Our expert coach Lena Engel explains how to work towards achieving this holy grail of parenting.
We all want our children to be resilient because, as parents, most of us have realised through our own life experiences that getting on in the world requires this very specific human skill.
However, it's not possible to simply tell our children to be resilient the last moment before they face the various stages and trials of growing up when they might need it most - such as starting school, getting through exams, enjoying friendships and relationships, or leaving for university.
Children need to develop resilience through their ongoing interaction with parents, family, nursery, school, and their community. It’s how we treat our children and how we respond to their behaviour that will enable them, over time, to develop the life skills that they will need.
So, what can we do as working parents to help our children on their life's journey to become resilient?
If we take a positive parenting approach to life, it will enable us to become aware of the outcome of our actions and to approach the job of being a parent as an opportunity to develop ongoing skills within ourselves.
As working people, we are used to facing the challenges that the working life brings, whether it be:
We are used to identifying the range of skills needed in any or all these contexts and can appreciate how our motivation to achieve a good outcome, as well as our ability to focus on creating constructive relationships with others, are the main skills we need to develop and use every day.
Positive parenting is understanding that the children we raise at home need to be shown similar attention, motivation, respect, and energies as we show our colleagues at work. In this way, we will be growing our children, just as we grow our fellow workers and ourselves.
From Babies
Create a routine that works for you and encourages your baby to feel supported by talking through the daily routines as you do them. Talking with your child - even from a very young age - and giving them an opportunity to respond by gurgling and smiling, creates the expectation for interactive communication.
As your baby grows, develop an environment that enables them to make choices from two options. 'Do you want Daddy to wipe your face, or do you want to do it?' This delegation of tasks engages you in an interaction at the simplest level and creates the opportunity for your baby to feel empowered. It’s through these ongoing approaches that you’ll see a reduction in the likelihood of your baby or toddler having tantrums, as it reduces anxiety and frustration.
Young Children
As your child develop physical independence, continue to involve them in decision making by:
To begin with, it will feel like you are giving away the control you have always tried to maintain at home. This can be scary!
However, what you are really doing is reducing the likelihood of stress in your home, because children thrive where there are fewer authoritarian regimes and they feel that they can practice social and emotional skills within the safe boundaries of the family.
They will role model your behaviour over time and become better able to cope. This is exactly the resilience you were looking for from the start!