Connection: It Starts with Respect

Winter is a natural time of year to focus on connection. In snuggling together in our homes, trying to stave off the cold, slushy weather outside, we can nurture our connections with each other and become re-energized. Isn’t that a great image? Snuggling, secure, warm, connected, at ease, and relaxed? Isn’t this what we crave? Isn’t this what our bodies and spirits need?

We do experience fleeting moments of connection when our “battery recharges,” and we cherish those moments deeply. The reality is, however, that we don’t seem to experience those moments as often or for as long we would like or even need. Shouldn’t taking the time to relax and connect with each other be a priority of our life rhythm?

Unfortunately, what I see as a life coach is that, rather than conserving energy and focusing on peace, ease, and connection, family life never seems to slow down: School projects take over the family dining table, sports teams’ practices gear up in anticipation of spring season, we eat in our cars on the way to dance and gymnastics, and everyone goes to bed later and later because there is always so much to do. The truth of the matter is: Slowing down enough to put closeness and strong ties into your days today can lead to smoother sailing over the next few months–when the spring season of action, growth, and school deadlines arrives.

So, what does my title, “Connection: It Starts with Respect,” have to do with all this? Bottom line is: Respect for ourselves, our partners, and our kids provides the impetus for us to slow down enough and take the time to make connection a priority for each person in the family.

Respect is a bit of a dicey word in our culture today. Many parents feel they are not getting enough of it from their kids. Most tweens and teens feel they are not getting enough of it from the adults in their lives: parents, teachers, coaches, salespeople in stores, etc. My teenagers used to ask me to shop with them, because of the lack of respect and trust they felt from the salespeople.

Another side of this is that both adults and tweens/teens get hung up with, “They don’t deserve my respect.” In truth, the word deserve does not appear in the Webster definition of respect: “high or special regard or to show consideration or thoughtfulness in relation to somebody.” Listening to and connecting with someone you don’t have respect for is challenging. Think about it. When you are with an adult you don’t respect, how attentive are you to what she has to say? How much time do you want to spend with him?

Now think about your children. Do you really respect them with “special or high regard?” Do you find yourself sometimes dis-regarding or dismissing what they have to say, because . . . they are too young, you know better, they are saying ____ to manipulate me or get their way. How well can one really listen and connect if respect is missing?

Our book this month, Respectful Parents, Respectful Children, reminds us that respect starts with us: parents. When we treat our children with respect, we model respect and we listen. We listen for what they really value and long for. When we listen like this, our children feel heard.

How do you begin to practice this powerful lesson?

1. Start by saying, “I respect you for . . . ” to your child more often. (This is the first step I focus on in my “Connect by Coaching Your Kid” class that starts this month.) The way this works is that you take a few minutes to write down the qualities you respect and admire in your child. Then, be on the alert for real-life opportunities when your child manifests those qualities. When the opportunities arise (and they will), say, “I respect (admire) you for . . . (insert quality). An example is: “I really respect how hard you studied for the math test.”

2. Listen for the underlying value or need driving your child’s behavior or request. (This step will be covered in our upcoming “Compassionate Communication” class.) Ask yourself, for example, when your child is having a temper tantrum, does she have a need for sleep, food, rest, attention? If your child is not keeping his or her room clean, does he have a need for creativity, independence, choice? Sometimes, all you can do is guess, but calling attention to the value/need helps us to figure out what makes our kids tick rather than just focusing on the behavior and how to squelch it. Once our kids get connected to their own values/needs and realize we are really trying to understand them, then they are in a better place to listen to our values and needs. Just giving your kids what they need is not what this is about. Rather, helping them to discover their underlying needs so they (sometimes with your help) can come up with effective ways to get their needs met while considering your needs is a win-win for both of you.

If you are an information junkie like me, check out the following links for more information on this complicated but powerful topic:

I challenge you to use this wonderful winter season to brush up on your parenting skills by focusing on respect and learning the invaluable tool of Compassionate Communication.

With admiration for all you do,

Dr. Kathy

Invasion of the Brain and Body Snatchers: Making a Scene about Screens

Our problems with screens start out innocently enough. A little TV here or there while I make dinner, a cell phone to stay safe, a little video-gaming-fun so friends will come over to play, computer learning modules to help our kids do better in school, a little Facebook to stay connected to friends. Then, little-by-little, step-by-step, we seamlessly allow this BEAST called media into our lives. Eventually, left unchecked, screens can lead to life-devastating problems.

