conflict

Fights (Part 1/2) - My Kids Are In the Middle of One!

Fights (Part 1/2) -  My Kids Are In the Middle of One!

A parent recently wrote: I'm having trouble with hitting. Do you have a P.E.T.-approved way to stop physical violence between brothers?

This is tough! 

In this post, we'll do a skills walkthrough on how to help -- let's call them -- Sean and Jack; in the next, we'll work on prevention.

What I Learn From Teens

What I Learn From Teens

These teens work hard.

Some are lucky -- they take the course with friends who will whisper, "Hey, send an I-Message!" or check, "Do you want me to Active Listen or do you want my advice?"

Others -- buoyed only by an 18 hour respite where they got to glimpse another reality -- reenter a world defined by winners and losers, full of blame and shame and "I get the last word."

Guilt, Shame & Effective Confrontation

Guilt, Shame & Effective Confrontation

Brene Brown, a mother herself, found that parenting is "a primary predictor of how prone our children will be to shame or guilt.” (page 224) She exhorts us to -- and I love her term for it -- parent with shame resilience as a goal.

So how to do this when confronting our offspring?

With a huge semantic tool: the Confrontive I-Message!

Roadblocks II - Parent Owns Problem

Roadblocks II - Parent Owns Problem

It is truly humbling but, as you may have read in my last post Roadblocks I - Child Owns the Problem, our patterning is just to use a heck of a lot of Communication Roadblocks instead of helping our children or confronting them with good results.

Change starts, though, with a simple decision and firm commitment. We've got your back as you strive to communicate in new ways that better serve you, your child and your relationship together. You will love the results.
 

The Assertive New Me!

The Assertive New Me!

I don't think anyone noticed my barely audible intake of breath. I was momentarily dumbstruck but for the best reason: I was stunned by the fact of my own transformation.

I'm still a work in progress but, OMG, I used to be pretty far down on one end of the passive-assertive-aggressive spectrum.

Self-Acceptance & Communication Skills For Balance

Self-Acceptance & Communication Skills For Balance

It's imbalance of another type -- emotional and relational -- that I have always found harder to endure. An argument with a friend or a touchy issue with my child would demand a hefty portion of my attention.

3 Ways to Confront Really Little Ones

3 Ways to Confront Really Little Ones

The Gordon Training International official P.E.T. Facebook page recently shared a humorous video of why some parents don't seem to get anything done. I can refer to it as funny because I am far removed now but I remember feeling exasperated and burnt out A LOT back in the day. I did a fair amount of "No!"-ing, desperate to finish the housework so when the baby napped I could have some precious me time.

I Am Not Your Servant!

I Am Not Your Servant!

Even if we get the change we want, we have sent messages about our child and the relationship:

You won't do the right thing unless I threaten you.

I gave you an inch and, like always, you took a mile.

You don't respect me.

We can do confrontation better, says Dr. Gordon.

Striving for peace - on the streets & at home

Striving for peace - on the streets & at home

I let them leave it at that so I could focus on the line of traffic in front of me. Inside I was swelling with pride. This is stuff I just recently learned how to do myself. How awesome is this kid's life going to be?

 

Why you should "ruin" a perfectly good day - Inaugural P.G.D. post

Why you should "ruin" a perfectly good day - Inaugural P.G.D. post

What that means, I recently explained to a good friend, is that we wait until there is no high emotion and then reach back to a painful incident and explore it. Many people, I acknowledged, would protest: "Why would I ever ruin a perfectly good day and do something like that?!"

6 P.E.T. Highlights of Summer 2014

6 P.E.T. Highlights of Summer 2014

When I gently raised the topic of language I realized I was jumping the gun. "Mom, I don't need that right now. I need to be Active Listened. You're supposed to do that stuff later. I'm still very upset."

I didn't mind the correction at all. Not. At. All.