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MAGAZINE
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Seven
Steps to Better Negotiation With Your Child

You walk in and find your child
playing computer games instead of cleaning his room. You asked him
an hour ago to clean it. In frustration, you blow up, yelling at
him to get his room cleaned up or "else." He scrambles around picking
up dirty clothes and toys. You stomp off. There has got to be a
better way, you think to yourself. Fortunately, there is a better
way.
Yelling often gets opposite results
and results in a lose/lose situation. Even if you win (get him to
clean his room), you lose (feel horrible for yelling). Instead parents
can try using negotiation. While, it is not a perfect tool, it will
increase the cooperation desired from your child.
Negotiation is a tool that allows
parents and children to make a win/win agreement. It is a learned
skill and no child, that I know, is born with it. It must be modeled
and reinforced by parents. But, because most parents, that I know,
were children at one time or another, they were not born with it
either.
Therefore, here are several steps
for parents to teach negotiation to your child:
Step 1: Know what is negotiable
and not negotiable ahead of time. If cleaning his room after
dinner is not an acceptable time because company is coming and you
need the room picked up now, state firmly but gently, why it is
not acceptable to wait. If it is an acceptable time to do the chores,
then be flexible and make sure you are both clear on what "after
dinner" really means.
Step 2: Be open-minded.
Be willing to listen and consider the other person's viewpoint.
Stephen Covey, in his book the "Seven Habits of Highly Effective
People," suggests that you seek first to understand the other person
before you ask to be understood. If your child appears grumpy and
depressed take a moment to find out why. Yelling will only increase
the grumps and depression, backfiring on you in moments of revenge
or decreased cooperation later.
Step 3: Set a time limit.
Keep the negotiation time short to prevent the discussion from getting
off track. Most negotiation ends up in the blame game where there
are no winners, only losers. Keep things on the specific topic and
not on what happened yesterday, last month, or years ago. If you
do get off track, simply steer yourself back on the right path by
stating, "Let's get back to the issue of when you are to clean your
room."
Step 4: Keep it private.
Don't embarrass your child by negotiating in front of his friends.
He will be more likely to react negatively if he thinks others are
watching. Ask to talk to him in a private room or ask for the friend
to go home.
Step 5: Stay calm and cool.
Don't try to negotiate when feeling you are over heated, tired,
or preoccupied with a hundred other things. If the situation gets
too hot, suggest taking a few minutes to cool off and then resume
the negotiation. Set this up as a ground rule before negotiating
if you think a heated discussion is likely.
Step 6: Acknowledge
the others' point of view. Even if your child is totally off
base, acknowledge his feelings about the chores. Those feelings
belong to him and are valid to him even if they are not to you.
One way to do this is to say, "I can see how you could feel the
way you do given your bad day at school." You never said it was
true, just bad for him.
Step 7: Restate the
final solution once it is reached. Most failures to cooperate
after a negotiation is due to a misunderstanding about what EXACTLY
were agreed upon. Write it in contract form if that seems necessary.
Of course, negotiation may not be enough. Your child may still not
pick up his room. If that happens set firm consequences for failure
to cooperate. Remind him of the negotiation and, in the future,
write everything down so there is no dispute on the agreement. When
he fails to comply, point to the contract and state the consequence.
This takes parents out of the uncomfortable judge and jury role.
Most often, children will be testing
parents to see if they mean what they say as parents have failed
to follow through themselves, in the past.
Source:
Ron Huxley is a family therapist, author, speaker, and father of
four! His ParentingToolbox.com website offers parents power tools
for building a happier, healthier home. Get more info at www.parentingtoolbox.com
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