Photo by: NPA

Discipline: Keeping it Positive

by Jen of "Heligirl"
Photo by: NPA

If you see your child pulling the dog’s tail, what is the first thing that jumps into your head to say? If it’s something like “Don’t pull the dog’s tail,” then you’re like most everyone out there. I know I was raised with “don’t do this,” “don’t do that” and it comes naturally to say the same. However, child psychologists and the like have pretty much determined the child hears everything but the “don’t.” They hear “pull the dog’s tail.” You’re emphasizing the exact behavior you want to curb.

Positive discipline, compassionate parenting, positive parenting and similar parenting philosophies emphasize the importance of focusing on what the child can do, as well as taking the opportunity to teach a lesson in these instances. In the above example, you could say (and demonstrate), “Pulling the dog’s tail hurts. You can pet the dog nicely like this on his back. He likes that. See how he wags his tail when you pet him nice?” By saying something like that, you’ve highlighted how to properly treat the beloved family pet, illustrated empathy, gave the child something he could do and then encouraged it by pointing out how the dog liked it.

This approach is not only more effective in changing the behavior you’re trying to affect than the standard “don’t,” but it also helps with laying the foundation of empowering the child. Kids want to please us and do well. The positive statement approach gives them the tools (in this case an example of what they can do) to achieve that goal. A childhood filled with statements about what he can do will engender a stronger sense of being able to do things far more than a childhood filled with being told what he can’t or shouldn’t do.

I can tell you from my own experience, this has been a hard one to learn. We started right away as Sweetness started crawling then walking, which sort of went hand in hand with when she started doing things we needed to correct. I’m so programed to say “no” and “don’t.” It’s hard in the heat of the moment to remember to come up with a positive (what she can do) rather than a negative (what she can’t do). But when I have, I noticed a marked difference in how quickly she changed her behavior.

For instance, Sweetness likes to tap her fork on the table during her meals. This is noisy, and when she does it with the prongs down causes damage to the table. I went through the roof when she did the later. Yelling “don’t do that, look you hurt the table” had little effect and got her the attention she wanted. So I started calmly saying, “We eat with our forks. Your fork goes on the plate.” Suddenly the fork was back on the plate. I followed up with a “thank you.” If she went back to the behavior, I said, “Oh, the fork isn’t on the plate. That means your done.” Sometimes she would just put it back and say “all done,” or immediately go back to eating because she’s learned my next move is to remove her from the table calmly as if her banging was just a clear message she was done and wanted down. The banging has really reduced and it’s been a long time since the prongs hit the table because when that happened, she was done no matter what she said and I just kept telling her, “when you hit the table with the fork, it hurts that table. We eat with our forks and when we hit the table with them, we’re done.”

We tried the same with her tendency to get up on the furniture and stand. Our response, “We sit on the furniture. If you stand, you can fall and hurt yourself.” She’s old enough that she understands the “fall and hurt yourself” part. She’ll sit down right away.

Some other examples: “Your coat goes on the hook/shoes go by the coats.” “Your brother was playing with that. You need to ask him if he’s finished and if he’s not, ask if you can have it when he’s done.” “Trains stay on the floor. If you throw them, they can hurt someone – mommy, baby brother, the dogs. If you don’t want to play with them on the floor, they have to go back in the box.” I always follow up with a “thank you” when she does what I asked. It shows appreciation and respect.

This all takes some practice and don’t worry if you miss it a few times. It’s all in the volume. If you’re more positive than negative, it will show. It also takes more engagement on your part. It’s really easy to say “don’t do that” and be done with it. You need to stop what you’re doing and look at how you can use the opportunity to be positive and teach a lesson or value. But in the end it pays off. Being more engaged now (supposedly) saves you from years of anguish in the teen years when, if their childhood was filled with “don’t” and “no,” they’re all about the rebellion.

On a final note, some experts warn that taking the time to try to teach a lesson to kids younger than 2 or 3 can be a waste of breath. I say you need as much practice as you can get. I know I did. Your little one may not know what you’re talking about, but he’ll know that you stop and talk to him, which in itself speaks volumes. You just have to have low expectations on the lesson teaching part for a while. When he starts to understand, it will be all the better.

Heligirl is a helpful and humorous mommy blogger dedicated to sharing positive parenting tools that help develop capable, happy, secure children.

Like This Article

Like Mamapedia

Learn From Moms Like You

Get answers, tips, deals, and amazing advice from other Moms.

43 Comments

Thanks everyone for your extraordinary discussion on this. I have a lot more articles on my site, www.heligirl.com, and try to write one a week (next one coming tomorrow) if you want more background. I also have a list of other resources. I was raised in a very authoritarian home where I was told "no" and "because I said so" and basically treated with little respect. I may be a thoughtful, loving mother, but I'm not confident...

