Posts Tagged ‘parenting’

Being Welcomed

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

he listened

he listened with the ears of his heart

the youth were not feeling welcomed

Earl was confused and sad

DeShawn was hardened

Justin was wondering, searching, uncertain

Michael was pissed off

they weren’t sure they belonged…again.

…as usual

they fell

fell back to that lonely feeling

that lonely feeling that is so easily ignored

so quickly protected

but this time seen

seen through a Jewel

as he reached across the table and grabbed hold of that lonely feeling

grabbed hold of it by the lapels

and shook it

as he reached it and grabbed it

he grabbed himself

and his Spirit Roared.

“Here is what I am pissed about…”

people think It’s Just a Kid

who is sitting alone

outside

actually, it’s Earl

It’s Earl

and Earl is not feeling welcomed

Um, er, teaching?! a card game

Monday, May 24th, 2010

I watched in horror, covering my eyes often, as he tried to teach the card game to his kid.

It was evident that the dad had been learning how to play and now wanted to share his enthusiasm.  The problem is that a 6 year old does not learn a card game the same way that a 50 year old does, and dad was not aware of that.  He was too preoccupied with sharing all his ideas and techniques.

It was painful to watch the kids face as dad explained the finer details of trump and card counting.

It would have been better if the kid just spaced out and stopped listening entirely, but the kid kept trying to grasp what his dad was saying, probably because of the enthusiasm.  But, the dwindling  self-confidence was growing across the kids face.

The intention from both the dad and his son was touching.

The actions that accompanied that intention were, well, not so good.

Empathetic Observation & Chunking Information

It reminded me of a musician who visited my son’s classroom years ago.

He was an excellent guitarist.  He played beautiful music.  And he was the dad of my kids preschool classmate.

I was looking forward to his classroom visit, as was Z (my little guy).

But, the visit was a disaster.  Complete dud.  He taught a class as if he were talking to college students, not 4 or 5 year olds.  He talked about music theory.  He talked about harmony.  He talked about different kinds of guitars.

He didn’t play his beautiful music.  And the kids were done after the first 2 minutes of his 30 minute visit.

Being able to communicate information at an appropriate level for kids is a skill – empathetic observation.  And it’s a skill that all parents, teachers, grandparents, aunts and uncles ought to learn.  Because when you help a kid to learn something, it feels great and they feel a sense of accomplishment, but when you confuse a kid with information that is too difficult, not in the right order, or they can’t understand, they end up feeling crappy and not capable.

Message from Captain Obvious

And Captain Obvious says we don’t want our kids feeling crappy and not capable, we want them feeling powerful, creative, and resilient.

At one point dad noticed his kid was having trouble and was not picking up the game quickly;  phew.  Unfortunately, in that moment he chose the easy (and far too common?) path.

The Easy path is to  blame the learner – “They aren’t ready.”  “They aren’t that sharp.”  “They’re stupid.”  “They’re lazy.”  “They aren’t paying attention.”

The Hard path is to take ownership – “I wonder how I could make that easier for them.”  “Where is a better place to start?”  “Are they following me?”  “Are they building on what we have already talked about?”  “How do they learn?”  “The way they understand this is going to be different than how I understand it (and probably at a different level).”

The subtlety of self-esteem

Teaching someone is so, so much more than transferring the information in your head to someone else’s head. Listening to understand and watching to understand will provide you everything you need to know about what the kid needs if you are paying attention.  It will provide you the exact information about what information or practice will be most helpful.

This is a skill that we can learn. But, to learn it, we have to get our self out of the way.

Empathetic Observation is a skill that as parents, teachers, and caregivers, we must learn, so that our young people feel over and over again, that they are capable, that they are resilient, and that making an effort makes a difference.

Their sense of self depends on our ability to figure them out.

Play Again

Monday, May 17th, 2010

I saw the world premiere of Play Again. Play Again is a documentary that takes 6 teens who usually spend lots and lots of time playing video games, texting, face-booking, etc. and sends the on a camping trip.

If you are familiar with Richard Louv (Last Child in the Woods), Free Range Kids (www.freerangekids.com), Campaign for a Commercial Free Childhood, and many of the new educational theories, you will appreciate the effort to get kids away from their screens.

There are lots and lots of questions that come from Play Again and these types of experineces.  Here are the ones that jump into my brain:

  • How to I set limits as a parent?
  • What alternatives do I offer to my kids?
  • What do I do about their grandparents (who spoil them with TV and lots and lots of material things)?
  • What about their friends whose parents are don’t care as much about screen time?
  • How are the teens doing now that the experience is over?
  • What are the long term implications of this experience?
  • How can I help kids like these continue their journey into nature?
  • How to sustain the effort and lessons so they do not fall prey to the trance of the screen?

That is a good start…what are  your thoughts?

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