Sunday, September 12, 2021

Once upon a time...

Don't Get Hijacked: Take the High Road! The high road is love. The low road is fear. Choose love as often as you can. Written by: Laura Markham, Ph.D., is the author of "Peaceful Parent, Happy Kids: How To Stop Yelling and Start Connecting". "You may become flooded by feelings such as fear, sadness or rage. These intense emotions can lead you to have a knee-jerk reaction instead of thoughtful responses. When emotional reactions replace mindfulness, you're on the low road and it is very unlikely that you will be able to maintain nurturing communication and connection with your child." -- Dan Siegel You know what the high road is. When you’re feeling really good, nothing fazes you. You respond to your child’s foibles with patience, understanding, and a sense of humor. You know what the low road is, too. It’s when you’re stressed, exhausted, resentful. When you insist on being right or wringing an apology out of your child. When your fuse is so short that you feel justified in having your own little tantrum. When you're in the grip of fight or flight emotions and your child looks like the enemy. All those challenging emotions that flood us and wash us on to the low road can be traced, at core, to feelings of fear, powerlessness, grief, disappointment and disconnection from our child. Sure, we're reacting to our child's behavior. But we rage so we won't have to feel those unbearable feelings. When kids act out, they're being driven by these feelings, too, which is why connecting with them heals their emotions as well as their behavior. That doesn’t mean there aren’t reasons to get upset. It means there are far fewer reasons than we think. It means that what upsets you might make another parent smile or shrug. It means that when we're in a state of love, not much upsets us. By contrast, when we're on the low road, everything upsets us. Life is tough. Nobody takes the high road all the time. But you can find yourself on it more and more. How? 1. Practice mindfulness. You don’t have to meditate, although I highly recommend it. Just bringing awareness to your thoughts and emotions is enough to keep you from being in the grip of them. What does that mean? Notice what's happening NOW, in your body. Every time you take a deep breath and feel the sensations in your body, you're practicing mindfulness. You're pressing the pause button so you aren't just getting triggered. That gives you a choice about which road to choose. 2. Accept feelings and take loving action. What does that mean? We usually start sliding down onto the low road by tolerating behavior we don't like without taking action, so we get increasingly annoyed and finally get hijacked by our anger. The high road is accepting feelings while we take loving action. Here's the difference: "I wish she wouldn't call her sister names." - This is tolerating the behavior that goes against our values, without accepting feelings or taking action. It doesn't solve the problem because no limit is set and the child doesn't get help with the feelings that are driving her to act unkindly. It makes us resentful of our child and more prone to snap later. "Stop that name calling right this minute or you'll get punished!" - This is reaction without accepting feelings. Although a limit is set, this response escalates the problem and reinforces it, because now the child blames her sister for the punishment, is angry at your unfairness so she doesn't WANT to behave, and still gets no help with her feelings. "The rule in this house is we speak to each other with respect, and no name calling.....I hear how angry you are at your sister....Sweetie, tell me what's going on.... what's making you so angry?" - This acceptance of feelings shifts the emotions all round. Loving action sets a clear limit on behavior AND helps the child with the emotions at the root of the behavior, so she doesn't have to act on them. 3. Don't get hijacked by the low road. Those emergency feelings of fight, flight and freeze tell you you're on the low road. So when you notice that you're shaking with anger, it's NOT a sign that your child needs to be taught a lesson RIGHT NOW. It's a red warning flag telling you to STOP. Notice you're getting hijacked by your upset. Resist the urge to act on it. Breathe through it. You aren't that emotion; you are observing that emotion. It will pass. Melt that rage away by letting yourself feel the fear, sadness and disappointment under the anger. If this happens often, you need to do some homework to heal your own issues. (And who doesn't have issues?!) 4. The low road never leads to the destination you want. From the low road, our child is so clearly wrong. But the wider view from the high road shows us our child's perspective, and our compassion blooms. Let's say your child is objectively, totally, completely, off-track. That often happens to young humans with big feelings and immature brains. But your child can only join you on a better path if you're reaching out from the high road. Blame, shame, anger, and criticism never help your child become a better person. (Do they help you be a better parent?) Your heart is your compass here; getting in touch with our love always gets us back on the high road. 5. Choose the high road. Children who feel ugly inside act ugly, which is a signal that they need our help. We always have a choice. Will you join him on the low road and escalate the upset, or will you embrace him with your love so he can get back onto the high road with you? You can't live on the high road all the time, if you're human. But the more you get used to choosing it, the faster you'll notice when you're off-track. It's hard, yes, but it isn't complicated. The high road is love. The low road is fear. Choose love as often as you can. Unconditionally. Source: https://www.psychologytoday.com/ca/blog/peaceful-parents-happy-kids/201403/dont-get-hijacked-take-the-high-road

