Contents
Error message
The text size have not been saved, because your browser do not accept cookies.
Contents
Note: This is the original 'Contents' page.
Minor headline structure modifications make within the body of this book are not reflected on this 'Contents' page. Someday.. maybe, someday...
-
Preface
-
1. Parents Are Blamed but Not Trained
-
2. Parents Are Persons, Not Gods
-
The Concept of Acceptance
-
Parents Can and Will Be Inconsistent
-
Parents Don't Have to Put Up a "United Front"
-
False Acceptance
-
Can You Accept the Child but Not Her Behavior?
-
Our Definition of Parents Who Are Real Persons
-
Who Owns the Problem?
-
3.
Active Listening: The Language of Acceptance. How to Listen, and Talk, So that Kids Will Talk to You.
-
The Power of the Language of Acceptance
-
Acceptance Must Be Demonstrated
-
Communicating Acceptance Non-verbally
-
Non-intervention to Show Acceptance
-
Passive Listening to Show Acceptance
-
Communicating Acceptance Verbally
-
What About the 12 Communication Roadblocks?
-
Simple Door-Openers
-
Active Listening
-
Why Should Parents Learn Active Listening?
-
Attitudes Required to Use Active Listening
-
The Risk of Active Listening
-
4. Putting Your Active Listening Skills to Work
-
When Does the Child "Own" the Problem?
-
How Parents Make Active Listening Work
-
Danny: The Child Afraid to Go to Sleep
-
When Does a Parent Decide to Use Active Listening?
-
Common Mistakes in Using Active Listening
-
Manipulating Children Through "Guidance"
-
Opening the Door, Then Slamming It Shut
-
The "Parroting Parent"
-
Listening Without Empathy
-
Active Listening at the Wrong Times
-
5. How to Listen to Kids Too Young to Talk Much
-
What Are Infants Like?
-
Tuning In to Needs and Problems of Infants
-
Using Active Listening to Help Infants
-
Give the Child a Chance to Meet His Needs Himself
-
6. How to Talk So Kids Will Listen to You
-
When the Parent Owns the Problem
-
Ineffective Ways of Confronting Children
-
Sending a "Solution Message"
-
Sending a "Put-Down Message"
-
Effective Ways of Confronting Children
-
You-Messages and I-Messages
-
The Essential Components of an I-Message
-
Describing the Unacceptable Behavior
-
The Parent's Feeling About the Behavior
-
How the Behavior Affects the Parent
-
Why I-Messages Are More Effective
-
7. Putting I-Messages to Work
-
The Disguised You-Message
-
Don't Accentuate the Negative
-
The Right Tool for the Right Job
-
The Erupting Mount Vesuvius
-
What Effective I-Messages Can Do
-
Sending Nonverbal I-Messages to Very Young Kids
-
Problems with I-Messages
-
Other Applications of I-Messages
-
An Alternative to Praise
-
How to Prevent Some Problems
-
How I-Messages Lead to Problem-Solving
-
8. Changing Unacceptable Behavior by Changing the Environment
-
Enriching the Environment
-
Impoverishing the Environment
-
Simplifying the Environment
-
Limiting the Child's Life Space
-
Child-Proofing the Environment
-
Substituting One Activity for Another
-
Preparing the Child for Changes in the Environment
-
Planning Ahead with Older Children
-
9. Inevitable Parent-Child Conflicts: Who Should Win?
-
The Parent-Child Power Struggle: Who Wins, Who Loses?
-
The Two Win-Lose Approaches
-
Why Method 1 Is Ineffective
-
Why Method 2 Is Ineffective
-
Some Additional Problems with Method 1 and Method 2
-
10. Parental Power: Necessary and Justified?
-
What Is Authority?
