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Mindful Parenting in 2009: Tips & Support

By Grace Sardonicus

    Thursday, June 4th, 2009

The following is an excerpt from Grace’s book, “Mother, How Can This Be?” Conscious Parenting for the New Age. We can all use parenting tips & support. Whether you are a single parent, a mother-to be or with grown children, we all wish we had a parenting manual to help figure out how to be a good parent. What if you were able to hear what your baby was screaming about? And you could actually give your child what they need. What a relief it would be. Read on to find out more…

3 Months Old: Getting to Know You & Me
Lila stretches, squeals and squawks, communicating her desires. So much has changed since the first weeks of life. And so fast. Her world is like nothing she knew in the womb. Lila learns to respond based on what she receives. If she feels pleasure and gets pleasant responses, she wants more and will act accordingly. Through her new discoveries of possessing a body separate from Ganga, she still maintains a core of light and love. This place is her Lila-ness. Her essence of mischievous play that will forever remain, no matter what challenges lie ahead. As she grows, a personality will emerge which is distinct from her essence. When she ignores her essence, favoring her personality, a great sense of loss will overcome her which she may bury deep inside.

Lila: “Mother, how can this be? I just want you to love me as I am. I am screaming so loud for you to pick me up. Why don’t you come to me? Is there something wrong with me? Do you love me? Did I do something wrong? I will try to be quieter so you don’t get so upset with me. I will try to do what you want, though I am not sure what that is.”

Ganga: “Lila, you have my attention. I wish I could read your mind so I could give you what you need before you scream. We are getting to know each other. I love you and want to comfort you. I want you to be happy and healthy. You are so precious. I may not be there right away. I may be in the middle of a phone call or something else. This does not mean I have left or do not love you. Please be patient. I will do my best to care for you.
You will learn so many things like how to rollover, crawl, feed yourself, find words rolling off your tongue, pulling yourself up to stand and walk after falling and bumping into hard tables and floors. You will also learn different ways to communicate, touch. And the many tastes and sounds.
The radiant, effervescent light that you were born with begins to flicker as your survival needs take precedence. Your inner light and love will always be within you. You may begin to believe that just being yourself is not enough. You will learn quickly what behaviors are necessary to get your needs met, sometimes relinquishing your true nature. It is a confusing world. But know that your inner light essence is who you are. The behaviors you will learn in order to get your needs met are not who you are. I am here for you, Lila. You are the love of my life!”

Can you relate to these struggles within yourself and relationships? Do you feel your ‘lila-ness’, that place of play and natural joy with-in?

Grace’s Book - Mother, How can this Be? is scheduled for publication in March 2010.

Grace will be offering a parenting workshop this summer, Mother, How Can This Be? Parenting with grace, compassion & inspiration. Click to find out more.

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Mindful Parenting: Long-term goals vs. Daily Interactions with Children – the Case of Chamomile Tea & Oatmeal

By Meghan McChesney Gilroy

    Friday, May 29th, 2009

Do oatmeal and chamomile tea go together? A seemingly simple question…with some complexity when it comes to mealtime with a toddler and indicative of a challenge that all of us parents have faced. Let me explain.

When it comes to the big-picture, Jamie and I have a few long-term “goals” for our children, for Bodhi (age 2): to be creative, curious about the world, authentic, caring and considerate towards others. We’d like him to be able to think and speak for himself and express his emotions freely (just to name a few). Our desire is the same for our teenager Nick (age 18). Perhaps these are qualities that many of us would like for our children, or even ourselves.

Yet when it comes to fostering these overall qualities during the moment to moment interactions that we have with our children (or ourselves), it can be a challenge to make them “match.” How can we hold our intent regarding the big picture in the midst of making decisions with a toddler or young child on dressing, sleeping, eating, or playing with others? Or on the amount of freedom and responsibility a teenager has?

Case in point: Yesterday I made Bodhi oatmeal – and chamomile tea. The oatmeal went into a bowl and the tea into a cup. I then poured some almond milk onto the oatmeal to cool it down, and also to add some flavor. I then handed Bodhi the container of cinnamon, which he would happily pour on everything if given the chance.

Bodhi plowed into his oatmeal. Then he picked up his tea and began to dump it into the oatmeal. Jamie asked him not to do this. We’ve been discouraging Bodhi from dumping his drinks out (onto tables, the floor, the bowl filled with goldfish crackers). Bodhi proceeded to dump the tea into the bowl and dig in. Jamie took the bowl away, Bodhi howled in protest. Suddenly the kitchen was filled with tension. Maybe you’ve encountered similar situations??

