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Guía de Paternidad Responsable Para Familias en Transición

Introducción

Cuando los padres -casados, solteros o del mismo sexo- se divorcian aparecen muchos trastornos emocionales. Establecer entonces una guía de paternidad responsable puede ayudar a minimizar bajo cualquier circunstancia, los profundos efectos, muchas veces de por vida, que sufren los hijos únicos o múltiples, quienes de pronto se ven a sí mismos atrapados en un interminable recorrido de altibajos emocionales.

Los niños que sin darse cuenta son trasladados al sistema de cuidado de crianza temporal, pueden incluso experimentar una mayor sensación de pérdida y confusión. También bajo una gran presión, están aquellos niños que deben transitar el laberinto legal para una posible reunificación con sus padres biológicos, otros familiares, o seguir el proceso de adopción.

Aunque la sentencia de separación o divorcio puede romper la relación entre los adultos, la misma no absuelve a ninguna de las partes -en la mayoría de los casos- de ser padres responsables. Ningún niño debe sufrir los daños colaterales del fracaso de una relación de pareja. Por eso, las normas para una paternidad responsable pueden ofrecerle un terreno positivo y neutral, a través del cual, todas las partes pueden operar, incluso si no quieren hacerlo.

En un mundo perfecto, la habilidad de comunicarse, comprometerse, ser flexibles, tolerantes, moderados, objetivos, justos e imparciales, formaría parte de la segunda naturaleza de las personas, y las ayudaría a enfrentar cualquier adversidad. Sin embargo, no vivimos en un mundo perfecto y por eso, es de suma importancia que los padres, parejas y otras personas encargadas del cuidado de los menores re-evalúen, revisen y mejoren la manera de comunicarse, por el bien de los niños.

No siempre es fácil llevar a cabo una paternidad responsable, incluso en las mejores circunstancias. Por eso, los siguientes puntos ofrecen normas, exploran actitudes y comportamientos para lograr una exitosa y responsable paternidad en cualquier situación, especialmente cuando el bienestar de los niños es el principal y único objetivo.

Obstáculos que impiden una Paternidad Responsable

Resentimiento, egoísmo y negativa a comprometerse son tres de los grandes obstáculos que evitan una paternidad responsable. Los ejemplos de cómo se manifiestan son muchos e incluyen:

1. La necesidad de estar en lo correcto- Nadie se mantiene en lo correcto “todo el tiempo”, la cooperación es la clave. La rigidez y mentalidad cerrada solo sirven para mantener a los padres/esposos separados comportarse de manera extraña entre ellos, sin ningún beneficio para los niños.

2. Poner a los niños en el medio- Cuando un niño es usado como amortiguador entre los adultos, se puede desarrollar el Síndrome del Niño en el Medio, donde los adultos se transforman en otros niños dentro de esta dinámica. En estos casos, la autoestima del niño puede ser duramente golpeada.

3. Asumir al niño como “propiedad” – Intentar controlar a la otra persona asumiendo el control del niño, nunca tendrá un resultado positivo para ninguna de las personas involucradas. ¡Sea flexible!

4. Competencia – La tendencia de competir para ser el “padre favorito” puede crear expectativas insanas en los niños, y esto puede llevarlos a volverse manipuladores.

Donde no hay deseo o intención de cooperar, no se pueden cumplir las normas para lograr una paternidad responsable. Es importante recordar, que muchas veces el padre más generoso con el comportamiento de los niños, por lo general, es el que obtiene los mayores beneficios a largo plazo.

La mayoría de las parejas entran en etapa de crisis, cuando el acuerdo que hicieron en buenos tiempos y que debe mantenerse después de la separación, no se respeta. Cuando los padres deciden contratar a un abogado para que los represente, esto puede mermar los ahorros de sus vidas. Ellos pueden llegar al punto, donde han perdido toda objetividad mas allá de una actitud antagonista del uno con el otro, volviéndose de esta manera, incapaces de proteger la salud mental espiritual y física de sus hijos.

Conserjería

La disposición de buscar la intervención neutral de un profesional, puede ayudar a las personas involucradas a desarrollar en gran parte, una relación positiva y estratégica, y manejar los asuntos o problemas a medida que éstos aparezcan.
La conserjería puede ayudar a forjar respecto entre las partes, y por lo tanto, a reducir discusiones, conflictos pequeños y peleas internas.
Por lo general, la corte ordena a los padres a asistir a sesiones con consejeros o terapeutas que los pueden ayudar a llegar a algún acuerdo. Estos padres pueden sentirse muy abrumados con los asuntos legales de la separación, sus propios problemas emocionales y por la pelea de bienes materiales, olvidando de esta forma los principios básicos de la paternidad.

En este caso, la tarea del consejero es trabajar con los padres y desarrollar o estructurar las cualidades que ellos necesitan, para llevar a cabo el rol de la paternidad de manera más efectiva.

Algunos puntos claves son:

• Aceptación de la responsabilidad compartida y el acuerdo entre padres biológicos, padrastros, parejas y padres adoptivos de comportarse bien, para el beneficio de los niños.

• Entender que los niños, si ellos lo desean, tienen el derecho de mantener una relación positiva y de afecto con uno de los padres, ya sea el padre adoptivo, padrastro, o abuelos. Cada uno tiene la responsabilidad de apoyar esta relación, a pesar de las dificultades que puedan existir.

• Reconocer la obligación de promover una relación positiva con el otro padre, por el bien de los niños

• Llegar al acuerdo de nunca hablar negativamente o hacer comentarios negativos del otro padre, en presencia de los niños.

• Ser responsables con el tiempo que se ha comprometido con los niños. El otro padre no debe interferir

• Demostrar un comportamiento apropiado en el teléfono, sin tener que acosar al otro padre o a los niños.

• No preguntar a los niños sobre la vida personal del otro padre o guardián.

• Comunicarse directamente con el otro padre, sin usar a los niños para que lleven y traigan mensajes sobre asuntos legales, educativos o de dinero.

• Evitar expresiones, actitudes negativas o de preocupación con relación al otro padre, en el momento de entregar o recoger a los niños.

• Evitar planear actividades con los niños que coincidan con el tiempo que le pertenece al otro padre.

• Elaborar un plan para tomar decisiones médicas y educativas de manera compartida.

• Construir las relaciones desde la fortaleza de los individuos, y no desde los problemas que están enfrentando.

• Realizar una reunión conjunta, a manera de intervención, para discutir todos los asuntos de manera abierta

Muchas personas pueden olvidar estas recomendaciones o estar totalmente en desacuerdo con ellas, esto incluso pasa entre parejas que viven juntas. Las mismas son más difíciles de recordar y poner en práctica cuando hay una separación, divorcio o ruptura. Una orientación psicológica es una herramienta invalorable para conseguir un balance cuando se presenta esta situación.

