Can
I just be honest with you? I HATE the word obedience in reference to
teaching little people. I don't know why. It's not because of what it
means. Honestly, it's just because it makes me think of....
puppies.
There, I said it. I don't like to use the word obedience because it
makes me thinking of training puppies on the farm. *sigh* That being
said, I understand that it's my number one job to teach my children to
OBEY me. For when they can obey my voice they can learn to obey the
voice of the Lord. This weekend I realize it was more than time to
crack down on the obedience training at the Beeler house. (arf, arf!)
Coincidentally (or NOT) after I prayed about the best way to go about teaching my right brained 3 year old and ornery 19 month old to obey my requests instantly I came to the chapter in my Duggar's book
about raising little people. Let me tell you now that I'm a fan of the
Duggar's. They have 19 children and everyone of them is respectful and
minds well. Ornery? Sometimes. But kind, loving, thoughtful, and
obedient (arf, arf!)? Definitely. So I think it's safe to say that
they are a good, solid, Christian family to glean parenting advice from.
Their
idea of well rounded obedience includes four points: instant,
cheerful, thorough, and unconditional. This meaning that the child
obeys instantly with a happy heart and does a complete and thorough job
even if the task isn't "their" job. I like it...I like it a lot.
And how do I get there from here?
Because here's where the Beeler's are:
"Natalee, please come get your coat on."
{Natalee, runs away to the other room.}
Mother
loses patience, while trying to remember that defiance and an obstinate
nature are part of Natalee's language delays and eventually makes a
threat (which I would like to believe is a choice but she really already
made her choice) to get Natalee to comply..."Natalee get your coat on
or you're going to the corner."
*sigh*
I know that's bad. Here's another bad example:
"Xavier, please go put these socks in the hamper."
X: "NOOO way!"
*sigh*
That's bad.
Okay,
no more sighing...time to buck up! I feel like we've made valiant
efforts at teaching the children to mind us...but what I'm realizing is
that, especially for Natalee, it doesn't come "naturally" and she's
going to need something concrete for her to understand.
But
it IS important...because if I can't teach the children to obey me, how
will I ever teach them to obey the Lord? {ahem...something I could
probably work on myself!}
So,
we are utilizing 2 of the obedience tactics also found in the Duggar
book. The "Yes, Ma'am/Sir" chart (we're using a calendar) and the
"obedience game." We started both of these tonight.
The
"Yes Ma'am" calendar is just what it sounds like...I printed a calendar
for each child and each time they reply to a task immediately with no
fits and a "Yes ma'am" {or "sure mama", etc} they get a mark on the
corresponding day of the calendar. In the Duggar house they turn in
their marks weekly and earn a penny per mark...I knew that to draw on
Natalee's language learning tendencies and Xavier's age appropriate
understanding their reward would have to be more immediate, so for
awhile we'll be turning in marks nightly and eventually spacing it out.
The obedience game was a great way to get my point across as to how
important the marks are...you gather the family in a central location
(for us the living room run) and give the children a short, attainable
task. Ask them to respond cheerily with "okay daddy" or "yes ma'am
mama" (etc) and off they go to do their task. Each cheery response and
obedient action earns a mark. So we played the game tonight and,
besides the training that it instilled in the children, it was fun and
silly and easy. "Natalee, turn in a circle," and she would giggle and
turn in a circle after replying "yes ma'am!" Natalee has quickly caught
on that her cheery responses and positive attitude earn her marks and
she likes to see them tally up on her calendar! She was quite pleased
with her pay-out of 15 pennies after the game! Xavier needs to work on
his cheery responses! I don't expect him to get the full blown "yes
ma'ams" out but he did say a couple times "tay mama!" and off he'd go to
do his little task. He had a couple of meltdowns and chose to go play
house during the game so his payout of 6 pennies wasn't as high as
sister's and he was a little upset about it. I'm not sure how much of
it he understands but I'm thinking he'll be able to catch on to the
correspondence between marks on his paper and pennies...and then what
earns him a mark on his paper.
We
chose for the children to have to turn their papers into daddy for
payout because we want them to understand that ultimately daddy is the
head of our home and they have to answer to him. It would be much worse
for Natalee to have to explain a day of poor marks to her daddy and see
his disappointment than if she had to turn it in to me.
Counting marks!
The
therapists can be proud that I worked and OT activity into payout time
by having the children put their coins directly into their piggy banks!
Overall,
I'm excited about the possibility of this bringing happier, more
compliant children into the Beeler home. It's not that I want to
completely bend the children into becoming what they aren't but I think
if I don't teach them to obey now then I'll lose their hearts for me
and for the Lord later.
I'm anxious to hear if any of my blog
followers out there have any other techniques that they use for
teaching their children to mind cheerfully but instantly.
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