MomTV - By VickiHoefle on February 8, 2010 - 6 Comments

Week Five: Where is your Roadmap?

vicki-hoefle-momtvA journey. Yes. That’s what parenting comes down to. A journey that lasts well beyond the 18 years our children are in our homes.

But how many of us took the time to create a Parenting Roadmap for this important and often challenging journey. The truth is, I don’t think most of us ever considered creating a roadmap for ourselves.

Without a Parenting Roadmap, parents get stuck in what I refer to as “the cul-de-sac syndrome”. The cul-de-sac syndrome is the experience of going around and around, every day, in a cycle that just doesn’t work. You know it doesn’t work and you don’t know what to do about it.

All that’s about to change as this week you begin to develop your own Personal Parenting Roadmap. As I’ve said on previous MomTV shows, this is an overview of Chapter 5 in the Parenting On Track program. But it’s enough to get you thinking.

So here is your question for the week:

If I have identified where I am starting and where it is I want to be, in a week, 3 months, 2 years or 18 years, HOW am I going to bridge the distance between?

Yes. This is going to take some thinking. Be sure to post your answers to this question. There is power in sharing experiences and insights.



6 Comments

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Lizzie
Feb 8, 2010 21:42

Oi, feeling a little shy, but I started a blog, too - I love being able to write down all the little observations (internal and external). Thanks for all the inspiration! http://moakhewsparentingontrack.blogspot.com/

Roadmap in use « Neibert Diaries
Feb 8, 2010 21:48

[...] not only did we set up these goals, but we used the Parenting On Track Roadmap philosophy to identify the steps we need to take to reach those goals.  It’s only [...]

Lizzie
Feb 8, 2010 22:23

Okay, husband’s roadmaps with our 2 year old daughter Fiora:
Starting place:
BRI: Impatient, busy
FI: obstructive? unwilling
Ending place goal:
BRI: Supportive and constructive
FI: willing contributor
GOAL: Fiora takes off boots and coat when she comes home
PLAN: Bri will let her know where he’ll be (upstairs in kitchen) once she’s got her boots and coat off (but don’t remind her anymore)…hang coat hook for Fiora (craft box?) downstairs
(note that she doesnt like being reminded once she’s gotten the hang of things…but sometimes it’s hard to tell that cutoff, because we still see her struggle with stuff like getting her boots off)

My roadmap for bedtime:
ME: Starting place: Weakness: distracted and impatient, tired
FI: Starting place: receptive, likes to help, enjoys being independent and capable, doesn’t like having choices made for her, minor tantrum every bedtime
END POINT:
ME: present, strong and centered (even if tired) - I’d say connected
FI: enjoys being part of our family rhythm, makes healthy choices
GOAL: have one peaceful bedtime
PLAN: read books about bedtime (one book is parent’s choice…if need to read it at the dinner table, can do that…or in the morning…or out loud while she’s playing)…talk more about sleepiness, about how much I value sleeping and why…ask Fiora how sleepy she is to practice her noticing it (from 1 to 10, though this is dicey, she doesn’t have a great grasp on numbers yet)…practice diffierent lullabies, let her pick one…

kookoo
Feb 8, 2010 22:43

We are working on a roadmap that leads to a more productive method of expression with an almost-6 yr old attention/power child. Currently, he primary mode of communication is complaining/drama. Seems that every day there is a new (or the same old) ache or pain. To the point where sometimes we are afraid that we might actually miss/ignore a real issue. The complaining is annoying but not that big in terms of button pushing. We can deal. We acknowledge her feelings (”I hear that your throat hurts, and I understand that you don’t feel well”), but then we move on.

The button pushing comes into play when the complaints turn into amped up drama. The drama is not necessarily tied to the complaining or our lack of response to it. It’s just that often times when she feels like she is not getting the response she wants or is feeling powerless she spins herself into hysterical fits. We’ve not overreacted (lately anyway) and then talked with her the next day, having her brainstorm on ways she can express herself the next time in a way that other people can hear and understand her. These fits do not happen that often (maybe once a month) but they are pretty intense when they do happen. They can go on for 30 minutes or more.

In general, we try to engage her with positive attention - at the dinner table we ask how her day was at school, who she played with, and what her favorite activity of the day. She often asks to help make dinner and we always find a way to involve her. She is very willing, even enthusiastic, with most of her family contributions - vacuuming, cleaning toilets, watering plants. She is even starting to ask if she can help do the laundry.

The one thing we are thinking is an issue is that she does not get as much time at home as her almost-7 year old brother. Because of school times, he gets about 2 hours more at home each day than she does. It may not be that she compares herself with him, it’s just that she is not getting the time she wants.

So we think the escalation may come from the fact that when we ignore her complaints she is getting even less of the time she wants with us. Maybe there was too much coddling in the past and we are just paying the price for it now, but something does not feel right in the way we are trying to deal with things.

We’d love to hear your thoughts/suggestions on how to build a road map to a household with more productive communication.

Vicki
Feb 9, 2010 9:48

Okay Ladies - Seriously - You ROCK! You got that? You rock. You are amazing. Lizzie, your blog - come on - amazing. Just amazing. Can NOT believe you didn’t share before now. It’s amazing. Send pictures girl. I wanna see all of you, including the pups.

Kristin - you hit your stride. I could feel it in your post about the Roadmap. You’ve got the rhythm. It’s like a wave, a song, a dance. It’s life itself. This rhythm you tap into that carries you along, blissfully. It’s yours now. It is yours to claim. Will you get out of rhythm - OH YEAH - but it will never matter again, because you KNOW it now. Regrouping will be easy. Can you IMAGINE your life in a few years with these kids. My God! It is just tooooo good.

Koo Koo, you get your own replay so stay tuned. Good stuff. Thank you so much for sharing, for sticking with this. It will so pay off over the years. So exciting. Thank you all for taking a chance with this program. Now lets tell the world. Such happy babies we will have.

Vicki
Feb 9, 2010 10:22

Koo - Nice insights. I think the fact that the outbursts only happen on occasion is to be expected with any child who is present on the planet. The world demands a lot from kids these days. There are high expectations that can cause real distress is kids. It sounds like you have created a lovely balance in your home.

I think your observation about the time might be right on the money. See if you can weave that insight into a conversation and ask your daughter if she would like to set up “special time”. That’s a time where you both pick something to do together alone. Not the normal stuff that you would do anyway, but something just slightly different. Like painting toe nails, or taking a slow walk through the neighborhood, or making cookies for a neighbor. Something that is more about connection than the real activity.

Over the next 4 weeks I will be talking about communication and building more solid relationships with kids. No matter how well we get along, it is always a good idea to know what skills are available to us as parents. This week, create that roadmap, get really clear about where you are and where you want to be. Use all the tools you have today and then we will begin filling in the “distance between” over the next few weeks.

Thanks for taking the time to share your experience with us. It is so appreciated.

Vicki

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