Conclusión

Establecer límites y normas de paternidad responsable, puede llevarnos a nuevas oportunidades de hacer decisiones compartidas que son saludables y beneficiosas para los niños, especialmente cuando las relaciones de parejas están viviendo una etapa de transición debido a la separación.

Una orientación psicológica puede tener un efecto positivo de largo alcance y ayudar a reconstruir la comunicación, confianza y el entorno familiar, facilitando a los padres reconectarse y satisfacer las necesidades de sus hijos con mejores resultados.

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Healthy Parenting – Your Options: Getting a Grip on Out-of-Control Behaviors: A Parent’s Guide to Maintaining a Winning Influence Over Children

By Tony Madril, MSW, BCD

Introduction
Guideline #1: Write family rules to fit the developmental needs of children
Guideline #2: Reinforce appropriate behavior using meaningful rewards and consequences
Table 1- Safety Tools for Children, Adolescents and their Families
Guideline #3: All adult caregivers will discuss and agree upon family rules
Guideline #4: All adult caregivers will consistently reinforce family rules
Introduction

All too often, children are operating outside the realm of parental control; they are doing and saying what they please despite the best efforts of their parents. This is a common complaint shared by many families seeking the help of amental health professional. Parents with unruly children often feel overwhelmed and ineffective. Simply put, they are out of things to try, and need practical answers to some tough parenting questions. If this is you, let me offer you a fewhelpful suggestions.

First, it is important to recognize that while every family is unique, there aregeneral principles from evidence-based psychotherapies to help guide you inyour quest to quiet your child’s resistance. One such principle suggests that for families to function optimally, parents must establish and maintain a suitableamount of behavioral structure for children. Practically speaking, this means parents must design and introduce a set of family rules that clearly communicates to children how they are expected to behave both in and outside of direct parental supervision. Another principle, from behavioral therapy, further suggests that parents create a system of behavioral reinforcement, a practical means of shaping a child’s responses to family rules through the systematic applicationf meaningful rewards and consequences. Parents who exercise these principles are destined to become the “master architects” of the family realm.

The first step to becoming the master architect of your family is to identify the type of behavioral structure presently in place for your child. The following questions will help you do this; they can also help you identify the strengths and weaknesses of your own unique way of shaping your child’s attitude and behavior. Answer the following questions alone if you are a single parent, or together with your parenting partner:

  • Are there specific family rules in place for my child to follow?
  • Have I communicated the family rules to my child in a way that makessense to him based on his age and particular stage of development?
  • If asked, would my child be able to define the family rules and expectations I want her to follow in a clear and accurate manner?
  • Do the family rules and expectations currently in place fit the present needs of the family, or are they ineffective and outdated?
  • Is there a system of meaningful rewards and consequences in place to increase the likelihood that my child will adhere to the family rules?
  • Am I appropriately reinforcing the family rules on a regular basis?

If the answers you provided suggest that, the type of behavioral structure you have in place now requires some attention, not to worry. Most behavioral structures do. Like the family system itself, behavior modification systems for children are dynamic; you can re-evaluate and adjust them at anytime to meet the changing developmental and behavioral needs of children. Here are some guidelines I recommend you follow as you consider the possibility of enhancing your child’s behavioral structure to fit his or her specific needs:

Guideline #1: Write family rules to fit the developmental needs of children.

In childhood there are several developmental tasks geared toward teaching children the specific skills they will need to successfully manage the demands of life at every stage of growth. For example, the infant who learns to trust others and the world will likely succeed at establishing and maintaining meaningful friendships with peers during school age. While it would not be appropriate for a parent to assign an infant a family rule at this beginning stage of life, a reasonable expectation for parents with infants would involve spending adequate amounts of time with the infant, providing love and nurturing. Doing so will help the infant develop a strong sense of safety and security that he or she will need to build trust with others; this is the first developmental task of childhood.

Similarly, parents with older children are encouraged to begin to view their child’s challenging behaviors as an outward expression of their underlying developmental need: in this case, the unconscious drive of the child to learn the skills of self-control. It is, therefore, important that you begin to think of the behavioral structure you are creating now as the strong foundation your child will need to support their successful progression through the developmental stages of childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood. Understanding this concept is crucial. Research studies indicate that the guidelines for acceptable behavior parents give children are instrumental in teaching them the skills they will need to accomplish important developmental tasks later in life.

That said, I suggest you begin drafting your family’s rules by prioritizing your child’s non-compliant behaviors by severity and potential risk of harm. Behaviors such as physical aggression, verbal threats, touching others, and inappropriate sexual behavior should be first on the list for intervention. For example, if your child hits others, you would want to demonstrate to them the seriousness of this act by establishing a “no-hitting” rule that corresponds with an immediate behavioral consequence. You would simultaneously want to reward your child for taking any actions that demonstrate the use of self-control. Gradually, your focus will shift from attending to your child’s negative behaviors to his willingness to comply with family rules and other behavioral expectations. In technical terms, this process of parental intervention is called behavioral shaping, and the focus of my next guideline.

Guideline #2: Reinforce appropriate behavior using meaningful rewards and consequences.

A thoughtful application of rewards and behavioral consequences to a child’s problematic behavior can dramatically improve the situation. With a little training, a parent can wield the strength of such a system to develop desirable behaviors in children such as behavioral compliance while decreasing unwanted behaviors such as fighting and tantrums. (It is important to note that positive reinforcement and minor punishment are the proper terms to refer to this process of shaping human behavior; however, I have replaced these somewhat technical terms with “rewards” and “behavioral consequencesfor clarity and ease of recall.)

Rewards, then, refer to the presentation of a particular incentive or event (attention, praise, a family outing) by a caregiver that increases the likelihood that a child will comply with a behavioral expectation. Meaningful rewards are those incentives that inspire your child to take desired actions. For example, if your child willingly takes a bath before bed when you remind him of the allowance he can earn for cooperating, the allowance is a meaningful reward to your child. You can identify other such rewards through careful observation of your child’s reactions to other possible incentives, and through direct conversations with them about what he or she might like to earn.

Behavioral consequences, on the other hand, refer to the presentation or removal of a certain incentive or event in response to a child’s misbehavior that decreases the likelihood that he will repeat this behavior. Like rewards, I recommend you base your behavioral consequences upon the strength of the approach to motivate your child. The following are some examples of appropriate behavioral consequences for children: brief time-outs, assignment of an additional chore, loss of free time, failure to earn allowance, and a loss of points, if you are using a chart to monitor your child’s behaviors.

