I
have been blessed to be very busy the past few weeks.
We are eagerly awaiting the arrival of our son any minute
now. The birth of a child is an amazing process,
as many of you know. I still find it almost unbelievable
I will be holding him in just a few hours. The
most excited person in the house is our 27-month-old
Madison. I talk to her every night about how exciting
it will be to have a brother - what she will teach him
to do - how important her role is as mommy has the baby
and we bring him home - how great a big sister she will
be – how proud we are of her and how much we love her.
Ever
since I read the classic How to Win Friends and Influence
People, the strategy of "giving people a fine reputation
to live up to" has fascinated me. I believe that
people will rise up to the expectations you set for
them. And consequently, people will fall to the
level you "crush" them to by using consistently finding
fault and dwelling on the negative.
One
strategy that has worked very well with Madison you
can try with your kids. Creating rituals at bed time
are very important as you know – dinner, play, tickle
attack, bubble bath, brush the teeth, read or tell them
special stories/dance and sing their favorite songs,
rub their head and back etc.
Since
she was very young I recap her entire day and ask her
questions about what happened. We would look at
all the fun things she/we did, how well she performed
and behaved, what she learned today – new tasks or words,
phrases and concepts, recently we began going over any
"time-outs" she had and why they happened, and finally
what she had to look forward to tomorrow and how well
she will do. I do my best to use the best words,
volume, tonality, pacing, facial expressions, touch,
and physiology to make it compelling. Adding in
the senses of smell, taste, temperature etc. helps too.
We
believe this ritual has made getting her to bed much
easier and has planted seeds deep within her that grow
a little more each day. We will strive to live
up to the positive expectations that people have of
us, especially those closest to us.
Chip
Eichelberger is an author and motivational speaker...learn more at GetSwitchedOn.com. |