As I stepped back to assess my reaction, I had to question, is it a problem to pour chamomile tea into oatmeal? After all, Bodhi had just witnessed me pouring almond milk into his oatmeal. Liquid onto solid food. The oatmeal and the tea end up in the same place – his belly. And the two were presented as food that you eat together – cereal and tea, yummy. Bodhi was fully prepared to eat his concoction. And in the larger scheme of things, it shows creativity and curiosity (what do these two foods taste like together?) two of the qualities we’d like to foster.

So the real “problem” is our (the adults’) beliefs: chamomile tea and oatmeal are fine to eat at the same time out of separate dishes, but not mixed in one bowl. Isn’t our conditioning of how the world is supposed to be amazing? It affects so much – right down to our breakfast choices.

And perhaps the challenge goes a little deeper. When a teen or a toddler defies what we say, we can become irritated, feel powerless, or want to make them “face the consequence,” i.e. be punished. From my experience, this is an automatic reaction, ingrained in us from when we were children. Our desire to control our children often prevents us from being able to see the bigger picture and make our intent and our actions “match.” In order to parent with awareness, we need the ability to step back and look at our choices and the reasoning behind them from a fresh perspective.

Being mindful of how we parent certainly isn’t the easy route. Mindful Parenting involves questioning what we are doing, thinking, saying and feeling – and questioning why we make the choices we do. Conscious parenting asks us to be more creative, have more patience, and be more considerate of our children’s needs and points of view. In short, it asks us to be and do what we are wanting and asking of our children.

So after comforting Bodhi and giving him some more oatmeal, he asked for some pepper on his oatmeal. And I thought, “Why not?” Given his propensity to pour spices on food that doesn’t “match” in my mind (cinnamon on pasta?), he might just delightfully surprise me one day when he cooks us an inventive and delicious meal. Until then, I’ll be navigating how to encourage his creativity while maintaining a modicum of sanity and order in our world.

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Mindful Mothering Class via phone: Virtual Full Life Circle for Women who are also Moms Forming

By Meghan McChesney Gilroy

    Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

From Allison Arneill, Life Coach at www.blissbound.com

You are in for a REAL TREAT, because Meghan McChesney Gilroy, Master Teacher, Author and Co-Founder of Life Mastery Programs, has volunteered to lead and facilitate a Virtual Circle for Women who are also Moms via Phone!  She is a very good friend of mine from Marblehead and an amazing, wise, creative and powerful woman, mom, wife, friend, businesswoman, artist, etc.  She is a natural-born facilitator and teacher on the topic of mindful and conscious parenting, AND living a life of balance/harmony, passion and purpose while doing it. 

Please see below for the description of this group and how to join.  Because Meghan’s life is so full, and because she is a professional in the personal growth field, I highly recommended that she ask for an abundance exchange for taking on these leadership responsibilities.  Therefore, we are asking for a suggested donation (see below) which is truly the bargain of the century.

Please forward this to other women who are moms who could benefit from a group like this.

Lots of love to all,

Allison

Mindful Mothering Teleclass: a Mindful Mothering Class via Phone

Virtual Full Life Circle For Women who are also Moms – from Meghan

If you are reading this, then my guess is that your life is like mine – very FULL… full of a little one who hits the ground running before the sun is up and creative endeavors, full of balancing a beloved husband and a business (or perhaps a balancing act), full of a deep yearning for moments just for myself and for connection to other like-minded and like-hearted women who also happen to be mothers.

Can you relate? (If not, pass it on to someone in your life who might!)

If you are a woman who is also:

  • a partner, friend, daughter, sister, and/or boss/employee/making-a-go-of-it on your own/staying at home kind of momma and
  • discovering/uncovering your purpose and passion in life, then

I invite you to join me in chartering a Full Life Circle – for Women who are also Moms (And yes, I know there are days when it feels like all purpose and passion have vanished from a sleep-deprived daze).

In our supportive circle which meets via phone once/month for one hour, we explore:

  • How do we REFILL, REJUVENATE, & REJOICE our inner-most self and our dreams so that we can extend ourselves into the roles we play?
  • How can we connect to what is IMPORTANT and FULFILLING to us so we can share these qualities with those around us?
  • How can we be more MINDFUL and CONSCIOUS of what we think and feel and how we use our energy as we interact with our world?