-
Serious Limitations of Parental Power
-
Parents Inevitably Run Out of Power
-
The Teen Years
-
Training by Power Requires Strict Conditions
-
The Effects of Parental Power on the Child
-
Resistance, Defiance, Rebellion, Negativism
-
Resentment, Anger, Hostility
-
Aggression, Retaliation, Striking Back
-
Lying, Hiding Feelings / Blaming Others, Tattling, Cheating
-
Dominating, Bossiness, Bullying
-
Needing to Win, Hating to Lose
-
Forming Alliances, Organizing Against Parents
-
Submission, Obedience, Compliance
-
Apple Polishing, Courting Favor
-
Conformity, Lack of Creativity, Fear of Trying Something New, Requiring Prior
Assurance of Success
-
Withdrawing, Escaping, Fantasizing, Regression
-
Some Deeper Issues About Parental Authority
-
Don't Children Want Authority and Limits?
-
Isn't Authority All Right If Parents Are Consistent?
-
But Isn't It the Parents' Responsibility to Influence Children?
-
Why Has Power Persisted in Child-Rearing?
-
11. The "No-Lose" Method for Resolving Conflicts
-
Why Method 3 Is So Effective
-
The Child Is Motivated to Carry Out the Solution
-
More Chance of Finding a High-Quality Solution
-
Method 3 Develops Children's Thinking Skills
-
Less Hostility- More Love
-
Requires Less Enforcement
-
Method 3 Eliminates the Need for Power
-
Method 3 Gets to the Real Problems
-
Treating Kids Like Adults
-
Method 3 as "Therapy" for the Child
-
12. Parents' Fears and Concerns About the
"No-Lose" Method
-
Just the Old Family Conference Under a New Name?
-
Method 3 Seen as Parental Weakness
-
"Groups Cannot Make Decisions"
-
"Method 3 Takes Too Much Time"
-
"Aren't Parents Justified in Using Method 1 Because They
Are Wiser?"
-
"Can Method 3 Work with Young Children?"
-
"Aren't There Times When Method 1 Has to Be Used?"
-
"Won't I Lose My Kids' Respect?"
-
13. Putting the "No-Lose" Method to Work
-
How Do You Start?
-
The Six Steps of the No-Lose Method
-
Setting the Stage for Method 3
-
Step 1: Identifying and Defining the Conflict
-
Step 2: Generating Possible Solutions
-
Step 3: Evaluating the Alternative Solutions
-
Step 4: Deciding on the Best Solution
-
Step 5: Implementing the Decision
-
Step 6: Following Up to Evaluate How It Worked
-
The Need for Active Listening and I-Messages
-
The First No-Lose Attempt
-
Problems Parents Will Encounter
-
Initial Distrust and Resistance
-
"What If We Can't Find an Acceptable Solution?"
-
Reverting to Method 1 When Method 3 Bogs Down
-
Should Punishment Be Built into the Decision?
-
When Agreements Are Broken
-
When Children Have Been Accustomed to Winning
-
The No-Lose Method for Child-Child Conflicts
-
When Both Parents Are Involved in Parent-Child Conflicts
-
Everyone on His Own
-
One Parent Using Method 3, the Other Not
-
"Can We Use All Three Methods?"
-
"Does the No-Lose Method Ever Fail to Work?"
-
14. How to Avoid Being Fired as a Parent
-
A Question of Values
-
A Question of Civil Rights
-
"Can't I Teach My Values?"
-
The Parent as a Model
-
The Parent as a Consultant
-
"To Accept What I Cannot Change"
-
15. How Parents Can Prevent Conflicts by Modifying Themselves
-
Can You Become More Accepting of Yourself?
-
Whose Children Are They?
-
Do You Really Like Children--or Just a Certain Type of Child?
-
Are Your Values and Beliefs the Only True Ones?
-
Is Your Primary Relationship with Your Spouse?
-
Can Parents Change Their Attitudes?
-
16. The Other Parents of Your Children
-
Appendix
-
1. Listening for Feelings (An Exercise)
-
2. Recognizing Ineffective Messages (An Exercise)
-
3. Sending I-Messages (An Exercise)
-
4. Use of Parental Authority (An Exercise)
-
5. The 12 Communication Roadblocks: A Catalog of Effects
of the Typical Ways Parents Respond to Children
-
Suggested Reading List
-
How to Experience the P.E.T. Model in Your Home
-
About the Author