât dramatically better. As Brian Nosek of UVA points out, parenting research is notoriously âunderpowered.â Instead of studying thousands or tens of thousands of kids, they often only look at a couple hundred -- leading to the flip-flopping advice we get every few years. So where is the useful information? Perhaps itâs time we tried another route. Humans have been raising kids almost as long as âLaw and Orderâ has been on the air. There must be effective traditions out there that work... And thatâs what led Michaeleen Doucleff to travel the world with her three-year-old daughter in search of ancient answers from other cultures. She lived with the Maya in Mexico, the Inuit in the Arctic, and the Hadzabe near the Serengeti. Then she cross checked what she learned with anthropologists, psychologists and neuroscientists. Her wonderful book is â[Hunt, Gather, Parent: What Ancient Cultures Can Teach Us About the Lost Art of Raising Happy, Helpful Little Humans]( Letâs get to it... How To Raise Helpful Kids Maya children in the Yucatan Peninsula are the most helpful children in the world. Researcher [Lucia Alcala]( found that in this community, three quarters of kids take initiative with housework. Whatâs their secret? These parents donât spend time trying to keep their kids entertained â they see their job as teaching children to be part of a team. Maya culture tells kids they are a working member of a family who is expected to contribute. Engaging in adult tasks is a privilege. Being a âbig boyâ or âbig girlâ is the ultimate Xbox achievement. Theyâre a part of something bigger than themselves and they need to earn their team membership card. Chore charts and allowances just teach kids to respond to rewards and punishments, killing intrinsic motivation. Instead, the Maya make sure kids understand the value of their tasks to the community. This way they actually enjoy chores because theyâre making a real contribution. Connectedness and being a competent, respected member of the group is the reward. Some parents are making lip farts right now. âMy kids would never respond to that. Theyâd prefer to just watch YouTube.â And those parents are right. You know why? Because thatâs what those kids have been taught. Little ones usually want to be helpful. To be a part of what mom and dad are doing. But often we shoo them away from tasks when theyâre young. Eventually they learn that chores are âmom and dad workâ and âmy workâ is to stare at an iPad until mom comes by to wipe drool from the screen. Of course they donât want to do chores â how do you feel when someone asks you to do something that âisnât your jobâ? When the kid world is so divorced from the adult world, children feel exempt from responsibilities. Instead of getting emotionally rewarded by being a part of the family team, they find reward only in Roblox and Minecraft. But when their primary context is family tasks, they want to be a part of them â both the responsibilities and the benefits. This doesnât sound as odd if you talk to the older generation. They grew up knowing they were expected to help in the family store or on the farm, not to live in a totally separate child-centered world. So how do we inch closer to the Maya way of doing things? With young kids itâs not as hard as you think. Children want to mimic adults and help â we train them not to. Young kids want together time and donât draw strict boundaries on what is âfunâ. Invite them into a communal activity you can do with them. âLetâs fold laundry together.â You can start with simple tasks they can handle: Hold this. Get mommy the bowl. Go grab the washcloth for daddy. Stir this. (Young kids can be surprisingly good sous-chefs.) Yes, itâs minor but youâre building the habit of helping. Then work your way up. Older kids can be given more complex tasks but again, make it communal. Itâs about the connection, time together and contribution rather than isolated forced labor. So why donât parents do this? They get errands done faster on their own. And theyâre right. That 15-minute task is now going to take 45 minutes with a toddler âhelpingâ. But this method isnât about getting things done efficiently -- itâs about teaching kids to be cooperative. That their help is needed. That theyâre responsible for things around here. The added time is an investment. Having a tiny incompetent helper now will more than be made up for by having a teenage competent helper later who does dishes without being asked. Donât micromanage. Children love to say, âI did it all by myself!â Initially, worry less about the task being done well than about building the skills of collaboration and responsibility. When kids are always told theyâre doing things wrong, they lose motivation. Use praise sparingly and focus on celebrating the trait of helpfulness, not the specifics of the task at hand. Yes, there may be some resistance at first. For young kids, emphasize the issue of being treated like an adult. They can âbe a babyâ but they donât get to be a part of what the family is doing together. Young kids donât want to be excluded. For older children, emphasize reciprocity. Theyâre going to want things from you, whether itâs money, the car, or help. So respond with: âDid you help me with the dishes?â Teens can be selfish but theyâre not stupid. And if theyâre really smart, theyâll start volunteering in advance to bank goodwill. Being helpful is a skill to be learned, like reading or math. The benefits are worth it. When the childrenâs world is a part of the adult world thatâs one less world parents have to manage. You donât need âchore timeâ, âplay event manager for the kids timeâ and âfamily time.â They can all collapse into one. And this brings everyone closer. (To learn about how to improve your relationships, check out my new bestselling book [here]( But what about making kids nicer and calmer? Conflict in family life is inevitable and sadly, sometimes frequent. Disputes can be like a âWhereâs Waldo?