Set Personality-Appropriate Expectations for Your Child
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Set "Personality-Appropriate" Expectations for Your Child
When you're trying to set reasonable personal expectations for your child, it's also helpful to think about their temperamental style. Temperament is the way a person approaches the world. Temperament is inborn. It's considered the “how” of behavior rather than the “why” or the “what.” The “temperament trackers” use 10 characteristics to analyze a person's emotional style, and to assess how well they adapt to situations. The 10 characteristics are:
- Adaptability: “We're going where? Cool!” or, “This wasn't on the itinerary!”
- Energy level: “Wowie zowie, let's go!” or, draggin' a loaded wagon.
- Environmental sensitivity: Eagle-eyed nature-lover, or, “Ooh! I broke a nail!”
- First reaction: Deep-end pool diver, or, inch by tiny inch.
- Intensity: Roller-coaster emotions! or, “Whatever.”
- Mood: Here's Eeyore and Pollyanna again.
- Perceptiveness: “You moved the curtains an inch,” or, “You painted the house? Whoa. Didn't notice.”
- Persistence: “I think I can, I think I can,” or, “No? Okay. Onward.”
- Physical sensitivity: “It's a bed of nails? That must be why I was a tad restless last night,” or, “Stop breathing so loud. I can't hear myself think!”
- Regularity: “Noon? Time for lunch. Now.” or, “Did I eat today?”
(You'll notice that intelligence, charm, or compassion aren't on this list-they're personality traits, but not temperament traits.)
Words to Parent By
Temperament is a way of analyzing a person's adaptability and emotional style. Temperament is inborn. The 10 characteristics-adaptability, energy level, environmental sensitivity, first reaction, intensity, mood, perceptiveness, persistence, physical sensitivity and regularity-all refer to the way a person approaches the world.
Behave Yourself!
It's your way or the highway-or is it? When you look at the world through your child's eyes, with his temperament and development, you'llgain understanding, empathy, and patience. There are many ways of living. Know your child's temperament-and your own.
It's All Temperament
Kids are born with temperament-you can't order it up like a Blue Plate Special (“I'll have one kid, over easy, light on the hysterics and make sure her regularity is well done.”). Some kids are generally easy-going, positive, and calm. Others are high-spirited, sensitive, or moody. Everybody has some temperament traits that can be labeled “easy” or “difficult.” Assessing your child's temperament (and your own) can help you take it less personally. “That's who Sally is,” you can say. (More on this in a moment.)
That said, your kid isn't stuck for life; she has certain temperamental tendencies, but those tendencies can be channeled: high energy into enthusiasm, sensitivity into poetry, regularity into organization.
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It's a Deadly Combo
Tales from the Parent Zone
Annie's good pal Alonza is a great, zesty kid-social, high-energy, bossy, and always covered in mud. Her mom is retiring, generally calm, and very respectful of Alonza. “She is who she is,” Saill says. “If I was to try and make her completely obedient, quiet, and timid, Alonza would spend a lot of unhappy years. It's my job to help her be the best 'Alonza' she can be. Even if I wanted to, I can't make her into somebody like me.” Saill is a wise mother, working with instead of against her daughter's temperament.
How does your child's temperament differ from your own? Two kids from the same family can have completely different temperamental traits, and both of them may be utterly different from you.
When you compare your temperamental traits with those of your child, you'll probably find some areas where you're two peas in a pod, and others where you could be aliens from different planets, you think that differently. If you have a child whose temperament is very different from yours, take solace. Nothing is wrong with your child. You are not inadequate as a parent. You simply are very different people, and there are lots of ways of being in this world.
Say you're quiet and deliberate and your son is high-energy and impulsive. Or you're highly emotional and your daughter makes ice cream seem scalding. Some combinations of kids and adults mesh better than other combinations-and it's not always tied to genetics. Understanding the differences between you and your child's temperamental approach can be a big help in figuring out your relationship, your expectations for your child, and what you can do to help him achieve success.
Temperament: Take a Positive Approach
If your house is filled with tension because of the constant fights with Augustino to get him to clean his room (“He lives like a pig!”), take a moment to reassess. He may not be as environmentally sensitive as you are. Maybe he's having trouble prioritizing tasks, and he's just not getting around to the room. Maybe try a new tactic.
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Use this worksheet to get started on the path toward improving your childs behavior. Download now Download now
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Q My three-year-old niece is always making up these stories of what happened during her day, or week. When you ask her a question, she tells the truth, its when she runs out of fun stuff to tell me that she makes up these stories. My brother is getti