10 Good Parenting Tips to Help your Children Blossom

While it is true that there is no single definition or correct method of raising children, a few parenting tips could go a long way in ensuring the happiness of your child. Let’s take a look at 10 good parenting tips.

Tip #1: Recognize The Privilege
It is a privilege that this child – this bundle of joy – has come through you and arrived in your house. Children are not your property; they do not belong to you. Just see how to enjoy, nurture, and support them. Don’t try to make them an investment for your future

Tip #2: Let Them Be
Let them become whatever they have to become. Don’t try to mold them according to your understanding of life. Your child need not do what you did in your life. Your child should do something that you did not even dare to think in your life. Only then will the world progress.

Tip #3: Give Them ‘True’ Love
People misunderstand that loving their children is to cater to whatever they ask for. If you get them everything they ask for, it is stupidity, isn’t it? When you love, you can do just whatever is needed. When you truly love someone, you are willing to be unpopular and still do what is best for them.

Tip #4: Don’t Rush Them Into Growing Up
It is very important a child remains a child; there is no hurry to make him into an adult because you can’t reverse it later. When he is a child and he behaves like a child, it’s wonderful. When he becomes an adult and behaves like a child, that’s bad. There is no hurry for a child to become an adult.

Tip #5: Make It A Time To Learn, Not To Teach
What do you know about life to teach your children? A few survival tricks are the only things you can teach. Please compare yourself with your child and see who is capable of more joy? Your child, isn’t it? If he knows more joy than you, who is better, qualified to be a consultant about life, you or him?
When a child comes, it’s time to learn, not teach. When a child comes, unknowingly you laugh, play, sing, crawl under the sofa, and do all those things that you had forgotten to do. So it is time to learn about life.

Tip #6: Nurture Their Natural Spirituality
Children are very close to a spiritual possibility if only they are not meddled with.
Generally, the parents, teachers, society, television – somebody or the other meddles with them too much.
Create an atmosphere where this meddling is minimized and a child is encouraged to grow into his intelligence rather than into your identity of religion.
The child will become naturally spiritual without even knowing the word spirituality.

Tip #7: Provide A Supportive And Loving Atmosphere
If you set an example of fear and anxiety, how can you expect your children to live in joy? They will also learn the same thing. The best thing you can do is to create a joyous and loving atmosphere.

Tip #8: Maintain A Friendly Relationship
Stop imposing yourself on the child and create a strong friendship rather than being a boss. Don’t sit on a pedestal and tell the child what she should do. Place yourself below the child so that it’s easy for them to talk to you.

Tip #9: Avoid Seeking Respect
Love is what you seek with your children, isn’t it? But many parents say, “You must respect me.” Except that you came a few years early, are bigger in body, and you know a few survival tricks, in what way are you a better life than him?

Tip #10: Make Yourself Truly Attractive
A child is influenced by so many things – the TV, neighbors, teachers, school, and a million other things. He will go the way of whatever he finds most attractive.
As a parent, you have to make yourself in a way that the most attractive thing he finds is to be with the parents. If you are a joyous, intelligent, and wonderful person, he won’t seek company anywhere else. For anything, he will come and ask you.

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Watch This Video To Learn What are the 4 Reasons I Can’t Wait For My Kid to Turn 4 🙂

4 Reasons I Can’t Wait For My Kid to Turn 4

In a few short days, my youngest child turns 4. While
this milestone might not be as typically celebrated as, say, a kid’s first
birthday (or even their second), in my mind, it should be.
The reason is simple: 4-year-olds have officially
graduated from being a toddler, and as most mums know, the toddler years are
soul-crushing. Two has a reputation for being terrible, but threenagers?
They’re even worse.
I’m not saying that my child’s fourth birthday will
magically transform him into a rationally behaving nonanimal, but the next year
is bound to be better than the last — one during which I came to accept that he
was probably the most annoying type of human on the planet. In addition to
constantly and gleefully putting himself in life-threatening situations, he
would then freak out when I tried to gently guide him back to safety. I’m happy
to report we both survived, and he’s no longer regularly running into oncoming
traffic (whew). Here are four more reasons I’m super stoked to officially have
a 4-year-old.
1. We’re officially done with potty-training.
I’m sure many of you lucky mums crossed this threshold
when your kids were 3, but my child decided to go for broke and wait until just
a few months before his fourth birthday to totally master the whole toilet
thing. It’s been a long struggle, but he’s been accident-free for almost a
month now, and I am officially done buying diapers. It’s a parenting game
changer and a truly beautiful thing.
2. He’s now able to communicate all his needs.
Better communication means fewer temper tantrums. While
he’s still melting down because I won’t let him do things like eat whipped
cream straight from the can for breakfast, at least we now both know what we’re
fighting about.
3. We’re a year away from full-day school.
Sure, actually having him in all-day kindergarten will be
pretty amazing, but for now, just knowing the days of putting both of my kids
on a bus at 7:30 a.m. and not seeing them for seven full hours are so close
might be even better. I’m savoring our time together, while being more aware
than ever of how short-lived this stage is.
4. He’s finally able to play with others without constant
supervision.

 

Now that he’s better able to communicate, he’s a way more
fun playmate for his 6-year-old sister and for his similarly aged friends. They
spend hours playing made-up games that I don’t have to be a part of, and they
only end up in tears about half the time — a much better percentage than I was
getting a year ago. Sure, it’s baby steps, but my 4-year-old is a baby no more.
And that’s pretty fantastic.
Watch This video to know 10 Parenting Tips for Preteens and Tweens