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Take Advantage of Your Child's Energy Levels
“Life consists not in holding good cards but in playing those you hold
well.”
-Josh Billings
If parents want to be able to make best use of time with their children,
then it is crucial for a parent to start becoming alert to the state
that their children are in. Tired? Satisfied? Bored? His shoe hurts him?
She has a stomachache from the spaghetti? And so on....This applies
particularly during the time that children are playing with toys. They
want to be happy. And you want them to be happy too..
Here’s one way of looking at it: it’s a bit like dealing with a baby.
Your baby cries. So you figure, usually and probably it’s one of four
things. One, the baby is hungry. Two, the baby needs a diaper change.
Three, the baby is tired. Or four, the baby wants to be held. You would
probably test each of these out to see if the baby will stop crying.
What’s happening here is a continual process of trying to figure out and
be sensitive to the the baby’s needs. Right? So we are dealing with a
sensitivity to the child, and a willingness to experiment to find out
exactly what the baby needs. Once the thing is done (for example,
changed a dirty diaper and put on a clean one) and the baby stops
crying, and is now smiling and gurgling, you think: “Bingo! I did the
right thing there!”. So the checklist is a key to a parent’s success,
because it provides the parent with the various possibilities of dealing
with a baby’s (or child’s) needs.
As babies turn into toddlers who turn into pre-schoolers who turn into
kids (and so on), their needs naturally get more sophisticated. In order
to keep up with their kids, parents need to increase their checklist.
Not only that, but to change the checklist as the kids grow, as some
needs get taken off the list and others get put on. So it helps to start
off with this idea of a checklist for each of your children. It can be
simply a mental checklist. For those who are more organized, they can
write it down.
An example of a checklist for a 6 year old can be:
Parents
Food
Friends
Clothes
Sleep/Fatigue
Homework
Entertainment
Siblings & Family (relationships)
For each of these items you can ask yourself- is my child happy and
fulfilled in these areas? What areas does the child need help in? It
would be difficult for them to be having fun playing if they have
problems elsewhere.
In dealing with each of these items, here’s an example of dealing with a
checklist item:
Energy Levels/Fatigue:
Let’s take a closer look at this. Children naturally have routines
during the day. Wake-up, get dressed, breakfast, school, after-school
activities, suppertime, homework, evening snack, bedtime. Yet you cannot
expect children to have the same energy level in the afternoon after a
long day of school/play as they would have in the morning when they are
fresh from a full night of sleep. Many experienced parents know that
when children are tired, especially little children, they just do not
function as well in being able to do activities, in listening to their
parents, or even at times to behave normally (!!).
So this is a good item for the checklist: How tired is your child?
“I still find each day too short for all the thoughts I want to think,
all the walks I want to take, all the books I want to read, and all the
friends I want to see.”
-John Burroughs
For parents, the same can apply for the time spent with their children!
Parents who want to get the most out of being able to build
relationships with their children should consider (as difficult as it
is) to schedule their day around the times that children have high
energy levels.
An example of a good time to be with the children is after supper. Often
children are well-fed, and the time spent sitting at the dinner table
allows them to recharge their batteries. They are refreshed and well-fed
and ready for some evening activity.
The time that is well-spent with children is like depositing a lot of
value into a bank account of love and trust with your child. And what
could be more valuable than that?
“Life is half spent before we know what it is.” -George Herbert
About The Author
Joseph Browns, creator of http://home-educational-toys.com, is a caring
parent who wants to share his experiences and expertise in how parents
can take advantage of valuable opportunities to spend quality time with
children and acquire those priceless memories of love and bonding. Many
issues are dealt with in the website http://home-educational-toys.com,
some of which are: educational toys (primary topic), parent-child
relationships, environmental (interior) design, health, communication
skills, furniture, and child education.
Article
by:
Joseph Browns
Reprinted
with permission from:
Article City
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