News & Events

Dr. Paul Holinger’s Parenting Place Newsletter - April 2011

| Newsletter Archives

by
Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
“As soon as I could talk, I was ordered to listen.”      Cat Stevens
     
May 2011

Turning Things
Upside Down
and Inside Out


Sometimes turning things on their heads — turning things upside down — allows us to see issues differently and make important changes.  Such is the case with two areas in child development.  The question at stake involves the importance of learning about the inner world of the child. 

 First - Listen 
The first  step is captured by the quote above from Cat Stevens.  We as parents are so eager to help our children, to socialize them, to give them information, to teach them how not to make the mistakes we did.  So, often we impose our viewpoint on our children rather than listening to what is going on inside of them. 
 
Of course, there has to be give and take — we convey things to them, and they convey things to us.  But perhaps too often we forget the second part of this give and take process — we forget to listen to our children!  This is especially crucial with respect to what they are interested in. Almost nothing is more important than learning what your child is interested in.

Feelings Lead to Behaviors
There is a second area where it is useful to turn things upside down, and that involves the focus we have on behaviors.  When dealing with children, one most often hears concerns about behaviors.  Is he doing this?  Is she not doing that?  He’s coming into our bed too much.  She is marking on the walls with the crayons.  And on and on. But what leads to behaviors? — Feelings!  So we need to attend a bit more on the feelings which cause the behaviors. 

Society's Big Challenge
This is an important question for our society: how can we transform a culture from focusing on behaviors to focusing on the feelings which cause the behaviors?  

 

Go to Dr. Holinger's website for more Issues & Advice »

 Paul Holinger, M.D.

Dr. Paul C. Holinger, M.D.
A founder of the Center for Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy, Dr. Holinger is a leading expert on child development and child behavior.

He is the author of the acclaimed book What Babies Say Before They Can Talk.

Quick Parenting Tip
Feelings lead to actions. Feelings cause behaviors. Talk with your child and help her/him put their feelings into words. Self-management comes from understanding feelings.

Book of the Month
The Interpersonal World
of the Infant
by Daniel Stern

(New York: Basic Books, 1985).

Article of the Month
"Ghosts in the Nursery"
by Selma Fraiberg et al.
Journal of the American
Academy of Child Psychiatry, 
14: 387-421, 1975.

 

Recent Research

Does breast-feeding help prevent bratty behavior?
If this is so, how does it work? Neurophysiology of the mother's milk? The psychological effects of the bonding which occurs? How do the personalities of the mothers who breast feed differ from those who do not? Read more about the study by clicking here.

 

How to intervene when you see someone hitting a child

Dr. Holinger talks with Chicago 

Tribune columnist Heidi Stevens
with helpful advice on how to broach the subject with a spanking sibling-- or even another adult who is hitting a child. Read more.