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By Chick
Moorman and Thomas Haller |
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International Parenting Commitment Day - March 20The
10 Commitments | Parenting
Resolutions | Commitment
Celebrations/Rituals The 10 CommitmentsThe First CommitmentI commit to remembering that experience can be messy.I accept that sand, mud, food, paint, cooking, eating, relationships, emotions, and social interactions can be messy. I allow my children to learn from making messes and the cleanup that follows. I recognize that experience can be messy. The Second CommitmentI commit to creating a culture of accountability in my family.I hold my children accountable for their actions and choices with gentleness and love. I implement consequences consistently and allow my children to experience the related, respectful, reality-based consequences that flow naturally from their actions. I create a culture of accountability.
The Third CommitmentI commit to suspending judgment.I create an atmosphere in which mistakes are seen as learning experiences and valued for the lessons they bring. I perceive my children's choices as either appropriate or as opportunities for learning and development. I do not make my children wrong for their choices, even as I hold them accountable for their actions. I suspend judgment. The Fourth CommitmentI commit to managing my mind first.I realize that how I approach a situation affects the outcome and that I alone control my approach. I attend to and manage my frame of mind before I approach my children. I move UP in my consciousness before I move IN with action. I manage my mind first. The Fifth CommitmentI commit to focusing on the search for solutions.I realize that fixing the problem is more important than fixing blame. I pledge to invest my time and effort in seeking solutions rather than in blame and punishment. I search for solutions.
The Sixth CommitmentI commit to speaking self-responsible language.My language patterns reflect my belief in autonomy, personal responsibility, and ownership of one's actions and feelings. I learn and use language that helps my children see themselves as cause. I speak self-responsible language. The Seventh CommitmentI commit to helping my children develop their inner authority.I recognize that an inner authority is the only authority my children will take with them everywhere they go. To that end, I strive to make myself dispensable and to assist them in becoming increasingly in charge of themselves and their own lives. I help my children develop their inner authority. The Eighth CommitmentI commit to modeling the message.I recognize that attitudes are more easily caught than taught. I know that children pay more attention to what I do than to what I say. I walk my talk. I become the message I want to deliver to my children. I model the message.
The Ninth CommitmentI commit to seeing my child as teacher.I recognize that my children are in my life as much so I can learn from them as they are so they can learn from me. I am open to the lessons my children offer me and honor them for helping me learn and grow. I see my child as teacher.
The Tenth CommitmentI commit to creating a sense of oneness in my family.I am present for my children, helping them develop roots and feelings of belonging. I treat my children with love and caring. I create a sense of oneness in my family. Chick Moorman and Thomas Haller are the authors of Couple Talk: How to Talk Your Way to a Great Relationship (available from Personal Power Press at [toll-free] 877-360-1477). They also publish a FREE e-mail newsletter for parents and another for couples. Subscribe to both newsletters at ipp57@aol.com. Chick Moorman is also the author of Parent Talk: How to Talk to Your Child in Language That Builds Self-Esteem and Encourages Responsibility. Visit Chick at www.chickmoorman.com and Thomas at www.thomashaller.com.
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| Contact Chick Moorman at ipp57@aol.com or www.chickmoorman.com.
Contact Thomas Haller at thomas@thomashaller.com or www.thomashaller.com. |
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