Author Archive for Sandra Dye

Screaming Children Banned From Restaurants

Sunday, September 12th, 2010

Branda Armes, owner of the Olde Salty restaurant in Carolina Beach, N.C. has posted a notice “Screaming Children Will NOT Be Tolerated”.  Currently there is a growing intolerance for cranky, crying, noisy children in restaurants and in airplanes.  The unanswered question is how to make a Read More→

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Self Control And Your Child: What Really Works?

Saturday, September 11th, 2010

open source video, online video platform, video streaming, video solutions

Will power alone fails miserably when parents try to get their children to exert restraint in the face of some highly desired object. The good news is that children can expand their self control with specific Read More→

Boy finds a lunchboxParents feel responsible for instilling values and morals in their children.  Yet, Harvard University infant cognition studies reveal how children are not empty containers to be filled.  Quite to the contrary, we now know that children already come pre-wired with their own basic moral systems.  This knowledge may throw a wrench in your ideas about instilling values in your child.

PARENTS DO HAVE RESPONSIBILITY BUT IT MAY LOOK DIFFERENT THAN YOU WERE THINKING Read More→

Toddlers Do They Need Traffic Cops?

Sunday, July 11th, 2010


Limits

Most parents react to their independent toddlers with limits.  Things may dissolve into an exhausting barrage of “No, Don’t Touch, Stop, Stop Hitting etc.”  Imagine that your child has the ability to stop him(her) self even at 18 months.

Yes, developmentally the challenge is to recognize they are separate from you, thus toddlers expressed feelings through “no, mine” language.  However….let’s see how the self regulation works in toddlers.

What is it really like?

If you have a toddler you may long for bedtime when your child is finally settled and calm, attentive and connected, listening totally absorbed as you read a bedtime story.  For you it may seem like you have become a traffic cop during the day.  It may seem that your toddler requires you to constantly direct his or her every move.

Well, I don’t mean to shock you … but not only is your toddler able to have his or her own traffic light, but your job is to shift from limit maker/enforcer to possibility maker.  When you are the possibility maker your toddler takes on the role of self-regulation.   Think of it this way, “when we finish this we get to chose what to do next”.

But Sandra, come on!  If toddlers were older they could understand but they need limits more than anything now.

Toddlers Need Limits

Sure, toddlers need limits.  But in working with scores of parents just like you I have found, by following a few simple guidelines, you can help your child self-regulate.  When your child self-regulates you can experience more success than you ever imagined!

Mindset

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Categories : Toddlers

What motivates us to perform at our peak, once we earn enough to live comfortably:

  • Being self –directed
  • The urge to achieve mastery
  • The satisfaction of getting better at what we do
  • The ability to make a contribution

While parents may believe that they should direct their child’s behaviors, science demonstrates that over-management dis-empowers children, teens and adults.  By standing back and allowing children to come up with Read More→

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Categories : Motivating Children

Parents: How Contageous Are Your Emotions

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Parents, have you noticed that when you are in a funk, that your spouse and children seem to follow in your footsteps  picking that precise time, when your defenses are low to have a meltdown?  Would you like  to know how to prevent this in the future by making sure that the emotions your child is catching from you are the emotions you want them to catch? Read More→

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PhotoSitClingingIt’s No Accident. In Less Than A Week, I Can Show You How To Get Time For Yourself.

One of the most difficult stages of raising a young child is from 18 months to 3 years old.  During this time, it can feel like there is a ball and chain connecting you to your child.  It can feel like you are under your child’s control.  Your child seems to be dictating your every move, and actively restricting your movements.

Clingy toddlers translate to exhausted parents.  During this phase, you may experience guilt, frustration, and sometimes anger because you want to break away from your child so you can breathe. Read More→

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