During our calls, we:

  • Make time for silence to hear our hearts (and heads)
  • BREATHE!! Laugh, cry, cheer…
  • Are inspired to step back and look at our ourselves and our lives anew with relevant and insightful questions
  • Share our joys and challenges
  • Hold space for one another as we navigate our full lives

Our Full Life Circle is a co-creation among the participants and facilitated by Meghan McChesney Gilroy (see below). We welcome your stories, questions, challenges, ideas, and comments on how we can best support ourselves and the multi-faceted nature of our lives.

If you are interested in joining our circle, email Meghan at Meghan@lifemasteryprograms.com. Feel free to include why you’re inspired to join and/or what your current challenges are. Please pass along this invitation!

The first call is FREE. First call, Wednesday, June 24th, 8-9PM. All subsequent calls will be by donation (suggested $8-15, more if you can, less if you can’t). We also ask that you make a 6 month commitment after the first call. The commitment is primarily to ourselves – to do the best we can to make the time and space in our lives to nurture ourselves via the circle, and secondarily to each other as a vibrant community. We intend to begin in June with a minimum of 10 women.

When not groggy from a lack of sleep, Meghan McChesney Gilroy loves writing and teaching on how we can bring more awareness to ourselves, our relationships, and our parenting. Meghan shares her wisdom and passion as a Master Teacher and co-founder of www.lifemasteryprograms.com.  Check out her blog for a flavor of her humor and warmth at  http://www.lifemasteryprograms.com/author/meghan-gilroy/  

Special thanks to Allison Byers Arneill who initiated this circle. Check out her awesomeness at www.blissbound.com.

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What is Mindful Parenting? (Part 2) Being in the Moment

By Meghan McChesney Gilroy

    Sunday, May 24th, 2009

How many times has a phrase escaped from your lips as you admonish your child that sounded just like your mom or dad?

How many times have I told you to stop? If you don’t stop your bickering, I am going to stop this car. For the last time…

Just like we try to be the best parents we can with what we know, our parents and childhood authority figures did the same. What amazes me about uttering a retort that was passed down to me, doesn’t have to do with what I am saying. What surprises me most is how quickly and automatically these childhood admonishments pop out – some of which I haven’t heard or thought about in years.

The reason we can recall the reprimands that we heard as a child so instantly is because our minds were programmed by our parents, as well as society around us. Like the code of a computer, our minds were programmed with beliefs: how we think the world should operate, what is right, wrong, good, or bad; what is safe or dangerous, polite or rude. Being conditioned was a necessary part of growing up. It helped keep us out of harm’s way and explained how to make sense of navigating the world.

Yet as adults, and especially as parents, relying on the information stored in our minds does not always help us accomplish what our heart desires for ourselves and our children (Read “What is Mindful Parenting? Part 1 Tapping into Your Heart’s Desire.“) Our mind relies on what it knows from the past or can project into the future. Yet our hearts are connected to deep-seated wisdom, found within our bodies in the form of intuition and emotion (and from my experience to life force itself).   

Anytime I catch myself being caught up in my mind – it could be when I utter one of those reprimands, or when I realize I’ve hardly noticed Bodhi’s beaming smile as I’m mentally reviewing what projects I still need to get done – I challenge myself to come back to the present moment, to return to my heart. I stop and breathe. I pay attention to what is going on around me – the sound of Bodhi’s laughter, the smell of his freshly washed hair, the taste of the meal I am cooking for him, the feel of his hand tugging mine.

As I come back into my body, back into awareness, I feel myself embodying my heart’s desire: to be balanced, centered, connected, content. I become myself right now instead of some pre-programmed response from my past. I open to the infinite possibilities of this moment, this day, this child.

And I become grateful. Grateful for all the lessons my parents passed onto me, and grateful for all the wisdom I am mindfully passing on to my child. Won’t you join me in reconnecting to your heart and returning to the magical moment of now?

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What is Mindful Parenting? (Part 1) Tapping into Your Heart’s Desire

By Meghan McChesney Gilroy

    Thursday, May 14th, 2009

Like so many of us, I want to be the best parent I can be. One of the ways I do so is through being mindful of how I am parenting my son Bodhi. When I am aware of what I am thinking and feeling within myself, as well as what I am saying and doing while interacting with him, then I have the choice to create loving interactions. Being conscious also gives me the power to modify when I fall short of my intent. And like all parents, there are certainly days when I do!

