Parents,Teach,Thought-Stopping family Parents, Teach Thought-Stopping! Fix Crooked Thinking Caps
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Does your child look, talk, and, feel sad? Perhaps you said No to watching TV, or didnt buy a toy she wanted, or you had to cancel a fun event. Its perfectly OK for your child to feel sad. Its not OK when your child broods and feels deeply depressed over every hurt and disappointment. Its time to help her adjust her thinking cap. Perhaps your child looks, talks, and feels angry. Maybe you restricted him because of fighting, or told him to quit sassing, or caught him bullying his little brother. Its natural for a child to feel frustrated when things dont go his way but it is not all right for him to fuel his frustrations with grudges and hateful thoughts. Its time to help him adjust his thinking cap. Lets say your child looks, talks, and feels worthless for making mistakes. Maybe your child tries to be too perfect and feels regretful when she is not. Maybe she thinks youll be disappointed if her report card isnt excellent, or if she breaks a dish or spills her milk. Its OK if she feels regret but expanding her regrets into crushing guilt is not. Its time to help her adjust her thinking cap. Does your child look, talk, and feel worried? Does he play it safe and avoid challenges? Is he unwilling to try new things? Does he care too much how others think of him? Its OK for him to feel concern about taking tests, speaking before his class, or when trying to make new friends but inflating his concerns into a habit of worry and fear is not. Its time to help him adjust his thinking cap. Occasionally your child may slip into depression, anger, guilt or fear. To stay depressed, angry, guilty or fearful, your child will have to think a lot of negative thoughts. Lots of negative thoughts create a crooked thinking cap. Perhaps you know adults with bad attitudes. Maybe they pity themselves and blame others. Perhaps they look for insults and exaggerate hurts. Maybe they belittle themselves and apologize for every tiny mistake. These adults definitely have crooked thinking caps. To avoid this kind of future for your child and all the pain such thinking causes, lets find out two ways to adjust your childs thinking cap. First, use your good judgment and know there are times when you need to go to your childs feelings. When your child seems too sad, too angry, too guilty, or too fearful, put your arm around your child and ask, Whats really wrong? Listen. Dont try to change, correct, or put down your childs thoughts. Just listen. Let your child pour out her heart and listen. When your child is almost done, ask, Is there more? Then listen. Congratulations! Youve probably relieved your child of painful emotion and cleared the air for a new beginning. The second way to help your child straighten his thinking cap is called THOUGHT-STOPPING. Its best to teach this technique when your child is not upset and is in a mood to talk with you. The first step is to encourage your child to notice his negative self-talk, like Everybody hates me. Its not my fault. I cant do it. The second step is to help your child recall three powerful images of him having done something good that felt great. Here are a few examples of images that may be powerful for your child: Playing with her pet Catching his first fish Learning how to swim Laughing so hard her sides ached Doing a great job on his homework Make sure your child is the one who chooses the positive images. Tell your child that each image must be more powerful than the negative thought. Teach and practice the following several times when your child is in a good mood. That way your child will know how to use THOUGHT-STOPPING when she needs it. When your child catches herself brooding on negative thoughts tell her to switch them to one of the positive images by yelling, Stop! inside her head to the negative thoughts. Tell your child to stay with the positive image for 30 seconds. (This prevents her from switching back to her negative thinking.) Time the 30 seconds so shell know how long it is. Then have your child say, I am in control. Your child will be too. Shell be in control of her thinking cap. You have just explored what goes on under crooked thinking caps. You have learned how crooked thinkers grow into unhappy adults. You have also discovered two techniques to help your child straighten his/her thinking cap. Now its time to teach these techniques to your child so that your child grows into a positive person of character. Jean Tracy has created Thought-Stopping Charts for your convenience.
Parents,Teach,Thought-Stopping