9 comments:

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    1. The 5 habit of Stephen Covey's “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People”, is: “Seek first to understand, then to be understood”. Could this imaginary letter offer such insight?



      "Dear Parent,

      This fight we are in right now. I need it. I need this fight. I can’t tell you this because I don’t have the language for it and it wouldn’t make sense anyway. But I need this fight. Badly. I need to hate you right now and I need you to survive it. I need you to survive my hating you and you hating me. I need this fight even though I hate it too. It doesn’t matter what this fight is even about: curfew, homework, laundry, my messy room, going out, staying in, leaving, not leaving, boyfriend, girlfriend, no friends, bad friends. It doesn’t matter. I need to fight you on it and I need you to fight me back.

      I desperately need you to hold the other end of the rope. To hang on tightly while I thrash on the other end—while I find the handholds and footholds in this new world I feel like I am in. I used to know who I was, who you were, who we were. But right now I don’t. Right now I am looking for my edges and I can sometimes only find them when I am pulling on you. When I push everything I used to know to its edge. Then I feel like I exist and for a minute I can breathe. I know you long for the sweeter kid that I was. I know this because I long for that kid too, and some of that longing is what is so painful for me right now.

      I need this fight and I need to see that no matter how bad or big my feelings are—they won’t destroy you or me. I need you to love me even at my worst, even when it looks like I don’t love you. I need you to love yourself and me for the both of us right now. I know it sucks to be disliked and labeled the bad guy. I feel the same way on the inside, but I need you to tolerate it and get other grownups to help you. Because I can’t right now. If you want to get all of your grown-up friends together and have a ‘surviving-your-teenager-support-group-rage-fest’ that’s fine with me. Or talk about me behind my back–I don’t care. Just don’t give up on me. Don’t give up on this fight. I need it.

      This is the fight that will teach me that my shadow is not bigger than my light. This is the fight that will teach me that bad feelings don’t mean the end of a relationship. This is the fight that will teach me how to listen to myself, even when it might disappoint others.

      And this particular fight will end. Like any storm, it will blow over. And I will forget and you will forget. And then it will come back. And I will need you to hang on to the rope again. I will need this over and over for years.

      I know there is nothing inherently satisfying in this job for you. I know I will likely never thank you for it or even acknowledge your side of it. In fact I will probably criticize you for all this hard work. It will seem like nothing you do will be enough. And yet, I am relying entirely on your ability to stay in this fight. No matter how much I argue. No matter how much I sulk. No matter how silent I get.

      Please hang on to the other end of the rope. And know that you are doing the most important job that anyone could possibly be doing for me right now.

      Sincerely,
      Your teenager"

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  2. Congratulations Bernie! I know that a couple d kids in Bells Corners have been waiting for years to get more access to stories of your adventures!

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  3. Thanks. My daughters ELizabeth and Laura also wanted them published for years when they were small girls. They are no longer small girls. Elizabeth turned 20 years old yesterday (Nov. 28). Laura has her birthday on Dec. 23.