Ironically, I begin being mindful by setting aside my mind and tapping into my heart. Through my spiritual practice, I have connected to what my heart desires. Our hearts don’t speak the language of words (that’s the mind’s job); they speak the language of emotion. So our heart’s desire is the prevalent emotional quality that we want present in our lives. For me, the feeling I enjoy most is a sensation of peaceful centeredness. A sense of balance and connectedness. Playfulness and contented joy.

I know from experience that I can only share this emotional energy with my world when I am able to create this feeling for myself. I can’t give what I don’t have. Of course I don’t live in this state all the time. I can be challenged by what my mind believes instead of what my heart feels. I have a long to do list that pulls my time and attention in multiple directions. And I have an active toddler who loves to stick his foot in our dog’s water dish as we are walking out the door.

Yet when I remember to make time to take care of myself so I feel balanced, then I can more fluidly create that balance around me. When I remember that my heart desires peace during a busy day, I can sink back into the moment. When I recall that I want to share my love of feeling connected with Bodhi even when he is throwing a tantrum, then I can draw on my creativity to find a solution that brings us both back into alignment with the feeling state I value.

So what emotional quality does your heart most desire for yourself? For your family? Every heart has its own song. Perhaps you already know what feeling is your top priority. If not, I suggest finding a few moments (and I know that can be a challenge!) and sit quietly. Take several deep breaths into your heart. Ask yourself, “What feeling or quality do I most yearn for in my life?”

Then listen. The answer may come as a sensation or image. Or you might hear a word bubble up into your consciousness from a voice from deep inside. Initially you may also hear what you don’t want. Do you best to be open to your heart’s response. Often our minds will immediately kick in with its list of reasons why your heart’s desire simply isn’t possible. Thank your mind and breathe back into your heart. Listen some more. Repeat as necessary.

Since I discovered my heart’s desire, I have an internal guidance system that allows me to cut through chaos and confusion – whether it’s coming at me externally from a wound-up 2-year old or from within myself in the form of not knowing “How do I deal with that?” When I ask my heart, “What would peace do?” I unearth all sorts of solutions from a space within that feels larger than myself. In this space, I am connected to my own intuition and wisdom, I am in the moment, and I am not relying solely on my mind’s preconceived ways of navigating this world. Whether I come up with an answer that solves the challenge or not, I have at least connected back to my center. And isn’t that what my heart desired in the first place?

As I mindfully parent Bodhi using both my head and my heart, I know I am modeling balance and emotional awareness. I am connecting to myself in delightful new ways and I am delighting in connecting to him anew. And I am bathing him in the emotional energy of love in action, no matter what appears in each moment.

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Mindful Parenting: In the Moment – and In the Mud

By Meghan McChesney Gilroy

    Monday, March 30th, 2009

We live in New England. With a toddler. So we can attest that yes, the long, cold winters that it is famous for are real. And there is such a malady as cabin fever. Come February, we look for any excuse to get out of the house. We pray to the gods of playdates, “Please don’t let anyone get sick. Please no long winter naps.” And yet we dread the wrestling matches that happen each time we do mobilize the troops with their required hats, mittens, snow pants, and jackets and Uggs

So when spring appears, and in this part of the world that means any part of the day that is above freezing, we can be found pushing strollers rigged with windbreakers, searching for a playground that has only a foot of mud at the bottom of the slide, and shivering in our own yards as our little ones run in circles around us in spring inspired March madness

This spring has done more than ease my winter weariness or encourage the flowers to poke their buds through the ground. I’ve reconnected to the simple joy of watching a world come out of hibernation and into creating new life. Bodhi, now almost 2, has discovered every crocus and tulip in our yard. As his legs pump furiously, zigzagging between each clump of green, he asks, “What dat Mama? What dat called?

As we discover the plants and rocks and bugs in our mud pit, for the first time in years, I chart the progress of a flower’s growth. We monitor the transition from just shoots, to tightly bound bursts of color, to “Look Bo! Today there’s a flower opening its petals.” Bodhi comically bends over to sniff the shoots, his nose a good foot from his intended target, he calls to me, “Mmmm! Good! Smell Mama!” I now schedule time each day to visit with and “pet” the patches of moss that cling to our rock walls and trees

Just like the seasons, our children grow and change before our eyes. A friend of mine who has boys in the 7-10 year old range reminisced on his now-gone days of being on all fours on the ground. Days like these give me pause to be grateful for who Bodhi is now – even when his whines or demands are more likely to drive me up a wall.