Now that you have established a program of suitable rewards and behavioral consequences for your child, here are some recommendations for putting them into place. First, schedule some time to sit down with your child to introduce and explain the family rules and behavioral expectations you will expect her to follow. Take care that the information you communicate is spoken at a pace and developmental level that she can easily comprehend. You may even want to ask her to repeat back what she heard you say for clarity.

Second, explain to your child what actions you would like her to take in place of those, which violate the family rules. For instance, you might tell her, “Instead of hitting, I would like to hear you tell me that you’re angry, see you walk away from the situation, or even hear you yell if you feel this will help. You will earn 10 points toward your weekly allowance if you do this.” Afterwards, your child will know what behaviors you want, and which you will reward, exactly!

Third, provide opportunities for your child to practice the skills of self-control. Practice role-playing how your child would go about applying specific tools (such as those Safety Tools described in Table 1) to “real life” situations, which typically trigger strong emotions for him or her. Fourth, prompt your child to use his new safety tools. For example, to encourage your child to adhere to the no-hitting rule when upset, you might say something like “Remember your safety tools: You can take a personal time-out if you think you need to. It might help. Hang in there, I believe in you!” You can also provide a visual prompt by modeling the desired behavior when you become upset or angry. Fifth, promptly reward your child for any actions he takes to demonstrate the desired behavior. Remember: reinforcing approximations of the desired behavior can increase the frequency and consistency of the behavior.

Lastly, follow a violation of a family rule or behavioral expectation with a reasonable and timely behavioral consequence. If followed regularly, this program of behavioral modification will teach your child the fundamental principle of cause and effect. In other words, it will help your child understand the parallel relationships between cooperation and the acquisition of rewards, and non-compliance and the acquisition of negative consequences. Over time, these parental interventions will teach your child the benefits of thinking through a situation–critically–before choosing a behavioral response. Your child’s use of this critical cognitive skill will promote the gradual development of self-control and the willingness to cooperate with others.

Moreover, if your family’s rules reflect widely held conceptions of what is appropriate and expected behavior within larger society, your care to prioritize and counteract your child’s non-compliance will spark a growing awareness and an eventual respect for the cultural norms of society. Teaching your children to measure their behaviors against a discriminating code of family ethics will help prepare them to meet standards of behavior upheld by contemporary society. This will be more and more important as your child enters adolescence and young adulthood when standards of personal conduct and societal costs for breaking rules are much higher.

Table 1 Safety Tools for Children, Adolescents and their Families

Tool Definition

Tool Definition
Stop, Think and Choose Stop what you are doing, be aware of your thoughts, and carefully consideryour choices and the consequences of each possible choice.
Personal Time-out Briefly excuse yourself from a situation that may cause you to make a decision that you could regret later.
Talk About Feelings Talk to someone who you feel you can trust. Name your feelings and explain to the person how these feelings are affecting you.
Positive Self-talk Use your mind like a tape player: repeat the positive statements you have created for yourself when you are going through a stressful time.
One-minute Vacation Vacation Imagine a special place where you can feel safe, relaxed, and free from all of your problems. Use your imagination to create the details. Stay in this special place for least one minute.
Check Boundaries Check to see if you are invading the personal space of others around you. Ask someone, if you are not sure.
Deep Breathing Take several, long and deep breaths when you are having a hard time managing your feelings.
Guideline #3: All adult caregivers will discuss and agree upon family rules.

Every family is a system, and like a system, the characteristic way in which family members relate to one another ultimately determines how the family will function as a whole. Like a thermostat that systematically works to create a safe and comfortable living environment, which the family can enjoy, adult caretakers have a wonderful opportunity to create a safe and loving family environment for children by agreeing to work together.

In simple terms, this means that adults involved in the care giving and supervision of your child must work together to draft family rules that make sense to everyone. While this may seem obvious, disagreement about family rules is one of the most common reasons parents struggle to resolve their child’s behavioral problems successfully. Parents and caretakers who disagree about family rules will unintentionally create a system that encourages non-compliance. For example, if Parent A gives a child a behavioral consequence for violating a family rule and Parent B annuls it because the child cries and promises “never to do it again,” the child ultimately learns that crying and negotiating are tools to control others; in this case, his parents. This experience also communicates to the child that family rules and behavioral expectations are essentially, flexible.

Here are a few suggestions I recommend for you to begin the collaborative process of writing your family’s rules in a way that makes sense to all: 1. Arrange a time that you and your parenting partners can sit down, uninterrupted, to discuss the matter of establishing a list of family rules and behavioral expectations for your child. An hour to an hour and a-half should suffice.

2. To begin the discussion, ask each person about the specific behaviors they are seeing from the child, which may be causing problems within the family, in school, etc. Is everyone witnessing the same behaviors from the child? Does everyone believe these behaviors are problematic? If everyone agrees, move onto the next step. If not, take a few moments to discuss the differences of opinion present within the group. Doing so may give each person a valuable glimpse into the underlying beliefs about discipline and other parenting practices, which could be unconscious, and contributing to the style of parenting within your household. Talking about these differences may also help the group identify and separate old, undesirable beliefs about parenting and discipline from those constructive parenting behaviors the group wishes to reinforce.

3. Ask for commitment. Once the group has developed and consented to a list of family rules, ask each parenting partner for their verbal commitment to do their part to reinforce them with your child. In what ways will each parenting partner help to reinforce the family rules? Are there specific activities or interventions that individuals are willing to do to help reinforce the rules on your child’s behalf?

4. Schedule regular check-ins. It may be helpful to schedule regular check-ins with your parenting team for the first few months following the implementation of family rules and the new behavior modification system. This will help resolve any problems that may arise in the beginning stages of the structural changes taking place within your family.

Kurt Lewin, a German-American psychologist, discovered that when 51 percent of the variables in any system change, the remainder of the system organizes itself at a higher level of functioning. This is great news! However challenging the task of getting your parenting partners to collaborate, you can rest assured that your family only has to go a little more than half the distance to earn many of the benefits that stem from family-systems change. The more your parenting partners work together to reinforce family rules, the more your child is equipped to meet his or her full behavioral potential.

Guideline #4: All adult caregivers will consistently reinforce family rules.

Over the years, I have met several parents who have an expressed disbelief that behavior modification programs actually work, especially in children with hard-to-treat symptoms. They say, “I’ve tried that already, it doesn’t help.” A close look into these situations typically revealed a problem with the timing and delivery of the proposed behavioral interventions, not with the behavioral program itself. In many cases, the rewards and behavioral consequences were delivered too late, or too infrequently to have any significant impact upon the child. Therefore, it is important that all parents understand the key role consistency plays in creating positive outcomes for children whenever behavior modification techniques are used.