See entire comment

I agree with the article. I have 4 children and with the older ones everyone (extendend family included) always said "no". I read a lot of self- development books and descovered that pretty much by the time the child is 2 he will have heard the word "no" several hundreds of times and that is what they are being programmed to hear is "NO, you can't do that." We've really refocused our parenting to reinforcing positive outcomes versus focusing on the negative...

See entire comment

If you need more guidance and practice in this area I highly recommend the book "Redirecting Children's Behavior and the parenting course that accompanies it. I took it when my daughter was 3 (I am a pediatric occupational therapist and thought I was "good with kids" and felt like I was failing as a parent).

The RCB book and course so changed our lives I became a parent educator.
Kim Cavins
"From the Heart" Family Healing

I agree whole-heartedly with the Positive Discipline approach and use it with my four kids. It's definitely not easy to always do it "right" though and I find that when things are feeling off track in our home, I have to go back to the original book and figure out what to do. Usually I can find a solution that works...

See entire comment

I like the idea of new way to disaplining. I am a grandma (nana) and I have a coulple of real active grand sons. One is 4 and the other 2and half. Most of the time they are ok but somethime they puch our buttons. Esiouly the 2 year old.Our 4 year old likes to puch mommies buttons all the time, I tell hime to be nice to her as it hurts her feelings and I don't like her to be hurt. We are at a stand still at what to do so we are going to try this new way. Up dates later. Thanks for the information

I'm always fascinated by the objections to compassionate parenting. I have yet to see a child thoughtfully raised this way become a demanding, out-of-control tyrant. Rather, they tend to become thoughtful and positive themselves, being programmed as they are to imitate the behaviors and attitudes of their parents. And I've seen a number of cases in which parents with problem children, upon switching to a more positive approach, are amazed to learn they have reasonable and cooperative children...

See entire comment

Ok, for example, in the comment with explanation of how one 6 year old son wasn't acting out for attention, he was acting out for control, therefore they could cater their style better. All the various recommended consequences weren't working, including the occasional spanking by dad that mom obviously wasn't on board with....so they decided to let him decide his own control, and now when you appeal to his need to do and choose the right thing, he does...

See entire comment

My husband and I limited the word NO to when it was absolutely necessary... when my daughter was about to grab something that could hurt her, when she was running away, etc. NO by itself doesn't mean much. No... what?? If she was just grabbing something, we instead chose to say, "Leave it," or "Give it back." Our daughter knew exactly what she was supposed to do. She didn't have to wait for the "command". And it's amazing the strength of the word NO when you use it sparingly.

"Barbies are not projectile weapons. Winging a Barbie at Mommy's head could give her a brain injury, which will make her forget where you put your DS... shoes... skateboard... etc."

thanks -- this article was really helpful. do you have any pointers for a 15-month old? i feel like my son doesn't yet understand the concepts and reasoning about safety, etc.

Thank you for providing so many examples!

I love reading these helpful mom articles, but sometimes I feel like I read an interesting parenting approach, or "mothering tip" but the author doesn't give me the "how to" on the subject. So I really appreciate all your word-for-word examples and results! I get it! I'm going to put forth a real effort in replacing my "no's" this week...

See entire comment

Here are some other good discipline tips from Dr. Kyle Pruett:

http://blogs.goddardsystems.com/Cedar-Park-TX/2009/10/30/...

You can use both. "No" isn't a dirty word. It should be used at appropriate times and circumstances (dangerous situations, hurting someone else, damaging something). After you say no, you explain (in short simple sentences) why they may not do x and what you do want them to do. Show them with actions as you speak. Give choices. Also give warnings and consequences that are natural to the offense (such as the author gave when she removed her child from the table while banging fork...

See entire comment

Jen, this is a very helpful article, and I've used this method for the majority of my children's discipline. I'm now a grandma of four, and my grandbabies are being instructed in this way, too. That being said, however, I must agree with Amy's point that sometimes a direct "No" is both necessary and appropriate.

In Natalee's comment above, she gives the perfect reason for why. She said that her little one has a tendency to ask why to everything, and she gives an explanation...

See entire comment

Thank you Amy!!! I agree with you. I fall into that "40-something" group who was told "no" and "don't" and turned out great. I'm college-educated and don't have a criminal record. I have tremendous respect for my parents, my elders, police officers, etc. Because it was what I was taught. I love my parents and thank them for raising me the way that they did.

Having said that...
Children need to learn right from wrong. They also need to learn that there are consequences to their actions...

See entire comment

Leave a Comment

Required
Required (will not be published)
Required (to prove you're human)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on topic and not abusive
For Updates and Special Promotions
Follow Us
Want to become a contributor?
Want to become a contributor?

If you'd like to contribute to the Wisdom of Moms on Mamapedia, please sign up here to learn more: Sign Up

Recent Voices Posts

See all