I often hear parents complaining about the stage their children are in – their toddler is too clingy, their teenager is never home. I do my best to remember on the crazy-making days that this too shall pass. And I see the opportunity in this moment in time – with my toddler I soak in every request to squirm on my lap and with my teenager, I revel in the freedom that I have to enjoy an evening with my husband while Nick is off with his friends. Mindful parenting is simply about being aware of what we are feeling, saying, and projecting emotionally to our children.

Life is amazing and ever changing. And if we take the time and the awareness to appreciate what is before us, our hearts open and burst just like those first buds of spring. I give my thanks to my boys and to spring. After all, how many of us adults have an excuse to crawl around in the mud?

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Mindful Parenting: How to Win-Win the Parent-Child Battle

By Meghan McChesney Gilroy

    Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

A friend of mine recently relayed a story about her battle with her 5 year old around having him cut his hair. For those of you who have forgotten, most little ones detest having their head sheared. In this story (which I’ve heard with minor variations from many moms and dads), the demand to cut the hair and the refusal to do so created a pissed off mom, dad, and child, not to mention a sulky Sunday. As my heart when out to her, I began contemplating the dynamic of the power struggles that often erupt between children and their parents.

When practicing Mindful Parenting (or in my own awareness practice), I love to look at situations from all points of views. It often reveals hidden insights into how to creatively resolve the challenges we face. So I began tackling this one, by stepping back from the situation at hand and looking at the world from a child’s perspective. For those of you familiar with our teachings, we also look through the lens of “everything is energy” to gain awareness on how we are using and attracting what appears in our lives whether it’s emotional energy or a challenging situation with our children. Let’s see what we can discover…

Let’s imagine what the world is like from the standpoint of a small child. In my imagination, tempered with direct observation, I see a being that is mostly absorbed in the moment and hasn’t fully developed their ability to control their impulses or think through the consequences of their actions. For those of us living with young children, it’s rather like handling a cute, but rather wild, animal.

These little creatures co-exist within the adult world of rules and timelines. For practical reasons, we control nearly every aspect of their lives: when they can come out of their rooms or when they have to go to sleep, when they must stop playing and come eat, whether they can go outside or have to stay in, when they need the dreaded haircut. We have the physical power to pick them up against their will and carry them up the stairs to bed. We have the mental power to reward and punish them through our words and actions in order to enfold them into our expectations of appropriate behavior. And we have the emotional power to shower them with love and kisses or withdraw our attention, to praise and encourage them or to criticize them sternly.

When our loveable wild critter is in the normal, necessary process of becoming conditioned on how to participate safely and successfully in the human dream, there is bound to be friction between what they desire to do (dump water on your carpet, smear food on the wall, tell a tall tale, throw a tantrum in the store, not get that haircut) and what you ask of them. In these moments, a battle of wills can quickly develop. Who is in control? The parent or the child? As a parent, we can easily become frustrated at a child’s defiance, however slight. How many times have you felt irritated at having to repeat yourself ten times? Or from having a toddler – or 5 year old – invoke the power of “no!”? As the child, without much physical power and with a limited number of mental tricks in your arsenal, you resort to your greatest tool: using emotional energy to your advantage.

For those of us with children, we know how well they can push our buttons. Children adeptly master their most effective line of defense against the onslaught of adult conditioning – gaining our attention by reading us emotionally. They quickly learn how to scan us and use it to their benefit: if they get more emotional juice from whining or stomping their feet than they do by complying, then they go for what brings them the most energy. When we engage in a power struggle with them, we usually lose. The more we try to force what we want, getting a jacket on, having the haircut, the more they push back against us. Yet when we reverse our course and withdraw sending our energy into the struggle, they realize that they are not going to get what they are hunting for – our attention and our energetic and emotional reaction. Here’s an example of how this works:

When Bodhi was about a year and half, we were eating dinner with friends and having an engaging conversation, not paying much attention to Bo. Apparently not being included was not to his liking, so he picked up his laminated dinosaur placemat and put it on his head with a big grin. Of course all the adults at the table started laughing – it was silly and charming. Bodhi responded to this positive emotion and attention and continued to put the placemat on his head. The “cuteness” wore off as he began knocking over his bowl, making a mess, and transferring the goo to his hair. Now, we were sternly telling him NOT to put the mat on his head. Of course, he had received more energy out of our laughter so he continued the hat trick.