Although there are a number of evidence-based, behavioral techniques available to treat conduct problems in children, none of them are effective alone: appropriate timing and consistent delivery of behavioral reinforcements over time must accompany the behavior-change program in order for change to follow. One study of behavioral techniques and children found that continuous reinforcement (reinforcement every time a desired behavior occurred) most often led to higher levels of performance of new behaviors, whereas inconsistent reinforcement led to problematic behaviors that were more difficult to extinguish.2 In other words, parental diligence to follow through with treatment recommendations must always accompany the implementation of any behavior modification program. This helps ensure that best possible outcomes for children and families are met.

Behavioral management problems in children remain a problem for many parents today. For example, in the report, America’s Children: Key National Indicators of Well-Being 2008, “five percent of parents in the United States reported that their child had definite or severe difficulties with emotions, concentration, behavior, or being able to get along with other people.” While this figure may sound discouraging, now, more than ever before, we are bound to hope: Most of the symptoms and distress associated with childhood and adolescent behavioral disorders are treatable with timely and appropriate interventions. Behavioral therapy combined with treatments from other evidenced-based psychotherapies is highly effective in successfully resolving hard-to-treat behavior problems in children. It is therefore imperative that parents learn effective strategies to make practical use of these treatments: understanding how to apply these therapeutic concepts is the key to establishing and maintaining winning influence over children.

I recommend that parents begin this process by prioritizing their child’s problematic behaviors according to the risk of a particular behavior to cause harm or disruption. Next, it is important that parents set a strong foundation for behavioral modification by establishing a set of family rules that addresses the developmental needs of children. The ability to interpret your child’s “acting-out” behavior as a developmentally appropriate way of communicating his need to learn the skill of self-control (not to punish you) can be liberating. Moreover, the thoughtful development and consistent application of meaningful rewards and consequences to your child’s behaviors is a powerful way to strengthen adherence to family rules and other behavioral expectations. Lastly, it is important to remember the benefits of working together with your parenting partners to affect positive change on behalf of your child: without this level of cooperation, the behavior modification techniques discussed in this article may simply, not work.

In closing, I would like to encourage struggling parents by noting that researchers are working to gain new scientific insights that will lead to better treatments for mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders in children. Innovative studies are also exploring new ways of delivering services to prevent and treat these problems; and research efforts are expected to lead to more effective uses of existing treatments, so children and their families can live happier, healthier, and more fulfilling lives. Be well.

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Tony Madril, MSW, BCD is a board-certified clinical social worker, licensed to practice psychotherapy in the State of California. He has over a decade of experience treating children and adolescents with an array of emotional and developmental disorders.

Early Childhood Development Tip Sheet – What I Know Now!

By Bette Freedson, LICSW, LCSW, CGP

Introduction

“If Only I knew then……..” How often do working mothers, or any mothers, say that to themselves as they think back on the toddler ages of their kids?

Toddlerhood comes on with a fury of needs and activities that keep mom’s reflexes responding and her head spinning. There is barely time to meet every need and deal expertly with every situation whether the mother is working inside or outside the home—or, as is often the case– both. Realizations of what could have been done differently, and lessons learned, are often revealed in reflections of the past.

What some of the older moms have learned through experience might be helpful to some of the younger moms now in that wild, wooly and wonderfully sweet period called Toddler.

Twelve Tips

Here is what I learned then– that I know now–and wish I had known then… 

  1. Believe in the unconditional love of your toddler for you.
  2. Set realistic and reasonable limits.
  3. Stay consistent in your reactions and responses as much as possible.
  4. Keep disciplinary measures short and to the point.
  5. Depersonalize your child’s reactions to discipline, limits, and you.
  6. Keep in mind that children of toddler ages are concrete thinkers, and are not born with innate understanding of concepts grownups may take for granted.
  7. Know that curiosity is normal. Give answers that are short and make sense.  Toddlers do better without tons of detail.
  8. Inform yourself about normal emotional development.
  9. Trust you have no need to fear their fears.  Know that it is okay for them to need reassurance and a sense of security.
  10. “Me” time is important. No need for guilt.
  11. Adopt the motto: This too shall pass.  —Second motto: Chaos will not make me crazy.
  12. Know you deserve to have support.

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Related Articles:

Bio:

Bette J. Freedson, LICSW, LCSW, CGP is the author of the “Relax and Learn Seminars: Skills For All Seasons,” a repertoire of workshops based on the principles of effective stress management. In her work Ms. Freedson emphasizes the power of the mind/body connection to improve decision-making, increase effective coping, reduce time wasted in conflict, boost morale and productivity at work, and create greater harmony in relationships.

Ms. Freedson practices clinical social work at The Listening Place in Lynn, Massachusetts. Besides maintaining an additional private practice in South Berwick, Maine, Bette is Social Work consultant to Maine School Administrative District #35.

 

Healthy Parenting Tip Sheet – Loving Learning at Four and Forever

By Bette Freedson, MSW

Introduction

The best way a parent can encourage their four year old to love learning is to model it! If you love learning (and it doesn’t have to be academic), your child will see it, and the encouragement will be a natural.

You did not have to be the star in your school to encourage your kid to love to learn. Just do this. Think about what you love to learn, how you learn best, and about what juices up your own learning excitement.

Some Tips:
  • Read, read and read some more to your child, and let your four year old “read” to you.  You might choose some stories you liked as a child. You might pick up on what naturally interests your child for choices of what to read– and choices of what to do.
  • Take them to museums.
  • Take them to gardens, and to lakes and woods.
  • Take them on field trips to see things being made. And yes, even to amusement parks. All kinds of fun can turn children on to curiosity about how things work. 

Teach your child to do the things you enjoy doing, and be generous with showing your pleasure.  The secret is to let your child experience your own joy when you go where you love to go, and do what you love to do. 

Four-year-olds are precious sponges, who will soak up your enthusiasm and very possibly be turned on for the rest of their lives.  And then, lucky parent, they will teach you!

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Related Articles:

Bette J. Freedson, LICSW, LCSW, CGP is the author of the “Relax and Learn Seminars: Skills For All Seasons,” a repertoire of workshops based on the principles of effective stress management. In her work Ms. Freedson emphasizes the power of the mind/body connection to improve decision-making, increase effective coping, reduce time wasted in conflict, boost morale and productivity at work, and create greater harmony in relationships.

Ms. Freedson practices clinical social work at The Listening Place in Lynn, Massachusetts. Besides maintaining an additional private practice in South Berwick, Maine, Bette is Social Work consultant to Maine School Administrative District #35.

