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How do you help your child cope with peer relationships?
Peer relationships are vital to children’s development. It’s the arena in which they learn to make decisions, to lead or follow, to become considerate and loyal, and to recover from mistakes. As parents we can have some influence over our children’s choice of friends. Here’s how you can be helpful while still encouraging your child’s independence. De-Emphasize Popularity Encourage Quality Over Quantity If children are left out or picked on by their peer group, help them recognize that it is not necessarily their fault. Reassure them that it is normal, though painful, to be “in” one week and “out” the next. Sometimes these popularity contents can be more upsetting to parents than to kids. Many children are more resilient that we give them credit for. Try to ride the waves of friendship fads, remembering that young people are fickle and peer groups are constantly in a state of flux. Don’t Interfere Without Good Reason Otherwise, allow children opportunities to negotiate their own issues and differences. Kids need time among themselves to learn how to develop their own rules, to share and take turns, to play fair, and to recover from bruised egos. Certainly there are times and places for adult supervision, but try to intervene only when necessary. Of course, you must step in if your child is constantly a victim or is repeatedly picked on, rejected, or humiliated. A helpful resource for parents on bullying is a book by Charlene Gianetti and Margaret Sagarese entitled “Cliques: 8 Steps to Help Your Child Survive the Social Jungle” (Broadway Books, 2001). Listen to Your Child First without always trying to Solve Their Problems For example, your son comes home in tears because his friends ridiculed him for backing out of a scheme to shoplift. Don’t yell, “You’re not spending time with those kids ever again!” Instead, listen to his anguish about being ridiculed. Encourage him to talk about his feelings, and praise him for being strong and taking an unpopular stand. You might say, “I know that was tough. I’m proud of you for not going along with them. I’m wondering though, if these are the kids you really enjoy being with.” Accept Their Right to Choose Their Friends Try to respect your children’s right to choose their friends even when their choices don’t appeal to you. When your child mentions a new best friend, don’t grill him with lots of intrusive questions. Withhold your judgment. Even if you don’t like some of his friends, don’t automatically denigrate them, especially without any evidence of harmful behavior. For many kids, the peers you disparage become all the more attractive. Adapted from "LOVING WITHOUT SPOILING."
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Copyright 2010 Nancy Samalin |
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