When I saw how Bodhi was responding to our energy, I asked my husband and our friends to join me in laughing and praising Bodhi loudly every time he placed the mat back on the table. After several minutes of no reaction when the mat was on his head and lots of energy when the mat was on the table, Bodhi modified to keeping the mat where it belonged. He went for the reward where he got the most attention and energy.   

This led me to the MORE Energy system of child raising. I assigned myself the job of being more creative and more aware of how I was directing my energy (both within myself emotionally and towards Bodhi) and how Bodhi was using his energy to gain some control in his world. When I became the one who was guiding and directing our energy, I re-gained control in many situations and in the process created a supportive, nurturing environment for Bodhi, a more balanced and calm mama, and a peaceful home for all of us. Here’s some suggestions on how to get started.

  1. Invite yourself to stretch beyond your point of view. What is your child trying to communicate to you? Is it really important for your child to be doing what you want? Is there a creative compromise that will satisfy both of you? Sometimes we mindlessly insist on a rule or timeline based on how we were conditioned, on our belief about how we or our child “should” be, or on our perception of what others might think of us or our child. When we take the time to be conscious about our beliefs, we may realize that with a little more consideration what we are battling over may not be so important in the overall scheme of life.
  2. Acknowledge and allow all the emotion to flow. Take a deep breath for yourself. Find a safe way for your child to release their energy: punching a pillow, turning a shriek into an animal sound, jumping up and down, banging a drum. When you let the frustration that you or your child may be feeling to pass, it creates the space to create anew.
  3. Look for where the energy is going. Take a step back from the situation. Assess how you are directing your energy and how your child is directing their energy. Are you sending out more attention and bigger energy to want you do want your child to do or what you don’t want them to do? If you can, take it out of the realm of “positive” or “negative” energy and look for where you are sending MORE or BIGGER energy. The amount of energy the child receives is usually more important to the child than if it comes from praise or yelling – so why not go for the more pleasant of the two?
  4. Finally, send MORE BIGGER attention and energy toward the behavior you want to encourage. I find more success in gently conditioning Bodhi by being in command of the overall emotional quality I want in our lives (peace!) When I direct my energy and attention toward motivating what I do want instead of sending my energy and attention toward what he does that “annoys me” or disrupts the peace, the more I create a peaceful life for both of us.

Modifying how both you and your child direct your energy and how you correlate it to encouraging the overall emotional quality you want in your home, along with the appropriate behavior may take time. If you can’t make the shift in the moment (especially when everyone is riled up), then try again the next time you encounter a similar behavior or situation. It can also help to review what happened later on in a spare moment, or to talk it over with a friend or co-parent who’s up for finding that new, creative point of view.

Sometimes it’s also helpful to hear examples of other situations where you can apply the MORE Energy System. These examples are not meant as advice or even the “right” way to do it, but rather as inventive sparks to help you think of alternatives that will work for you and your child. And since we can all use all the help we can get, if you have an example that’s worked for you, or are stuck on finding a creative response to a challenge with your child, feel free to comment on this blog and we’ll post the responses. (And here’s the disclaimer – make sure you use your awareness about what is appropriate for your child’s age and temperament).

Here are three ways we’ve re-directed our energy with Bodhi that come to mind:

TONE OF VOICE:

Does your child ever drive you crazy with whining? Before I caught onto Bodhi’s wily ways, he would often ask for a snack or help in a demanding voice. He knew that if he asked long enough or loud enough, it would make me stop what I was doing to attend to him. Once I saw this, I began asking him to use a different (i.e. pleasant and normal) tone of voice and use his sweet words (please and thank you). I make sure I make a big deal out of his pleasant tone and very calmly and quietly discourage the grating one. Now he is beginning to self-modify and when I don’t respond to the first hysterical demand, he lowers his voice and asks sweetly and pleasantly.

KICKING OR HITTING:

Like most toddlers, Bodhi doesn’t like stopping his play to have his diaper changed. When we would lay him down on his changing table, he would often kick his feet at the person who was attempting to wrestle him into a new diaper. Now, after firmly telling him “No kicking Mama,” I warmly say, “Get all the energy out. Kick! Kick!” as his feet flail against the padded table. After 30 seconds or so, I ask him to have “calm legs” and he usually stops kicking so I can change his diaper in peace. Or, if he says he’s not ready, I allow him to kick for a few second more. After a suggestion from a friend, we’ve also started to diaper him standing up near his potty so he feels more engaged in the process.