Healthy Parenting Tip Sheet — Heroin on Long Island: What Parents Need to Know

By Maria Elisa Cuadra-Fernandez, LCSW-R, ACSW, CASAC, CPP, CPS, CEO, COPAY, Inc.

Introduction
What is Heroin?
Other Related Health Concerns
Addiction to Heroin
Symptoms of Withdrawal
What Parents Can Do
Treatment Is Available
Getting Help
On Long Island, COPY Is a Bilingual Professional Resource

Introduction

The recent and unexpected deaths of several Long Island teenagers as a result of heroin overdose have been met with deep grief as well as shock and disbelief by many.  Heroin, always thought of as an “inner city” problem affecting low income communities is now being seen in affluent suburban communities, on Long Island.  This frightening reality poses new challenges and needs for parents who now are just beginning to learn how to protect their adolescent children from this danger.

This new influx is believed to be connected to the availability of higher “purity” heroin (which is more suitable to inhale) and to decreases in prices, making it more obtainable by youth.   The thing that many teenagers don’t understand is that all routes of administration (inhaling, smoking, and sniffing/snorting) are all highly addictive.  Also, purchasing substances on the streets is highly dangerous as there is no assurance of its’ purity nor its’ potency.  Overdoses and/or poisoning can occur because young people have no idea of what and how much they are administering to themselves.

What is Heroin?

Heroin is extracted from the seed pod of certain poppy plants.  It is a processed form of morphine and is sold as a white powder, a brown powder, or a black sticky substance often called “black tar”.  One of the many dangers of “street heroin” (heroin sold on the street) is that it is often “cut” (mixed) with other substances.   Heroin confiscated by authorities has been found to contain starch, sugar, powdered milk, and quinine.  Sometimes, confiscated heroin has also contained strychnine and other poisons.  Educating teenagers to the seriousness of these dangers is enormously important and necessary.

Other Related Health Concerns

Heroin abuse, like other substance abuse, is a progressive disease process.  In teenagers it often begins as “recreational” use, increases slowly, and eventually leads to daily use and loss of control.  Loss of control signals that both a psychological as well as a physical disease process is active.  Loss of control also signals that the disease has moved from one of substance abuse to addiction.

Addiction to heroin puts teenagers at much higher risk for infection to HIV, Hepatitis C (HCV), and Hepatitis B.  It also interferes with judgment, particularly when they are under the influence of the drug.  This can lead to unprotected sex and the greater likelihood that the substance abusing partner is HIV positive or HCV positive.  It can also result in unplanned pregnancy and/or an increased risk of sexual assault. 

Other possible consequences from pro-longed use include bacterial infections of the blood vessels and heart valves, abscesses, infections of soft tissue, liver or kidney disease, scarred/collapsed veins, and pneumonia and/or tuberculosis.  Once again, educating teenagers to these consequences and dangers is most important.

Addiction to Heroin

Adolescence is a time of exploration and experimentation.  This makes many adolescents particularly susceptible to experimentation with heroin if available in their social circles.  Unlike adults who begin their addictions by  ingesting substances to avoid and/or cope with problems, adolescents frequently begin theirs with innocent experimentation thereby making education all the more important.  Because heroin is so highly addictive its’ use can easily “derail” teenagers from a healthy life course and interrupt their emotional and psychological growth and progress and their academic success.   One of the most detrimental consequences is the addiction itself.

Addiction to heroin leads to drug seeking which is compulsive, molecular as well as neurochemical changes in the brain, physical dependence as evidenced by increased tolerance to the drug.  Behavior changes become obvious to parents but also confusing.  Often, parents never suspect that the changes might be a result of a growing dependence on this lethal drug.  As the teenagers’ body steadily adjusts to the presence of the drug, withdrawal symptoms begin to occur if use is reduced. 

Symptoms of withdrawal that parents can notice are restlessness, complaints of muscle and joint pain, insomnia, bouts of stomach upset that include vomiting and diarrhea, goose bumps on the skin and complaining of feeling cold, and involuntary leg movements. 

What Parents Can Do
  • Read and share this article with your teenager.
  • Be alert to the above mentioned symptoms of withdrawal.
  • If your child appears impaired do not assume s/he has consumed alcohol alone.
  • Notice changes in your child’s patterns of behavior.
  • Notice if s/he is associating with a different crowd.
  • Secretiveness is often present.
  • Refusing to bring new friends home to meet you is common.
  • Notice unexplained periods away from home without legitimate explanation regarding their where-abouts.
  • Drop is school performance.
  • Cutting school.
  • School or other officials reporting to you that your child has publicly misbehaved.
  • Arrest or official reprimand for unruly behavior and/or public intoxication. 
Treatment Is Available

If your child is experimenting with heroin or other substances, it is vital that you know as soon and as early as possible and that you actively seek professional help for your child and for your entire family.  Family education and family involvement are pivotal for successful treatment. 

Remember, all addictions exist in a context.  A professional can quickly guide parents in re-evaluating and changing family dynamics thus making the presence of substance abuse harder for the teenager to maintain.  Treatment can be provided both out-patient and/or inpatient depending on the needs of your teenager and family and on the level of care that is necessary.  Therapy, detoxification, and psycho-tropic medications are available to effectively assist in a full recovery from heroin or other substance abuse.

Getting Help

The New York State, Office of  Alcohol and Substance Abuse Services (OASAS) is a wonderful resource to obtain licensed professional treatment facilities in your community and surrounding areas.

On Long Island, COPAY is a Bilingual Professional Resource

COPAY has successfully provided substance abuse treatment and education to adolescents, adults, and families for more than 30 years.  If you suspect drug abuse in your teenager, call COPAY today at 516-466-2509.  Schedule an appointment with one of our experienced professionals and discuss your concerns.  COPAY also offers a Parent/Child Screening Service whereby you can contract for two sessions with a professional to explore your concerns with your child.  In addition to the two sessions a urine toxicology evaluation will be completed that will provide clear answers and reassurance regarding substance use.  It will clearly inform you if treatment/intervention is needed. 

COPAY also provides a 12 week Educational Series for Families and Teenagers.  Here, you and your child will learn about substance abuse and why it’s best to avoid it.  You will also learn about addiction in the context of the family and who families can change their structures thus making it difficult for the addiction to contine.

In addition to these services, COPAY offers intensive, medically managed,  out-patient treatment for addiction to drugs and alcohol as well as treatment for co-existing mental health problems.   All calls to COPAY are strictly confidential.

Call COPAY today at 516-466-2509. We are here to assist you. 

