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Dealing With Power
Struggles
Article
By Karan Sims
Most parents
first experience their child's attempts
at autonomy at about age two. They feel
challenged and often a battle of wills
begins that lasts throughout childhood
and the teen years. Parents can turn
these trying times into a rewarding
growth period for them and their children
by shifting their perspective concerning
the child's behavior and by becoming
clever and creative in responding to the
child's perceived "headstrong,
rebellious, stubborn, frustrating,
negative" behavior.
Empowering not
Overpowering
Instead of viewing
children's willful behavior as
"bad" and reacting in a way
that overpowers the child, parents can
view this behavior as a healthy positive
sign of their child's development and
find ways to empower the child. From
about the age of two, and at differing
intervals in the developmental process,
children are individuating from their
parents and the world around them. This
includes making decisions for themselves,
exerting their power and will on persons
and situations, getting their own way,
declaring ownership and authority.
When parents react by
overpowering children, they cause them to
feel powerless. Since all humans strive
to feel powerful, the overpowered child
may react to his or her feelings of
powerlessness by either fight or flight -
either giving in and letting others make
all the decisions and maintain all
control or fighting to seek power through
rebellious and destructive behaviors.
Parents who can shift to seeing their
child's struggle for power as a positive
sign can find useful ways for the child
to feel powerful and valuable and deal
with power struggles in ways that reduce
fighting and create cooperative
relationships that empower both the child
and the parents.
The First Step is
to Side-Step
The first step to
effectively and positively deal with
power struggles is to side-step the power
struggle - in other words, refuse to pick
up the other end of the rope. A mother
asked her two-year-old if she was ready
for a nap. "NO" replied the
child. Feeling challenged, the mother
replied, "Do you want to walk to
your bed or do you want me to carry
you?" "I want you to carry me
upside down and tickle me as we go."
The mother realized that
the "no" was an invitation to
join a power struggle and by
side-stepping it (neither fighting nor
giving in) the mother created an ending
that was happy, nurturing and loving
rather than hateful and painful as nap
time can often be. By side-stepping the
power struggle, you send your child the
message "I am not going to fight
with you. I am not going to hurt you. I
am not going to overpower you and I'm not
going to give in, either."
Choices, Not
Orders
After side-stepping the
power struggle, the next step is to give
choices, not orders. A father, trying to
change an 18-month-olds diaper, against
the wishes of the child, offered the
child a choice of which room to have the
change made. The child choose a room, but
once in the room, balked again at the
diaper change. The father continued with
his plan to empower the child and asked,
"Which bed?" The child pointed
to a bed, the diaper was changed and the
ongoing power struggle about diaper
changes was ended.
When giving children
choices, parents must be sure that all
choices are acceptable. Don't give your
child the choice of either sitting down
quietly or leaving the restaurant if you
have no intention of leaving.
Also be sure you don't
give too many "autocratic"
choices. Autocratic choices are choices
that are so narrow the child senses no
freedom at all. Young children benefit
from having some choices narrowed, but
try to give broad and open-ended choices
whenever possible.
Choices should not
represent a punishment as one
alternative. For example, telling a child
"You may either pick up the toys or
take a time-out" creates fear and
intimidation instead of empowerment.
Find Useful Ways
for your Child to be Powerful
Whenever you find yourself
in the middle of a power struggle with
your child, ask yourself, "How can I
give my child more power in this
situation?" One mother asked herself
this question concerning an endless
battle she was having with her son about
buckling his seat belt. Her solution was
that she made him boss of the seat belts
- it became his job to see that everyone
was safely secured. The power struggle
ended.
Do the Unexpected
One parent side-steps
power struggles by announcing "lets
go out for a treat" when she feels
the situation is headed for a showdown.
Her purpose is not to "reward"
bad behavior, but to reestablish her
relationship with her children and keep
her end goal of a close, loving and
cooperative atmosphere in mind.
Getting to Win-Win
Power struggles often feel
like someone has to win and someone has
to lose. A win-win solution is where each
party comes away feeling like they got
what they wanted. Getting to win-win
takes negotiation. Parents can assist
their children by responding to a childs
demands, "That sounds like a good
way for you to win. And I want you to
win. But I want to win, too. Can you
think of a solution that works for both
of us?"
Handling
"NO"
Parents often have the
attitude that children should not say NO
to or question authority. However, it is
interesting that most of us parents buy
into the media campaign of "Just Say
No." It is best to hear a childs
NO as a disagreement rather than a
disrespectful response. Teach children to
say NO, or disagree, respectfully and
appropriately. Keep in mind that you want
them to say NO when faced with peer
pressure and inappropriate situations.
Powerlessness
Creates Revenge
Children who are
overpowered, or who feel powerless, will
often seek to gain power through revenge.
They will seek to hurt others as they
feel hurt and will often engage in
behavior that ultimately hurts
themselves. Revenge at age two and three
looks like talking back and messy food
spills. Revenge at age 16 or 17 looks
like drug and alcohol abuse, pregnancy,
failure, running away and suicide.
When children act out in
power struggles and revengeful behavior,
they are most often feeling powerless and
discouraged about a positive way to
contribute and know that their actions
count. Most parents goals are to
raise a child who becomes a self-reliant
adult, can make good decisions and has
the confidence to be whatever he or she
chooses. Your child will see the future
that future more clearly if you allow him
or her to practice at being powerful in
useful and appropriate ways.
About the Author:
Karan Sims is a
Redirecting Childrens Behavior
instructor for the International Network
for Children and Families.
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Copyright
© 2000 Karan Sims, All Rights Reserved
Reprinted with Permission
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