REFUSING TO COOPERATE:

There are times when Bodhi doesn’t want to stop what he’s doing in order to get dressed to come downstairs or go out the door. If he struggles against getting ready, I stop dressing him. I remind him of our goal in terms that appeal to him – we’re going outside, we’re getting into the MiniCooper, we’re going to eat his favorite breakfast and then see a friend. Then I tell him that if he needs help getting dressed to let me know when he’s ready.

By the way, after a little time apart and some help from her husband, my friend’s child relented and now sports a very cute haircut. Parents of the world unite… with our creativity and awareness we can create loving relationships with less struggles with our little ones.

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Mindful Parenting: A Radically Simple New Way to Deal with Your Emotions

By Meghan McChesney Gilroy

    Thursday, March 5th, 2009

WHAAAAaaaaaa! We’ve all experienced it – a wailing child (perhaps your own) at the supermarket, on an airplane, or at a restaurant. Quick, what’s your first response?

a. There, there, don’t cry… it can’t be that bad.
b. What’s wrong with that child? Someone make that stop!
c. Please get me out of here.
d. Oh, poor thing…
e. How wonderful! Let all that emotion out!

So what does this situation have to do with you?

Let’s start at the beginning. Your parents, teachers, and authority figures did the best they could to teach you how to survive in this world. In the process, they shared their beliefs with you, their rules for navigating the world – including their beliefs about emotion. Of course few, if any, of us received a clearly thought-out, let alone enlightened approach to dealing with emotion.

Let’s face it, most of the people who raised us were just not that comfortable dealing with messy, loud, or big feelings (or small subtle ones either for that matter). This means that at a core level, you probably don’t have many tools for dealing with your emotions or the emotions of the people around you either. And why does this matter?

Your body is designed to perceive sensation and your mind is designed to interpret this information, creating an emotional reaction in the process. It’s what we humans do – we manufacture emotions all the time. These emotions affect all aspects of your life – your health, your wealth, your personal and business relationships. They determine whether you are feeling on top of the world with hope, happiness, and joy or in the lowest depths of despair, anger, or jealousy.

Ultimately emotions relay messages from your Integrity, letting you know when you are out of balance, signaling when you have an erroneous belief in your programmed mind, and pointing out when you are out of alignment with Life itself. In short, emotions are the key to the quality of life you experience on a daily basis. Understanding them is vital to your journey of self-discovery.

So as an adult, how do you deal with your own emotions and with the emotions of the people around you? From what I’ve been observing, most adults use one of five strategies with young children. When I investigated a little further, I noticed that most adults use these same strategies with their partners, colleagues, and other adults. From experience, I know that I once used them on myself.

The five typical strategies for dealing with emotion are:

  1. Deny: “You don’t really mean that…”
  2. Rationalize: “That must be because…”
  3. Fix: “Why don’t you try to…”
  4. Run from: “I can’t deal with this right now, I need to…”
  5. Victimize: “That’s terrible! Poor you…”

Sound familiar? Take a second to think of the last time you were emotional. Now imagine if a close friend or your partner responded to your distress with each one of the five typical strategies. How does each make you feel? Unheard? Angry? More Confused? Frustrated? Unloved? What about when you respond to yourself (within the confines of your own mind) in these ways?

I will now make the assumption that if you are reading this article, then you desire to have a loving, supportive relationship with yourself and the people around you. If the five typical strategies are not achieving this objective, then what will?

First, let’s start with a commitment. My husband, Jamie, and I made this commitment first to ourselves, then to each other, and now with our son Bodhi. Try it on for yourself:
I pledge to fully support my unique expression of all I feel and wish to do as I explore the world.

Now how do you do this on a practical basis? Here’s a radically simple idea. Instead of denying, rationalizing, fixing, running, victimizing… how about accepting your emotions? Simply allow yourself to feel them. Doesn’t this possibility allow you to breathe a little?

Since this method probably hasn’t been modeled to you, I’ll break it down a little further. When you or someone you know is experiencing emotion:

  • Listen: Listen carefully without the need to respond. Truly hear what is being “said” in your body, in your mind, or by the person who is confiding in you.
  • Acknowledge: Acknowledge that you have heard your/their problem, desires, or emotions with a simple “Hmmm… I see… Uh-huh.”
  • Describe: Describe the feeling simply. “That sounds…” For yourself, you can name how it feels in your body (i.e. My shoulders are tense) and notice what thoughts are going through your mind (i.e. I can’t believe I did that again).