â page thatâs too easy and you always find them immediately. For answers here we need to go to the arctic... Teaching Kids Emotional Regulation The Inuit never yell at children. Even if little kids hit their parents, the Inuit remain calm. To the Inuit, emotional control is one of the strongest signs of adulthood. Getting angry with a child is stooping to the same level as them. If your kid misbehaved in the arctic and you yelled at them, the Inuit wouldnât shame the child â theyâd mock you. Arguing with children is more strenuous that Middle East negotiations and about as productive. So the Inuit donât do it. They believe that getting angry with kids just reduces communication. The more you shout, the less they listen. You may think youâre going to change the childâs mind through the magic of screaming but Western scientists agree with the Inuit: Your example matters more than your words. Behavior is contagious. Kids mirror emotions and so your anger has far more impact than whatever you say. When verbal carnage is unleashed from that hole in your face, you lose it, they lose it, and the whole thing escalates. During conflict, the goal is to bring the energy level down. Modeling a calm demeanor silently teaches children to reduce anger and control their emotions. Think about it. Your goal is to get the kid to change. Who do you pay to help you change? Therapists. And how often do therapists yell at you? Exactly. We underestimate kidsâ helpfulness but overestimate their emotional intelligence. Training them that anger is the way we respond to problems is not good for you in the short run and not good for them in the long run. When parents ignore anger, kids start to realize this method doesnât work. And science agrees. Batja Mesquita, a cross-cultural psychologist at the University of Leuven in Belgium, says that ignoring misbehavior dampens emotions. Yelling escalates them. Kids often do things to get attention. Anger is the most extreme form of attention. So when you get angry their brain says: This works. Donât suppress your anger; be less angry. Itâs not as hard as you think. The secret? Change the narrative in your head. The Inuit expect kids to misbehave. We, however, are shocked â SHOCKED! â when children arenât little angels. And so we get angry. Expecting kids to control their temper is like expecting them to know math without being taught. When we get rid of unrealistic expectations, anger is less likely to arise. And stop assuming their tantrums are intentional. When someone is difficult and you tell yourself, âTheyâre out to get me!â -- youâre angry. When you tell yourself, âThey must be having a bad dayâ -- youâre compassionate. Itâs all about the narrative. Whatâs this like in practice? Maybe your little one wonât take a bath and theyâre screaming. Quite literally, you are dealing with a dirty bomb. Take a few court-mandated deep breaths and remind yourself they are not out to get you. They are a new employee who needs HR training. Tantrums are a chance to help them learn to calm down, and the best way to accomplish that is through modeling behavior, not through lectures at the top of your voice while using their middle name. Speak less when youâre angry. Using fewer words keeps energy levels low and creates less resistance. Speak gently. Calm but confident. Your example is more powerful than your words. You need to get their "thinky" brain back online without escalating things. How do you do that? Turn criticisms into questions: âWho made this mess?â âWhat are you doing to your sister?â âWhy are your wielding that crossbow?â This gets your point across without a dictatorial power struggle â and it makes them think. Keep asking questions. Again, what you want here is a thinking adult member of your family team. âWhy did you hit me? Do you not like me? Are you a baby?â The more you get them thinking, the less emotional theyâll be. And more importantly, as long as you stay calm you wonât be escalating emotion. Then you want to bring emotion back -- in a positive way. Touch them. âPhysical touch breaks the tension between a child and parent,â says psychologist Dr. Larry Cohen. The Inuit use touch to show kids they are safe and loved. You can hug them, nuzzle them or just put a hand on their shoulder. (Tickling is not out of the question and has incredible tension-relieving ability.) The initial goal here is not to logically teach them why what theyâre doing is wrong â itâs to make them sane again. Then, once youâve broken the emotional spell of anger, you can rationally explain what better behavior would be in the future. Okay, weâve covered a lot. Letâs round it up and learn a much, much bigger lesson about how these methods can improve your life beyond the realm of parenting... Sum Up This is how to use ancient traditions to raise awesome kids:
- To Raise Helpful Kids: Donât shoo them away to the world of self-indulgent child distraction. Make them valued members of the team with communal activities that benefit the family.
- To Teach Kids Emotional Regulation: Yes, you feel like you need to shout until your soul starts dribbling out your ears but all theyâll learn is that anger is the solution to lifeâs problems. Change your narrative, model calm behavior, trigger thought with questions, and touch them to let them know theyâre loved.
Letâs step away from the ancient traditions and modern science for a second. Iâve read more books on parenting than any childless guy ever. What have I learned? Itâs simple: Almost all good parenting advice is good people advice. Or, to put it bluntly: There are no grown-ups. None. Nowhere. Ever. Weâre all muddling through. Sometimes weâre all selfish, emotional and out of control. It happens. And itâs okay. If you apply parenting advice to all your relationships, youâll be better off. Donât try to control people. Treat them like adults â especially if theyâre not acting like one. Bribes and punishments are not as effective as encouraging cooperation and making people feel like part of a team. Anger usually just makes things worse with people. If theyâre angry, you getting angry just escalates things. To stop being angry change the story in your head: theyâre usually not evil, theyâre just having a bad day. Encourage their thinky brain to take charge again and focus on a warm, positive connection where they feel supported. When you stop trying to control or win with others you can focus on getting to that thing which is worth more than anything else is the universe... Yes, printer ink. Okay, maybe we should focus on the second most valuable thing in the universe: love. Itâs not printer ink but itâs still pretty good. ***If you are one of those lovely people who bought "Plays Well With Others" please leave a review on Amazon [here](. Thanks!*** Email Extras Findings from around the internet... + Want to know how to rest and recharge? Click [here](. + Want to know how to easily reduce the chance of dementia? Click [here](. + Want to know how to keep employees engaged when they work from home? Click [here](. (Many thanks to the excellent [Bob Sutton]( + Miss my prior post? Here you go: [How To Be Resilient: 5 Secrets To Success When Life Gets Impossible](. + Want to know how to become an expert at something new? Click [here](. (Many thanks to the excellent [Dan Pink]( + You read to the end of the email. I feel calm and like a member of the team. (Given that the advice in the post was designed to be effective with immature children, it's unsurprising how well it works on me.) Thanks for reading. Okay, it's Crackerjack Time: Science needs to address the vital questions we all have -- you know, like the quickest way to grill burgers. How often should you flip that slab of meat? Math has answers. You can check it out [here](.
Thanks for reading!
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