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  4. Dec 23, 2018. Happy 22nd birthday today, Laura. From Dad xx00

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  5. Bernie The Monkey issues a shout-out to Elizabeth, Laura and their Mom on Father’s Day 2019. Stay well. Stay healthy. Keep on making s difference in this world every day. Lots of love, Bernie The Monkey (“That’s OK. That’s my job”)

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  6. Happy birthday Elizabeth. From me and everyone in Rockland. You are loved... deeply loved. Keep on doing the wonderful, important work you are doing. You are using the gifts you received, including your EQ, your empathy and your artistic, creative side, to make the world a better place. That is all any of us can hope to achieve. To make the world a slightly better place for others. I love how you are using your life experience to improve the lives of others. Yesterday, I brought my mom to a surprise meeting with my Grade 7 teacher, Therese Dalrymple at Simon Morris Retirement Residence in Rockland. We talked for almost two hours. Therese Dalrymple approx 88 like my mom (your grandmother). I visit her and love to re-connect with her. Above her blackboard in Grade 7, she had written: "Fait bien tout ce que tu fait". In other words, whether you are a pauper or a king, do well whatever you do". After that, I took a box of donated WWII material to Mr. Levesque at the Rockland Museum. He is the uncle of my best friend in high school, Luc Pilon ("Bouchon"). We were known as Mutt and Jeff at Rockland H.S. (L'Escale) in the late 1070s. Though Luc is no longer with us, his spirit lives on. Then my brother Peter brought his son Noah (future NHLer) to Rockland. Noah and I played croquet on the frozen ground (he won both matches), and then played crokinole. After that, mom, mike, noah and I watched the South Korean film Parasite. Then Noah's sister Kiara came by for supper. We had a great time. I still love kids... guess I am still a kid at heart. we had a couple of facetime calls via the TV. With Emma Williams (your aunt) in Australia, and with your aunt Jane. Jane and Marc have moved to a new condo in Ottawa South. Today is your birthday. I will never forget your birth in 1994 in Tsuyama Japan. It was an unforgettable experience for us... and a pretty important one for you too. Ha! Ha! Your beauty, your kindness, your gentle way with others, your empathy and sense of caring, your ability to put yourself in the shoes of others and walk with them, those are some of your true strengths, Eli. I think of you daily and trust you are doing well. My regards to you, your sister and your mom. Know that life is good. Despite all the challenges our earth is facing from global warming to the newest strain of COVID, we must all do what we can to help each other out during this all-too-brief journey we call life. It goes by in the blink of an eye. One day you are carrying to little girls on your shoulders (Eli on one and L. on the other). And the next thing you know, you are caring for your 88 year old mom. Life is precious and none of us will make it out alive. So we must just do what we can to make life a bit easier for each other and to support each other. That is the purpose of this birthday message today. To let you know just how much you are loved. And to congratulate you on becoming the amazing woman you are today. Continue using your gifts and talents to light the way for others. And be thankful for the cracks and bumps along the way. As Leonard Cohen said, the cracks are how the light gets in. And the bumps are learning opportunities. So relish both. It is what I try to do too. And now I must go and prepare some breakfast for mom, and for Chester the Cat. Happy 28th birthday Elizabeth. May the coming year bring you many more opportunities to help others as you did the Ladouceur girls etc. Using the hard-won insight you have garnered to help others is the best thing you can do, IMHO. It is a gift that you have... almost a super power. I imagine you with a cape with a large E emblazoned on the front. So know that your grandfather N is watching from heaven with pride at your achievements, and that your dad is doing the same. To my amazing Elizabeth, happy birthday today (Nov. 28, 2021). XXXX0000 (insert heart with arrow here)

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  7. HAPPY 27th birthday birthday today... Eli. Math was never my strength. Your grandmother and I are having tea. She wishes you a happy birthday.

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  8. Happy 28th birthday today, Laura. May this year be the start of a lovely career for you. With love, Bernie the Monkey

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