Showing posts with label habit training. Show all posts
Showing posts with label habit training. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Charlotte Mason on the "Habit of Obedience"

The language may be a bit outdated, but WOW, was she ever wise!
"The mother's great stronghold is in the habit of obedience. If she begin by requiring that her children always obey her, why, they will always do so as a matter of course; but let them once get the thin end of the wedge in, let them discover that they can do otherwise than obey, and a woeful struggle begins, which commonly ends in the children doing that which is right in their own eyes.

This is the sort of thing which is fatal: The children are in the drawing room, and a caller is announced. 'You must go upstairs now.' 'Oh, mother dear, do let us stay in the window-corner; we will be as quiet as mice!' The mother is rather proud of her children's pretty manners, and they stay. They are not quiet, of course; but that is the least of the evils; they have succeeded in doing as they chose and not as they were bid, and they will not put their necks under the yoke again without a struggle. It is in little matters that the mother is worsted. 'Bedtime, Willie!' 'Oh, mamma, just let me finish this'; and the mother yields, forgetting that the case in point is of no consequence; the thing that matters is that the child should be daily confirming a habit of obedience by the unbroken repetition of acts of obedience. It is astonishing how clever the child is in finding ways of evading the spirit while he observes the letter. 'Mary, come in.' 'Yes, mother'; but her mother calls four times before Mary comes. 'Put away your bricks'; and the bricks are put away with slow reluctant fingers. 'You must always wash your hands when you hear the first bell.' The child obeys for that once, and no more.

To avoid these displays of willfulness (wilLESSnes), the mother will insist from the first on an obedience which is prompt, cheerful, and lasting--save for lapses of memory on the child's part. Tardy, unwilling, occasional obedience is hardly worth the having; and it is greatly easier to give the child the habit of perfect obedience by never allowing him in anything else, than it is to obtain this mere formal obedience by a constant exercise of authority.

By-and-by, when he is old enough, take the child into confidence; let him know what a noble thing it is to be able to make himself do, in a minute, and brightly, the very thing he would rather not do. To secure this habit of obedience, the mother must exercise great self-restraint; she must never give a command which she does not intend to see carried out to the full. And she must not lay upon her children burdens, grievous to be borne, of command heaped upon command."
My bright 3-yr old daughter is a master negotiator.  And I have fallen into the trap of her negotiations more than once and reaped the just reward of a daughter who is VERY reluctant to obey at all!  The battles we have now as we work to instill this habit of obedience!  How I wish we had implemented this earlier.  Nathaniel, at not quite 2.5 years has a much better grasp on obedience as he has never had any other choice (we'd figured out his sister's game by then!).  Again, I must stress, as I am constantly surprised, this is HARD WORK on the part of the parent!!!

Habit Training

There are days when I feel like all I am doing is habit training.  (aka discipline!).  Habits we are currently working on:
  • Stay in bed until 7am
  • Tidy up your toys, crafts, clothes etc.
  • Look people in the eye when you are speaking to them or being spoken to
  • Obey the first time
  • Make things right when you have made things wrong (ask forgiveness, receive forgiveness and MOVE on!)
  • Speak politely - say please, thank you, you're welcome, excuse me
  • Use your words - tantrums, screaming and other "fits of rage" are not allowed
  • Sit at the table and use proper utensils when eating
  • "Yes Mommy", "Yes Daddy"
I know there are more but these ones stand out as the top priority at this stage.  It is a LOT of work.  But, I do believe (HOPE) that it will reap a rich reward of respectful, enjoyable and self-controlled children who grow into the same adults.  Children that I and others can enjoy.  Adults that can thrive.  I hope.

You know what the hardest part of habit training is?  Realizing that I need to develop most of these habits in myself!  Speak politely - I need to work on the words that come out of my mouth when I am frustrated!  Tidy up after yourself - yikes - don't look too hard at my kitchen or my pile of laundry!  However, the biggest habit I have learned and the one I have worked the hardest to instill in my children is to make things right when you have made things wrong.  I have apologized to my children more times then I can count - mostly for yelling.  Hopefully they will grow up knowing that there is grace. 

Friday, November 5, 2010

A Week of Habit Training

This has been a week of focusing on setting solid habits.  Not much "schooly" stuff done but a LOT of life!

This week we've worked hard to drastically cut down on the TV hours in this house.  It's so very easy to let the TV keep the kids quiet while I try to get work done or do my own thing.  The kids still get 30 min. first thing in the morning (this is so I have 30 min. to wake up!).  They also get 30 min. (ok, sometimes it's more, but ideally...) in the evening.  I have occasionally put the TV on when I've had to take an important call or during a portion of Adrianna's quiet time when I need to nap (after working late).  On no given day should there be more than 2 hrs of TV - and I'd like to see that be only 1 hour max.  The kids are adjusting.  They are playing together more.  Adrianna is getting more creative in her play and learning how to entertain herself.  Also, possibly coincidentally, Adrianna is paying attention long enough to begin listening to chapter books!  yay!

Instead of letting the TV entertain them while I do household chores, I am also learning to actively involve them as much as possible.  This is a big adjustment for me.  Sometimes it just takes SO painfully long! Sometimes it makes more of a mess (ie: dishes!).  I will keep focusing on this goal though as I see the need to train them in habits of helping with the household chores and teaching them how to do so.

Scott and I have also finally got on the same (or at least a similar) page in terms of discipline.  Ask once and expect obedience.  Short and simple.  No obedience equals a consequence.  No more of this warning and cajoling and counting and negotiating.  Nate, being 2, is by far the hardest at this stage to teach to obey but he is getting it.  Adrianna has her own challenges.  She will obey but she will twist it in such a way so that she is not really or fully obeying.  We are working to get on top of that as it really is a form of rebellion.

We are also teaching them to work out their squabbles.  I keep them close by me so that I can see a fight begin.  As it heats up to the point of screaming, hitting or tug of war over a toy, I step in and remove the toy.  I sit the kids on the couch and ask each their side of the story ("I had it first", "I want it" etc).  Then I have Anna (mostly) think of a way to resolve it and usually they can! 

We're also focusing on "use your words" for everything!  Ask for a turn with a toy.  Ask if the other person wants a hug or a cuddle.  Ask if you need help.  Tell the other person how their action made you feel.  Ask for a hug if you need attention.  I find a huge portion of my day is spent on obedience training and teaching boundaries and conflict resolution.  The school of a preschooler!