COPAY is proud to be supported by the Great Neck UCF, Greentree Foundation, United Way of LI, Hispanic Federation, LI Fund for Women and Girls, March of Dimes, GNMCCCP, Levitt Foundation, The Horace and Amy Hagedorn Fund at LICF, Act for Youth, Manhasset Community Fund, and the National Tennis Association.

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Healthy Parenting Tip Sheet – Teaching Kids Patience

Introduction
General Tips for Parents on Teaching Patience to Children
Teaching Patience to Little Ones
Teaching Patience to Older Kids and Adolescents
Special Considerations for Adolescents
Introduction

Patience is a virtue that can be instilled in children. Patience teaches children the value of delaying gratification, a skill necessary for maturity. Patience can help develop the ability to think through and resolve problems; it can counteract impulsivity and acting out behaviors. The value of patience lies in its ability to lead to inner calm and emotional strength of character. Teaching patience by example helps children learn resilience, self-containment, and the ability to self-soothe. These are qualities needed for emotional maturity.

General Tips for Parents on Teaching Patience to Children

Teach by modeling. Refrain from snapping impatiently at your children. Use “no-shaming” techniques to help your child understand that she or he may need to wait or take some time before a need is addressed or request is fulfilled.

Take time to look at the child and listen carefully when she is talking to you. Giving your attention even when you are distracted or busy shows the quality of patience more clearly than words can explain it.

When the kids are demanding you to do something right away refrain from yelling at them to “stop,” or “be quiet,” (or worse.) Instead, explain to the children the reasons you may not be able to fulfill their requests immediately. Match your explanations to the child’s age and level of maturity. Offer the child something to do in the interim, and be sure to return to tending to the child’s request when you say you will. Having your attention at the end of a period when the child must be patient will be rewarding and tend to reinforce the patient behavior.

Work with your kids to resolve problems when they are frustrated with trying to deal with something. Help to trouble shoot and think things through together. This will demonstrate patience by example. If you both get frustrated, suggest taking a breather, when you both get away from the problem for a few minutes. Then come back together to deal with it.

Practice relaxation techniques that prepare you for patience when your children are trying yours. Teach relaxation skills to the children. Little kids love to daydream. You can try a few minutes of quiet time with them to train them to use this as a patience technique.

Teaching Patience to Little Ones

Little ones are impatient by nature. They have short attention spans. This is natural. One way to teach patience to kids is by distracting them for short periods of time, if they are demanding attention. Be sure to come back when you say you will. Your return to attending to them will reinforce the patient behavior.

When my daughter was young she was impatient at bedtime and wanted me to sit with her. Because of my own responsibilities I could not do this. To help increase her ability to be patient, I would come back to check on her every 10 minutes or so until she fell asleep. Often she would be asleep on the first check in.

Stories can help little ones be patient. You can use their dolls or stuffed animals, or toy soldiers to make up storylines about patience. This type of teaching by example can be very effective.

Some parents use the television to keep a child quiet. This may be effective to get the child to leave you alone, but does not instill the true quality of patience. This virtue comes from inside out and not from outside in.

Instill self-esteem in little kids with honest feedback as opposed to empty praise for positive behaviors. The better the kids feel about themselves the more able they will be to hold themselves together with authentic patience when the situation requires.

Teaching Patience to Older Kids and Adolescents

This task will be easier when you have started them young. Many of the same ideas apply such as giving your patient attention and helping children to delay gratification for increasing periods of time, but not extending frustration beyond what is safe or healthy, assuming safety needs are met in general.

As children get older you can explain in words what it means to be patient. However, if you are not patient, that is what they will learn. Your words will carry very little meaning if you are irritable and snappish.

When little Emily lost her favorite stuffed rabbit she was painfully impatient for it to be found. Her mother knew it was in the house, but efforts of all family members had failed to find the bunny. Emily was inconsolable at first, and had trouble falling asleep. Her mother sat with her and normalized her impatience. “It is understandable that you would be impatient because you love to sleep with your bunny. I know your bunny is somewhere here and she will be found. For tonight, let’s find another stuffed animal to be your special friend and we will keep looking for bunny.” This required patience from Emily’s mother. As mother exhibited her own patience with Emily’s distress, Emily calmed down. Eventually the bunny was found.

But when little Julia lost her stuffed squirrel in the woods, it could not be found. Mother had to help her get through her loss, patiently explaining that these things happen to everyone. Mother had to hold the patience for her child until Julia was able to attach to another animal. When that happened, it was time to buy another squirrel.

Special Considerations for Adolescents

If good teaching/modeling has taken place in childhood, adolescents will have some ability to hold themselves together during stressful or difficult situations. Adolescents require a lot of patience while they go through the initial stage of figuring out who they are.

When young Jane was about 15, her frustration tolerance was limited. With a wrong look or word from her parents, she would beat a path to her room, slam the door and rant. Her parents refrained from following her to her room and assailing her character. Each time they patiently waited for her to emerge. Eventually the emerging time became shorter. Eventually, Jane was able stay present and to talk to her parents about her frustration, rather than to run. Her parents’ patient waiting for her each time, and patiently being available to talk rather than telling her what a rotten kid she was, allowed Jane to learn to be patient with herself.

However, when an adolescent is acting out with extreme anger or irritability, or self-destructive behaviors that do not abate, the parent may want to consider the function of the behavior. Is this evidence that there is inherent immaturity and the parent may need to address this with the child? Or might there be some deeper root cause? Remember that professional social workers are equipped to help in situations where chronic and extreme impatience is indicative of a deeper issue. The parent’s patience in dealing with the child’s problems will teach the child the value of patience although the parent may not see that result for some time.

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Healthy Parenting Tip Sheet – Teaching Kids Honesty

Introduction
Tips for Parents
Teaching Honesty by Example
A No Shaming Policy
Examples for All Ages
Special Consideration for Adolescents
Introduction

Honesty is a virtue and it can be taught to children. Teaching the value of honesty to children is part of the development of moral and emotional strength. The quality of honesty helps to develop character and solid self-esteem.  Here is what parents need to know about teaching honesty. 

Tips for Parents

Lessons about honesty are learned differentially, depending on the child’s age. If you start the teaching of honesty early on, you can continue to support this virtue, as your children get older.

Explain to your child what honesty means at his/her developmental level. Use words that they can understand at their ages.

Teaching Honesty By Example

Teaching honesty by example is very effective. “Do-as-I-do” is a better motto than the proverbial, “Do-as-I-say, not-as-I-do.” Be honest with children at a level that they can understand. When deciding what to tell a child about a given situation, take into account the child’s age and maturity, and to what extent it is in the child’s best interest to know whatever it is you are considering telling him. Talking about personal adult issues with a child does not necessarily teach honesty, but may raise anxiety levels instead.