Finally, after the emotion has passed through you, take the time to explore what triggered the emotion in the first place. Have awareness about the preceding thoughts in your mind. Explore whether these beliefs, stories, and agreements are part of a pattern from your past. Just observing these underlying causes of your emotional reactions will cause them to shift.

The results? We often fear that if we give ourselves permission to recognize emotions that this will just increase their intensity, get bigger, or more out of control. In reality the opposite is true. When you acknowledge and allow a feeling, you give it permission to pass through you (or another). If there is no resistance, then there is nothing to push against. What a radical idea.

So what would this world be like if we began cheering for all emotions, both within ourselves and with others? Yeah anger! Yeah sadness! Yeah for joy! Come on out! (Of course, as adults, we can also indulge in our emotions so have awareness if this is your pattern.) From what I’ve observed, when you start engaging your emotions in this innovative way, you support your body, clean your mind, and give Life an opportunity to flow through you in surprising ways. Plus, you just feel better. Try it out for yourself, your partner, or your children and get back to me with the results of your own field research.

Since the arrival of her son, Bodhi, Meghan McChesney Gilroy has been dispatched to do field research on how parents respond to emotion in young children and how this creates our response to our own emotion as adults. Bodhi, now almost two, freely shares his emotion in many ways including temper tantrums in stores – as well as in words such as “Bodhi frustrated. Bodhi very sad.” or “Bodhi happy now!” Meghan does her best to respond to all his emotion with a resounding “Horray!”

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Mindful Parenting: The Transformation of FRUSTRATION

By Meghan McChesney Gilroy

    Friday, March 7th, 2008

I love being married and being a mother. I know that this is part of my Life’s Purpose, along with being a messenger for this wisdom.

Yet at 1:30am last night, I wasn’t in love with any of these roles and I wasn’t so pleased with Life either. For the past hour, my husband Jamie had been popping in and out of bed to determine what was causing the strange, loud noises coming from next door. It was our neighbor, in her pajamas, dragging who-knows-what through her yard. Then my 10 month old, Bodhi, who has recently been sleeping through the night, started wailing.

I was groggy and unhappy to be jerked awake by all three of the offending parties – husband, neighbor, and baby. As I crawled out of bed and pulled Bodhi into my lap in our rocking chair, I was aware of a sensation racing through my body. I felt FRUSTRATION. The stillness of the night amplified it. Since I knew I’d be rocking for awhile, I placed all my attention on what I was feeling.

With the world now quiet, I was keenly aware of Life passing through me. This omnipresent energy was moving and vibrating – and then thunking against the jumble of thoughts in my mind, causing the FRUSTRATION. I suddenly had an image of a child jubilantly riding his bike, legs pumping, flying down a hill with so much momentum. A playing card vibrated against each spin of the wheel. Tick, tick, tick, tick, tick.

My mind was no different. As I heard each story whiz by – Can’t Jamie just stay in bed? She shouldn’t be out there at this time of night. Bodhi should be sleeping. - I saw that each of these opinions was a belief that crashed into the magnificence of this moment in the night, impeding Life from flowing. My idea of how everything should be was causing me to get lost in the noise inside my head and this resulted in the unpleasant FRUSTRATION inside of my body.

What is frustration? I wondered. It’s having an expectation or judgment about Life not being the way I want it to be. It’s my small “me” believing that I know the right way, the way it should be, instead of accepting the way it is. It’s seeing the world through only my lens, without consideration of others.

I took a deep breath. And another. I asked for acceptance and compassion. I sent loving energy to myself. May my heart be full of peace. Another slow, deep breath.

Was there another way to be in this moment? Swiftly I felt a shift in my point of view. I looked down at Bodhi snuggled in my lap. What has he been experiencing? He’s growing at an astonishing rate – learning to talk, crawl, walk, teethe. Ah, compassion. May his heart be full of peace. My awareness traveled to my husband. What was he experiencing when he got out of bed? A desire to protect his family? A frustration at being awoken as well? Ah… May his heart be full of peace. I continued on to my neighbor. Anyone wandering around in the middle of the night is more disturbed than I. May her heart be full of peace.

The night gently settled around me. Enveloped, I sighed, let go and sunk into the rocking motion of the chair, enjoying the warmth of Bodhi nestled into me. I relaxed not knowing how much longer I will have the opportunity to sit quietly in the darkness with a little bear cub in my arms, my husband slumbering soundly in bed, alone with my thoughts and feelings, receiving another message from Life.

Ah… That’s transformation. That’s peace within on a beautiful night.

Please feel free to comment.

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