Visualise this: you’re happy, calm and you have well behaved kids. It can be done. Here’s how…
Parenting from your child’s point of view means shifting your orientation, and seeing the world from a new perspective. Instead of understanding your child from a “top-down” adult position, think and look at the world as if you were their age and size.
It’s something I think about every day as the director of the Barnard Center for Toddler Development at Barnard College, where I have had the pleasure of working with children and their parents for nearly two decades.
Having a toddler-centric view of the world is something I’ve come to develop over my years as an educator (and as the parent of three boys). But it didn’t necessarily come easily — thinking like a toddler means seeing many things as new, fascinating, or scary; it means having no real sense of time, and an unending curiosity about life.
It means not knowing why things happen or what came before. Clearly, the world looks different from this position. But here’s what I’ve discovered … approaching parenting from your child’s point of view is the key to better-behaved kids, happier parents, and a smoother home life.
Here are five parenting essentials I’ve learned by looking at the world from a child’s perspective.
1. Stay close, even when it's hard.
Our kids need us to stay close, even when they are pushing us away. They need us to be (or at least act!) steady when they falter. They need us to stay calm, even when they are agitated, upset, or plain difficult to manage.
Does this mean giving in all the time? Certainly not. But it does mean learning to accept that our children are good sometimes and bad sometimes. They need to know that we still love them even when they have a hard time or do things we don't like.