Teaching by example means that you conduct your own personal and business affairs in an honest and ethical manner. By doing so you will be demonstrating the self-respect that accompanies ethical behavior.

A “No-Shaming” Policy

Use a no-shaming policy when children mess up. Children will be more likely to revert to dishonest behaviors if they fear being shamed. Approval is a strong motivator. Non shaming disapproval can help to teach, but shame dissolves strength of character, and tends to elicit the behaviors you want to extinguish.

Respond rather than overreact when children lie or dissemble. It is natural for children to test. Your response will teach them to be honest, or to hide. Do not demand (or expect) perfection. Keep consequences for transgressions equal to the “crime,” and always as consistent as possible. Short consequences work best.

If dishonesty has become chronic at any age, consider the underlying root causes. The child may be acting out something that is troubling him. Seek help from a professional if appropriate. Social workers are trained to help in these situations.

Examples for All Ages

Teaching Honesty to Little Ones

A good way to teach moral development to small children is to use stories. You might look for books with stories about honesty or make one up.

One idea is to create a little character that can become an alter ego for your child. I have used a rabbit named “Bumpy the Bunny.” Bumpy gets into all sorts of problems, some are caused by his/her not being honest.

Stories can demonstrate consequences for not being honest in a way that will grab the child’s interest and keep the story line close enough for the child to identify, and far enough removed to keep shame at bay. This is an effective method for helping a child to process an incident of dishonesty he or she has actually experienced. Depending on your “plotline” of the moment, you can ask questions such as:

  • “What could Bumpy the Bunny have done instead?”
  • “What do you think Bumpy felt when the other bunnies lied?”
  • “Do you think Bumpy felt good about herself when she lied to her mother?”

Teaching Honesty to Kids from Very Young Through Adolescence

Using words that the child can understand, explain what honesty means in your family. Then continue to remind the child:

  • “This is the way we do things in our family.”
  • “We tell the truth.”
  • “We do not take what is not ours.”
  • “If we have done something dishonest, we own up to it.”
  • “We tell the truth even when it is hard to do.”
  • “When you tell the truth people will respect you, and you will feel better about yourself.”
  • “I might not like what you have to tell me, and there might be a consequence, but I will respect you for telling the truth.”

For example, little Emily, 5 years old, wanted to use the special hand-wipes that her mother had put in a basket. She wanted a lot of them. Her mother noticed that Emily had her hand under her t-shirt and had a sheepish look on her face. “What are you doing, Em’?” Mother asked.

“Nothing.”

“Em’ please let me see what you have.” Mother gently removes the hand-wipes from under the t-shirt. “Emily, you do not have to take these when I am not looking. You can tell me if you want to use these. I may allow you to have only one at a time, but in our family we do not take things without asking permission. That is part of being honest.”

If an older child does something like this, it is worth considering a simple consequence such as putting the hand-wipes back and organizing the basket. Refrain from attacking the child’s character. The parent might also consider what might be the function of the dishonest behavior. One such possibility would be to act out something that is bothering the child.

Special Considerations for Adolescents

All kids test. Teens test and try your patience. They sneak out, sneak cigarettes, hang with the wrong crowd, experiment with drugs and alcohol and engage in many other ingenious behaviors that might make the parent think all the lessons on honesty (and every other virtue) have been lost.

The key advice is not to “freak out.” Keep your concern in perspective and refrain from shaming. Have well thought out consequences that the child is aware of and adhere to them. Predictability and consistency will help instill the values you want to impart. Follow through is very important. If dishonesty and acting out become chronic, seek professional help, as this may be indicative of a deeper problem that needs to be addressed.

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Healthy Parenting Tip Sheet – Moms Thrive in Connection: Establishing and Maintaining Friendships

Introduction
Seven Tips for Establishing and Maintaining Friendships
Introduction
  • “I’m going stir crazy just home alone all day talking to a two year old!”
  • “All I do is schedule the kids and then drive them around from one activity to another!”
  • “Between my work and my kids I have no energy and no me time!”
  • “My husband doesn’t come home ‘til after the kids are asleep, and he’s too tired to talk.”

These are a sampling of the many varieties of mom laments brought into my psychotherapy office on a weekly basis. Married, partnered or single, Moms are out there working hard–and often feeling alone and isolated.

Many mothers have little time in their busy lives to enjoy or establish the social relationships that could recharge their energy or keep morale from slipping into depression.

A body of evidence has recently emerged regarding the psychological benefits of social contact. It is now generally accepted that friendships can reduce the negative effects of stress and contribute to health. Since motherhood, despite its joy, is stress producing (big time!) it is vital for women to maintain friendships after having children.

The friends might be single, married, with kids, not with kids, pregnant or trying: it does not matter. The critical element is connection that feels genuine, caring and supportive. Women thrive in these friendship connections, and they need them.

However, locating and maintaining such relationships at a time when there are great demands on time and energy is a challenge. The task may be made even more difficult if the mother has moved to a new community after having children. She might have lost her established ties and have a more difficult job finding new people with whom she is compatible. Yet establishing and keeping friendships is not impossible, particularly in the age of technology.

Seven Tips for Establishing and Maintaining Friendships
  1. Believe that you deserve time with other moms, and develop the support services that will free you up to have it. Cultivate baby sitters you can trust (if budget allows.) If family is close by, muster up the confidence to ask for a little help so you can have a girls’ night out.
  2. Free up the time and energy to have friends in your life. It is important to trust how vital these connections are to your sense of well-being. If you believe that your stress will be reduced, your batteries will be recharged, and your morale will be higher, you will be more apt to make room in your life for friends.
  3. Contact women you know to form morning or afternoon playgroups. While the little ones play, the moms can talk. Some working moms might form weekend playgroups. If you live in a familiar community you might know people from pre-mom days who might want to get together. If you are new to the community you can begin by getting to know other women in your neighborhood. Take a stroll with the carriage or with the kids. Don’t be afraid to ask. You might find that you are offering some other woman just what she needs.
  4. Check local churches, community centers or counseling agencies to find groups for moms or groups for women. Some communities have family resource centers that offer a wide variety of programs for mothers, and activities for kids, separately or together. It is likely you can find the locations of these resources on line.
  5. Form or join interest groups such as garden clubs or book clubs. Joining a faith community can be a way to begin to form friendships with like-minded others who are moms or non-moms. You might choose to continue some of these contacts outside the group.
  6. Try the Internet. There are several good sites for Moms to make contact with other moms. “Cafemom” is one such site. Enjoying friendship on line is a modern way to stay in touch. It is worthwhile, but does not fully replace the refreshing value of in-person give and take. Consider asking on-line about moms in your geographic area who share similar interests. You can meet for coffee with or without kids, form groups, and develop support networks.
  7. Remember that old-fashioned method called the phone. This is still a tried and true way to share, offer support, have a cry, have a laugh, give some advice, and keep the connections alive when time is short and energy low.

