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Encouragement is not the same as indulgence

Posted by Meg Parkinson on 29 January 2014

Hello and welcome to Paediatrician Dr Stephen Cowan's 4th insight.

4. Encouragement is not the same as indulgence

We are not in the business of raising little kings and queens. Kings don’t do well in our society. Recent studies have shown that indulgence actually weakens your child’s powers to survive, deflating motivation and diminishing feelings of success.

Encouragement means putting courage in your child, not doing things for him. Create a supportive context that will open up a path without pushing your child down it. Unconditional love is the scaffolding that encourages your child to take chances, to experiment, and to fail without judgment. Sometimes being an encouraging presence in your child’s life means standing a little off in the background, there to offer a compassionate hand when circumstances call for it, but trusting in his innate ingenuity.

There is spaciousness in encouragement. Indulgence, on the other hand, limits freedom by inflating a child’s sense of entitlement and reducing the patience needed to work through obstacles when he doesn't instantly get his way. Indulgence leads to small-minded thinking.
 

 

Next week's post is: Pushing your buttons is a spiritual practice, and children are our spiritual teachers.

Regards,

Meg 

Author:Meg Parkinson
info@thriveparenting.com.au