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Bad gifts
I've got a 19 year old brother who was raised completely different then I was. Same family, same house, same parents, different ways of being raised. I grew up with the ability to go outside and play, run around, get dirty and get into trouble every now and then. On the other hand, my brother had a heart defect when he was born and was sheltered. My mother would always explain to me that she "didn't want to force him out of his shell".
When you compare the two of us, it's like night and day. I am loud and grateful while he's the type to kick around rocks and stare at the floor or mumble out awkward replies that just seem a bit weird.
I think by doing things with your kids to help them become more outspoken in other areas, it should/could/would translate into being grateful as well. Just my two pennies :)
Nice site Chris.
What do you do when you find yourself in the midst of teens and still have to deal with it? Well, you could take Chris' tact and it may work, but you really have to know your child. They are all so different and teenage years are when kids like to rebel in a quest to define themselves y their own standards -- not yours.
sincere compliments, they themselves inherently become
better at accepting them - IF - they are taught carefully to see the good
in people, on their own.
The mom or dad who teaches their child with things like;
"I know she's not pretty like you,
but try to find something nice to say"
Or "Yeah, I know he stinks at pitching, but it will make it worse
for you if he feels worse, so find 'something' good to say"
are hurting their OWN child's ability to accept compliments.
You've taught them to live in the gap between truth and what they speak,
and thus talk is cheap and compliments in general are not trustworthy.
The second example is the worst though, as they become ever more narcissistic; believing no compliments deep inside, and incapable
of truly seeing or wanting to see the good in others to laud.
[Sorry if I went OT]
As with most lessons, how a teen feels about him/herself and how he/she responds when someone offers a compliment or criticism, has a lot to do with the groundwork which is built long before they reach this age. I would also offer that how they respond to a compliment and how they *take* (internalize) the comment are two entirely different things. Knowing that saying "thank you" is an appropriate response is not enough. I know plenty of kids who respond appropriately, but dismiss the comment as being invalid or less than genuine.
One thing I always did with my daughter over the years was to ask her every day to tell me three things that went well or made her happy and something which wasn't so great that day. She enjoyed talking about the times she was proud of special accomplishments and was honest in sharing ways in which she felt frustrated (even when it was with herself). She has grown up knowing that, while not perfect, she totally rocks (smart, confident, talented...) and feels good when someone notices. Of course, when someone offers her a gratuitous compliment, she sees through it and is annoyed, but still polite. She also has enough of a sense of self to keep criticism and critiques in perspective.
My oldest of three boys is 10, making him a tween. Although a quiet leader he is a great soccer player. Last Wednesday we lost a game 3-8(?we lost count for the other team!) and he came out with a hat trick. The coaches of the other team complimented him on this during the traditional end-of-game shake. Crickets. When I observe this I think "snob" although I know he isn't really. At this point I think the skill just comes SO naturally that he himself doesn't have the appreciation for it. So, although the social nicety was my question the concern is much greater. Possibly his lack of value in his God-given talent! I'm starting with the simple nicety and working my way back to the deeper issue.
Thanks everyone for the great responses! We'll start today - another great day for soccer, a hat trick, compliments and gr-ATTITUDE!
I've chewed on this topic on my blog too, actually, though more focused on having children say "I'm sorry" and then getting into the inane loop of "say it like you mean it" as if they can -- or anyone can -- just switch emotional states on demand: http://www.apparenting.com/should_younger_child...
Generally, my kids are very polite and say thank you, but I think it's more because I model that behavior and am super polite when I'm with them (alone, as you know, I'm a surly crank. :-)
Nothing more awkward than telling someone you like their dress or hair or artwork, etc. and either getting no response or getting a negative response. "Oh this? I hate it. Makes me look fat", "Are you nuts? This sucks", and so on.
I've taught my kids to say smile and say Thank you. Whether they agree with the compliment or not it's the gracious thing to do without making the other person feel awkward or insulted.
I have one child in all my six who is a red head. You would think when taking this child to the store that no one has ever seen a child with red hair. She gets compliments every single time we leave the house. Without fail. When she was much younger, she wanted to correct them that her hair color was really orange (LOL), but I told her that the polite response was just a simple thank you.
That brings me to a concern I have about TV shows, especially this one on cable called "spongebob squarepants", I believe kids shouldn't be exposed to junk like that because it teaches them that it's ok to be downright rude and that when other people react negatively to it, it's the other person's fault for being "intolerant", I've seen my two younger sisters watch it and how it's effected their behavior and all I can say is that I don't like what I see. I'll admit that it starts out being cute, but than it keeps dragging on and it gets old quick, especially when it causes my two sisters to fight because the younger of the two is annoying the other one just to be annoying. My advice would be to get a TV filter that can block specific shows and block spongebob squarepants since the spongebrat has no respect for anyone around him, not even people that would otherwise be his friend and I'm sure that's the complete opposite of what you want your children to be seeing. The reason I bring this up even though spongebob is aimed towards younger kids is because old habits from the elementary school days can easily be carried over into their teen years, habits such as talking back and general rudeness. The worst part of spongebob squarepants is not just the fact that the spongebrat is so rude, but the fact that the people he annoys are seen as "stick in the mud", intolerant people when the fact is that spongebob is being a brat.