Just Say “No.”
November 12, 2013 by Linda
Filed under Parenting From Balance©
When clarity is not mine, but everyone around me is pulling for an answer, I just say no. I make that my “go to” answer. Why? I believe that saying NO when I am not clear teaches my children to heed their inner compasses. It makes them pay attention to that feeling in their gut that tells them when something isn’t quite right. It teaches them to tune into themselves, so that later, when their peer group comes up with a crazy scheme, they will ‘check in’ with themselves, rather than go along with them on a casual “why not?”
[I am on the phone]
“Linda, can I watch a cartoon?”
“hmmmmmmm…..Kian, I am on the phone. I can’t process that right now with you, so right now I am going to say no, and when I am able to process it, I will.”
“Does that mean I can watch it later?”
“I’m sorry Kian, I can’t talk about it right now, but I promise you that as soon as I get off the phone I will.”
“But the show is going to start!”
“I’m sorry Kian, I cannot talk about it right now.”
“BUT I’M GOING TO MISS THE SHOW!”
“I know Kian. I’m sorry. I am on the phone right now and I will talk with you about this later.”
Kian YELLS
I step into a quiet room and finish my call (my son is 8 …. if I had younger children with this situation I would excuse myself from the call and make myself available to them) I return to Kian and listen to his feelings about not being able to watch the show. If he is having such deep feelings about something, the chances are there is more to it that just missing a show. And by that same token, allowing him to watch the show at that point won’t meet the deeper need.
You might question me: “why not just let him watch the show, if it means that much to him?”
I have to stay with my initial gut feeling on it. I did not feel a resounding “YES” when he asked. I didn’t even feel a “why not” — which I also count as a “no.” I ask myself whether I have had the opportunity at that point to gain clarity about the situation, or am I reacting to an emotional experience? Am I reacting from fear or imbalance, or am I responding? I think the answer is in that.
Allowing, by the way, doesn’t have anything to do with having no limits, or not stepping into a guiding role for our children. More on this later. 😉
xxx
Lots of Love,
Linda