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Home and Family > Babies Toddler > Toddler Skills for Personal Responsibility
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Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
There are three skills that are very important for our little ones to learn
early in their lives.
1) Children need to be able to fall asleep on their own. Infants and
toddlers who are always rocked to sleep, or breastfed or bottle fed to
sleep, learn to depend upon others for falling asleep and do not develop
their own falling asleep mechanism. This can cause much distress for
parents who go through the nightly nightmare of trying to get their infant
or toddler to sleep. Instead of always picking up and rocking a crying
little one, which only reinforces the child’s dependency on you putting
him or her to sleep, try patting the child and then leaving for a few
minutes. If you keep coming in, patting your child and reassuring him or
her that you are here, eventually your child will stop depending upon
you to rock, hold or feed him or her to sleep.
2) Children need to learn very young to play by themselves and amuse
themselves. It is not healthy for children to be constantly dependent
upon others, or upon the TV, to amuse them. I work with many adults
who never learned to “play by themselves.” These adults feel lost when
they are alone, having no idea what to do with themselves. Instead of
turning to creative or learning opportunities, they may participate in
addictions such as eating, drinking, drugs, TV, work, spending, and so
on. When children learn to play by themselves at a young age, they tend
to be more self-sufficient and creative as adult.
3) Children need to learn how to self-nurture. This means that they need
to learn how to take some responsibility for their own feelings. Infants
often self-soothe with their blanket, thumb, or pacifier. But as they grow
older, they need to learn other ways of self-nurturing because they will
not be taking their blanket or pacifier to school.
Even children as young as 2 1/2 years old can learn to attend to their
own feelings. You can help your young children start to take
responsibility for their feelings by giving them a doll or stuffed animal
that represents their emotions. You can tell them that the doll or stuffed
animal is the baby inside them that has a lot of different emotions. When
they are feeling sad or angry, they can learn to talk to the baby inside
and find out what that
baby needs from them or from you. As they get
older, they can learn to connect their thoughts with their feelings. They
can learn that if they judge themselves by telling themselves that they
are bad or stupid or ugly, they will feel very badly.
It is vitally important for all of us to connect our thoughts with our
feelings. Most of us grew up believing that others caused all our good
and painful feelings. If someone yelled at us or told us we were bad or
stupid or ugly, we certainly felt badly, and if someone approved of us,
we felt good. So we learned to believe that all our feelings are being
caused by others. It is important for children to learn that their feelings
are also affected by what they tell themselves and how they treat
themselves. For example, if an older brother tells his younger brother
that he is stupid, the younger child might start to tell himself he is stupid,
without realizing that he is causing himself to feel very badly. By talking
with his “baby”, he might realize he is treating himself in a way that is
hurting him.
He also might also be able to understand that his brother is not telling
him the truth. The way he can learn to realize this is by learning to
access his “Source of Love and Truth.”
Small children can easily learn to open to a powerful Source of Love
and Truth. You can ask them to imagine a wonderful friend, a guardian
angel, or a fairy godmother. It is very easy for most children to imagine a
wonderful being who is here to love them and guide them. They can be
encouraged to ask questions of this loving being, such as “Is it true that I
am stupid?” They can learn to bring through true and loving statements
to themselves when they open to learning with their spiritual Guidance.
These skills, learned early in life, will do much to foster personal
responsibility in our children.
Margaret Paul, Ph.D. is the best-selling author and co-author of eight
books, including "Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved By You?" and
“Healing Your Aloneness.” She is the co-creator of the powerful Inner
Bonding healing process. Learn Inner Bonding now! Visit her web site
for a FREE Inner Bonding course: http://www.innerbonding.com or email her
at margaret@innerbonding.com Phone Sessions Available.
Find Love guide and resources.
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