Thursday, August 25, 2016

Expectations while being in the lead



I realized something today when I was asking my daughter to come to me to get her hair brushed:

I did not actually expect my request to be carried out! 

I did not REALLY expect things to work. I kind of expected her to stay where she is. Which is what she did. Ha ha. I am usually asking three or four times, getting a little more irritated with each time, and then she will usually come to me.

I am doing my best to really respect her and her boundaries, while keeping good care of her at the same time (as in brushing hair, brushing teeth, etc. - We tried for a long time to let her do this herself but the results just weren't nearly the same). This can be confusing for me. Is this ok to ask? Is that maybe uncomfortable for her and that's why she does not want to? Hm.

I've understood today that if I want her to do something for me, I need to ask her in a way that I find convincing. If I am not convinced of myself being in the lead, how will she be? (Obviously, I am talking about things that are ok to ask from a 3 y/o!)

My mom was very helpful for me with this insight. So often I see her ask my daughter something (something that is no issue at all, and being with my 3 year old 24/7, I have the advantage of knowing that). Very often my daughter does exactly as my mom asked, and my mom is soooo surprised every time! Ha ha.

As in "Oh ... really? THANKS! I did not think you would actually do it". Ha ha. 

Friday, July 29, 2016

Same child, different circumstances

My daughter (three years) helping me to make our own washing powder.
 
Some people have - directly or indirectly - expressed the idea that my daughter is maybe just easy to handle. A relaxed, sweet girl by nature. And there were times when I wondered about this myself!
Having said that, after three years, I've seen her in lots of different situations. The biggest differences in her behavior occur when she's with my mother (who does not apply the Continuum Concept).
My mom will say to my daughter:
"You are SUCH a diva!"
"You are too strong-willed".
"Little terrorist".
"Well, that's something you've got to learn to get used to".
"Oh oh, little miss don't-touch-me is a bit sensitive today, isn't she?"


My daughter on the other hand will tell my mother things like:
"You are NOT allowed to touch me!"
"You are NOT allowed to look at me!"
"Go away!"
"My brother is OUR baby, you are not allow to touch him. Stop kissing him!"
(Alexsandra Burt said that dd is the voice of nature - ha!)

One day my mother was here to visit, and she went grocery shopping with my daughter (around two and a half back then). When they came back, my mom told me that my daughter had had a major meltdown in one store. She was so loud in her tantrum that people started looking, and that pretty much everyone paid attention to them. My mom had to lift her up and carry her outside while dd was kicking and screaming right and left. When asked what happened before that, my mom said she did not allow dd to take something she wanted to have.
Same situation: Dd and I often go to stores together. She touches whatever looks good to her. She will often ask if we can buy something. Sometimes, when she was younger, she would take colorful products that looked good to her and put them in the basket (that what she sees me doing!). That alone was so sweet ... she would often even "read" the labels. Often it was something that I did not want to buy. I said something like "Oh, thanks dear. We don't need that today. Could you put it back?". Then she put it back. Ha! Sounds too good to be true, right? I think attitude is more important than the actual wording.

Small strawberries in the wild.
Fresh raspberries on one of our hikes.
Picking wild raspberries.
Alexsandra Burt said that foraging for food is one of the most natural things humans can do. Really, the more I think about it, the more I believe grocery shopping with toddler can actually be quite fun. I think assigning them little tasks really helps. Dd pretty much always wants to help me do whatever I do.
Many people have commented on how they've never seen a toddler that relaxed when shopping.
I remember one day when we were at the checkout, where all the candy is. Not that I do mind her eating candy. But she took several packages of something I did not want to buy, mostly because I was sure no one would eat it. She was passionate about this stuff as it looked so beautiful. I told her to put it back. Seriously, I literally heard the people behind me gasping! A nice elderly couple behind us smiled and said "Oh, good luck ...". And then guess what: Dd put it all back. The elderly couple commented on how this was the last thing they had expected.
For a while, I let dd pick one "chocolate lady bug" in our organic store every time we went. After a few weeks, she wanted to keep buying them, but stopped eating them. I don't particularly enjoy those myself, so I did not want to buy them just to let them go to waste. It was a bit of a change for dd, but each time she wanted one, I said if she really wants to eat one, we can come back later and get one (which I would have done if she had ever asked about getting one - she never did). That sounded ok to her and we went to the check out, paid for our groceries, and left.
On the way to the check out, I pretty much always tell her that anything in a glass is my job, but she can put the entire rest on the counter. For a long time, I let her hand over the money at the check out. Once or twice, she thought it was fun to drop the bill on the floor and I had to pick it up. I discontinued giving her the money. Not as a punishment, but to show her again how it's done, in a calm and relaxed fashion. Alexsandra confirmed that this is probably the best way to handle it (I was a bit worried back then because it had happened in the first place. Somehow I thought things like these should not occur at all. Haha. Turns out they do!) We took up our habit of her paying after a while and everything was fine.

Really, by now I have realized on several occasions that how we treat children can lead to very different outcomes. I hope that makes sense.

Monday, May 2, 2016

My big CC girl and another CC baby

Going outside to buy some groceries.
My big girl has grown so much! She will be three this summer. It's hard to believe. She is still a JOY to be around. Now that she will not be two years old for much longer, I guess I can officially say that we skipped the terrible twos! I did not fully believe it when I started on this journey, but the Continuum Concept really does seem to work very well for us in this regard.

In the woods.

Now it could be a coincidence and she could just be a sweet girl by nature. BUT when she's with my mother (who treats her in a more "conventional" way), she can be very different. In fact, she did throw one major tantrum in a store once and my mother said that literally everyone stopped and looked at them, because she was so loud. My mother carried her outside and by the time they were home, they had both calmed down.
"A voice of nature", as Alexsandra Burt put it! You treat dd in a disrespectful way and she will show you how it's not okay.

Having lunch in the sun in early spring.

And ... we've had another CC baby

He was born in late Winter and has added more love, joy and giggles to our family. I love him! He does cry and fuss more than the Yequana babies did, but hey. I am doing my very best to keep all of us in our Continuum rhythm. 

I'll leave it at that for now. 


Enjoy the month of May!