Try a few of these ideas. Most importantly know how crucial friendships are for your health and happiness. You will be a more peaceful person and a better Mom.

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Family Safety Current Trends – Interpersonal Violence in the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Community

Introduction

Osvaldo Caballero, MSW, LCSW is the Supervisor for Elder Abuse at the Metropolitan Family Services in Chicago, Illinois. Throughout his social work career I has worked in violence prevention and intervention having an opportunity to see a life span of violence. He started work as an intern working with children witnesses of domestic violence, and co-created a teen dating violence prevention program for high school freshmen. Mr. Caballero has also worked with perpetrators of domestic violence for the court system.


Q. Is intrapersonal violence more of a problem in the LGBT community than in the heterosexual community?

It’s a problem in any relationship gay/straight couples, parent/child, and care-provider/dependent person, etc. The available research indicates that domestic violence occurs at the some rate in gay relationships as in heterosexual relationships. I think that in the gay community it is under reporter because not enough programs are focused on LGBT relationship violence, little advocacy and research is happening and people in abusive situations may not feel the support or confidence needed to report the incidents.

Q. How are the dynamics different, if at all? What are the catalysts?

I have worked with many forms of intrapersonal violence and strongly believe that the similarities are worth mentioning, much of the violence in our society stems from the Power and Control dynamic. Other similarities of an abusive relationship; no one deserves the abused, the abuse can be physical, emotional, sexual and/or verbal, the abuse is cyclical and may be lethal, the victims feelings of isolation, loneliness, fear, powerlessness and guilt and the difficulties and dangers of attempting to leave the relationship. Violence is a learned behavior and in our society there are many ways in which you directly or indirectly learn to use one of the many forms of violence as a way to deal with any given situation. I say this because I truly believe that violence is a choice. A choice made to gain power and/or control of a situation and/or person and anyone of us is but one choice away from becoming an abuser.

I have never worked directly with the LGBT community on this issue but I think that one of the differences is that in a same sex relationship it may be harder to determine who the primary aggressor is. I also think that in the LGBT community you would find other forms of oppression faced by both the victim and the aggressor. Realizing that the aggressor may have been a victim in another situation challenges the response of police, programs and available curriculum. Further research and more programs are needed to service same sex relationship and deal with intrapersonal violence to better understand the effects and identify the catalysts for change such as challenging gender roles, homophobia, stereotypes and heterosexism.

Q. How can social workers help? Are some abusers more likely to respond therapy and change, for example a young batter in his late teens or 20s versus someone in his or her 40s?
My work with batterer and substance abusers in the court system helped me understand that in order to change the person needs to believe that because of their behavior they are at risk of losing something. What a person risk losing may take many possible forms; a committed relationship, status in a social group, employment, their driver’s license, freedom just to name a few, so that the more commitments a person has the more likelihood for change and I believe that this would be regardless of age or sexual orientation.

I don’t recall ever working with someone in a same sex relationship, in part because not many LGBT were being arrested for domestic violence and because I have never worked in an environment which actively seeks out LGBT clients. I have been a supervisor and as such I encourage staff to keep an open mind and learn about LGBT issues so that they are prepared to ask the right questions and deal with the situation at hand. As Social Workers we should all be prepared to do the same because the people who come into our practice may not bring up being LGBT if they don’t feel safe or assumptions are made automatically. We need to challenge the heterosexist frame work from which much of our work is defined and challenge our own thoughts, beliefs and feelings about homophobia, heterosexism, gender identity and roles, stereotypes and the many other “isms” in our society.

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Youth Development Current Trends – Understanding an Adolescent Phenomenon: Teens Click With Their Cliques

Introduction
A Sense of Belonging
Conclusion
Introduction

Adolescents intuitively gravitate to cliques. Cliques are developmentally in sync with the tasks of adolescence. When these groups of tightly connected kids and young adults are founded on positive principles, they can do a lot to promote the positive emotional growth and healthy psychological development that is necessary for adequate coping in adulthood. Positively oriented cliques, based on values of caring, empathy and respect for others provide learning experiences that augment those opportunities available in the family unit during adolescence. By recognizing their own unique developmental and psychosocial needs teens can understand the reasons cliques exist, and learn to make positive decisions about the clique with which they want to click.

Earlier stages of life have to do with identifying with family of origin. In adolescence it is normative for kids to begin to individuate from the original family, identifying more closely with peers, especially those with like interests. While seeking like-minded others happens throughout the life cycle, the clique phenomenon appears to have special meaning and purpose in adolescence. Either a positive clique experience or a negative one will influence teens’ adaptation to the demands of adult life. Teens may want to be aware of the potentials for either pro-social or adverse outcomes to occur. 

A Sense of Belonging

Whether a clique is oriented around positive or negative social values and experiences, teens gain a sense of belonging, from being part of a group that is important to them. Positive self-respect and self-confidence that can empower an individual throughout his/her life can be derived from being part of a group with pro-social values. Being accepted in a clique of school intellectuals, for example, might inspire a student to reach for greater academic success. However, someone who is rejected from a pro-social clique may gravitate to a clique of outsiders. Such a clique might click around anti-social behaviors as way of expressing negative emotions. In such a case, a dysfunctional type of self-esteem can emerge. Even more problematic, this type of clique may re-form into a gang with more significant negative social implications, such as scape-goating, and verbal and emotional abuse of insiders and/or outsiders.

Often a clique serves an auxiliary function to the family for social and emotional development. Experiencing peer group social dynamics can play a role in the adolescents’ success in later adult settings, such as nuclear family units and work environments. In their cliques teens can learn to understand current culture, gain experience in peer interactions (including resolving conflict). In addition adolescents may derive a type of understanding and emotional support that may not be available from parents, who are overly stressed or (in the teenager’s perception) out of touch with what is important to them, (i.e. what is “cool”). When pro-social norms underlie the value system of the clique, the tight knit nature of the groups may help guide moral development.

There exists risk when teens connect in groups of socially maladapted or emotionally disturbed individuals who may have been rejected from more positively oriented cliques. Such “outsider” networks may overly control members, or form rigid connections around socially unacceptable behaviors, including violence.

Conclusion

Whether positive or negative, cliques provide certain functions for their members that are developmentally in phase. They aid in creation of self-confidence, self-esteem, and self-respect that comes from feeling accepted, valued and recognized as a worthwhile part of a group. The acceptance by peers has the potential to facilitate moral and pro-social development that is necessary for success in adult life.

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