1
When a situation comes in direct conflict with a stereotype you hold about being the “parent” . . . Acknowledge the discomfort you are experiencing in the moment. Give yourself permission to NOT take action. (Pausing gives you space to ground yourself and identify what is your issue vs. what the child needs.) Acknowledge and be open to the idea that you may not know what the right thing to do is. Challenge the stereotype that a parent “knows what’s best.” Remind yourself that you want to honor the child’s process, and that can look a variety of ways. As parents, this is our daily practice. How to Shift the Internal Power Struggle of the “Parent” Stereotype www.parentingforsocialchange.com

How to Shift the Internal Power Struggle of the “Parent ...€¦ · Challenge the stereotype that a parent “knows what’s best.” Remind yourself that you want to honor the

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    0

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: How to Shift the Internal Power Struggle of the “Parent ...€¦ · Challenge the stereotype that a parent “knows what’s best.” Remind yourself that you want to honor the

When a situation comes in direct conflict with a stereotype you hold about being the “parent” . . .

Acknowledge the discomfort youare experiencing in the moment.

Give yourself permission to NOT take action.

(Pausing gives you space to ground yourself andidentify what is your issue vs. what the child needs.)

Acknowledge and be open to the idea that you may not know what

the right thing to do is.

Challenge the stereotype that a parent “knows what’s best.” Remind yourself that you want to honor the child’s process,

and that can look a variety of ways.

As parents, this is our daily practice.

How to Shift the Internal Power Struggleof the “Parent” Stereotype

www.parentingforsocialchange.com