One
of the most important things your child can do is to internalize the values
they will live by. For moms, dads, and other parenting adults, this process can
be both rewarding and terrifying. On the one hand, we see children expressing
their honesty, compassion, and other positive values that we would hope to pass
on to them. On the other hand, they often also do things that don't reflect our
values—or even contradict our deeply held values. Other influences in their
lives—peers, television, social media, other adults—can influence them to adopt
values and perspectives that we may not share. We may feel like
it's out of our
hands. But it's not. Even though it's critical that young people internalize their own values (rather than having them imposed), parenting adults continue to shape and influence their children's values throughout the teenage years and into adulthood. The goal and challenge for parents is to help teens “make their own” kinds of values that help them make positive choices throughout their lives.
Consider the following to help you be a
positive role model in your child's life:
Nurture
a warm relationship:-Children tend to be more willing to accept and internalize
parental values when they feel close to their parents. And close families usually
have many shared interests and values that reinforce each other.
Show and tell what matters:-A
key to your influence on your child's values is that they understand what
really matters to you. The best way to do that is both to show and tell—help
them see the values in action in your own life, then talk about why you do what
you do. Getting the child's attention, being clear, and regularly reinforcing
the values all help children to more accurately understand the values you hope
for them. That increases the likelihood that they will take in those values.
Cultivate
open communication:-Teens are more likely to internalize their parents'
values when they have open, frequent, and honest communication with each
other—when teens feel comfortable talking with their parents about tough issues
and about things that matter to them. Open communication increases the odds
that teens will listen to and internalize their parents' values. In addition,
parents gain a greater understanding of how their teens think and what's
important to them. That makes it easier to connect the parents' values with the
teens' own emerging values.
Pay attention to your child's world and interests:-When
you show interest in the things that matter to your child, you show them that
you care about their choices and activities. That attentiveness, in turn,
motivates your child to pay attention to and accept your values and
expectations.
Give your child choices and appropriate
independence:-Helping children see that they have
power in their own lives and can influence others helps them be aware of and
internalize their own values. If parents don't give choices or don't see their
children as unique individuals, the children may end up pushing away in order
to develop their own sense of who they are.
Provide appropriate information, guidelines, and
structures:-In addition to giving children
opportunities to make their own choices, it is just as important to set clear
and fair expectations and consequences, then follow through with the
consequences when needed. There is, however, a careful balance. If the rules
and consequences lead to feelings of being pressured or controlled, they can
become counterproductive, with teens rebelling against them.
Learn from your children:-Your
relationship with your child is a two-way street. They learn from you; you
learn from them. Through their experiences, they may develop values and beliefs
that enrich your life and help you see the world and other people in new ways.
Be open to what they have to teach you. In the process, they will be open to
what you have to teach them.
Provide experiences that reinforce positive values
and commitments:-If caring for others is
important, give young people opportunities to care for others. If being honest
is important, give them opportunities to be honest. If being generous is
important, give them opportunities to share. If being responsible is important,
give responsibilities to the child where others are depending on her or him.
When you do, also be sure to talk about or reflect on the experience, so they
become more articulate about why they do what they do.
View mistakes as teachable moments:-Your child is going
to make mistakes and not live up to your values or his or her own. Sometimes
those mistakes are fairly trivial; sometimes they have momentous consequences.
In each case, remember to keep your relationship with your child as a priority,
and seek to find ways to learn from the mistakes. Think together through
appropriate consequences as well as alternate strategies for dealing with the
issue in the future. That may take time, but it can pay off in the long run.
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