The biggest issue I have overall with screens is the myriad of things we are not doing because of screen-time. Having 8.5 hours (some say 6.5, some say 11) of screen time per day in the lives of our children is like eating an entire chocolate cake every day and simply not being hungry to eat anything else.

Here are “Dr. Kathy’s Top Ten Worries about Media Influence in Our Kids’ Lives” (and, frankly, ours, too). Watch the videos we have linked to each of these problems and you will cry.

1. Loss of relationship skills and eventually loss of the very core of who we are and what matters most–our relationships with others. Without practice with empathy, love, and conflict resolution, the quality of our relationships with others goes down. Consider even the tragedy of Facebook envy!

2. A future generation of super-consumers who start early and become addicted for life to more stuff than ever. They will have to work longer hours than we do to pay for it all (until the “stuff” runs out).

3. Obsession with thin and beautiful: It is hard to like yourself as you are when everyone in the media is perfect. This obsession can lead to low self-esteem, self-loathing, depression, eating disorders and more.

4. Desensitization to violence–both tolerating it and doing it!

5. Promotion of extreme gender-identities–of what it means to be a man (tough, in-control, stud) and a woman (sexy, passive, and always wanting sex).

6. Promotion of fear and anxiety–by a focus on negative events and stories.

7. Unnatural sexual relationships: The message in many games and movies is that women are objects to be used sexually–sometimes leading to rape and pornography-addiction. Another message is that a woman saying “no” is just teasing and that she really “wants it.”

8. Unnatural brain state while watching screens, especially immature brains. They soak in media images as real.

9. Addiction to fatty food and to alcohol: Food is viewed as entertainment rather than nourishment. Our children will die earlier than we do from complications of obesity and diabetes.

10. Video-game addiction is costing time, money, jobs, and relationships. The average gamer is 37 years old and showing up in marriage counseling.

For a ton more links to sad but fascinating videos pertaining to research on these topics, check out this link.

HOW DID WE ALLOW THIS TO HAPPEN?
We have fewer laws to protect our kids than any other industrialized nation. When did WE allow the health of corporations to be more important than the mental, emotional, physical, and even spiritual health of our children? And what are WE going to do about it? Most parents want the best for our kids. We invest a lot of time and energy in their futures–spending our life energy and our money on their education, sports teams, music lesions, and many other experiences. Then, in a blink of an eye, we undermine it all by allowing screens in to the tune of 6.5 hours/day, a full one-third of their waking hours. Check out “Generation M2: Media in the Lives of 8- to 18-Year-Olds,” 75 pages of research on this topic by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

SO WHAT TO DO?
Dr. Doreen Dodgen-Magee is a fantastic Portland psychologist who is passionate about addressing media issues in families. During her presentation, “Plugged In: The Neurological, Interpersonal, and Personal Impact of Technology-Only Entertainment” (which you can attend at the Multnomah Arts Center on April 17), she offers some absolutely, right-on messages for all our families to embrace:

  • Use technology with moderation.
  • Promote a life of messiness and stickiness. Have creative corners all over your house. Find ways to bring art into your kids’ lives.
  • Remember it’s easier to establish healthy norms than it is to break bad habits. Regarding technology, ask questions before bad habits happen; get at real issues to get at real solutions. (e.g. If your son loves “strategy,” for example, try the “FIFA Soccer” game rather than first-person shooter games.)
  • Do everything possible to protect your children from violence, gender bias/objectification, and the overly consumerist media. You can reduce exposure to commercials, for example, by taping shows so you can watch on your schedule and fast forward through commercials.
  • Be honest: You are what you ingest (sounds, visuals, etc.)
  • Value a counter-culture lifestyle.

I would add: BE ACTIVE IN CHANGING OUR CULTURE to one that protects its children. Let’s get closer to the 1750 BC Code of Hammurabi: “It is a crime punishable by death to sell anything to a child without first obtaining a power of attorney.”

With admiration for all you do!

Dr. Kathy

A few additional ways you can be proactive about being keeping screens in check would be to: