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Quitting
is a learned behavior; it does not come naturally. Think about it: How
many children do you know who gave up trying to walk? Or talk? Or feed
themselves? Who is more persistent than a kid who really wants
something? A child’s first instinct is to try over and over and over
until they succeed.
Unfortunately,
most kids today have been “taught” to act in opposition of this most
instinctive human trait by us — the so-called “grown ups” in their
lives.
A
person — kid or adult — quits when the physical and/or emotional pain
of continuing is greater than the pleasure derived. It is that simple.
So
the trick in persevering and succeeding — help your child tap back into
that innate instinct they had to stick with things, and not see failure
as an end, but as a challenge they can take on.
While
these skills, strategies, and character traits come naturally in some
people and not in others, they can be learned and mastered. Below are
five tips to keep your kids from becoming quitters when they encounter
adversity.
1. Find the “why” when quitting comes into play
Ask
yourself this question: if it is not important to me, how much thought,
effort, and emotion would I put into something? Now put this into play
with your kids. What are they quitting and why do they want to quit?
Whose decision was it to begin with: yours or theirs? In other words,
whose “why” is it?, Your kids are not miniature versions of you. They may or may not enjoy the same things you do.
2. Focus on the potential positive outcome
What
the mind focuses on, it manifests. In other words, we tend to get what
we think about. So, the question is, are you and your kids focused on
the desired outcome or the current lack of success while pursuing it? If
they stay focused on the end result, it is easier for your kids to get
back up and keep going after a perceived failure.
3. Associate past failures with the successes they eventually led to.
The
great thing about the human mind is that we get to decide what things
mean to us when they happen, and how we are going to react. Let me ask
you this question: How do your kids view an attempt at something that
didn’t end they way they wanted? As a failure or a success? If they
associate each unsuccessful attempt as a success in eliminating ways to
NOT do something, they feel better about failure and don’t treat it as
something to be avoided. After all, the world’s most successful people
are usually the ones who failed most often and kept going.
4. Pay attention to the language you use around the topic of failure.
Words
have meaning, but you and your kids have the power to redefine your
personal meaning of words like failure to make them empowering rather
than hurtful. This goes hand-in-hand with association. Changing your
language will have a huge impact on your emotional state.
5. Lead by example
Nothing
erodes a parent’s credibility more than being a hypocrite. You cannot
ask them to be or do something you are not prepared to be or do
yourself. We all know that “do as I say, not as I do” doesn’t work when
it comes to parenting. —Mark Papadas.
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