I might edit it later. but... I just wanted to blurb on how I've noticed there is a huge lack of empathy or ability for people to see how a situation is for someone else. Is it that difficult to be empathetic? I don't understand why the first response for so many is to try to convert someone into believing that their way of living or viewing a situation is the right one. I can't understand why it's difficult to step back from oneself and say, hey, this person does NOT see things the way I do, but it does not lower my standard of living, it does not affect my life at all, so I shouldn't let it bother me. Many still get angry at people who live different lifestyles or respond to something in an alternative method. Why can't there be a respect for others and agreement to disagree?
This was brought on by a family member disagreeing with my methods and reasoning for dealing with negative behaviors. I admit I'm still stubborn and will run my point through the wall to make sure someone understands and respects my perspective, but it's only to prove that there are many ways to see a situation, no view is better than the other; they are just different. I said I ignore negative behaviors and a person said that is a wrong way to go about it. I felt a little attacked, and I wanted to spew all my knowledge of my guidance and discipline class, my three years' worth of studying and practicing certain ABA techniques in the classroom, clinic, people's homes as well as in my own life. ABA principles are basically conditioning, so it's reinforcing the behavior you want to keep, and extinguishing the behavior you want to get rid of. It's very basic rules, extremely difficult to be consistent at especially if there is an emotional barrier between the person who has the negative behavior and the person who is trying to alter the behavior. I think having the ability to work with children who are not related to me (even though I truly care for them) has enabled me to develop this necessary skill to do what is necessary despite the emotional ramifications.
Many parents become numb at the sight of their children crying. They feel like they don't want to be the bad guy, or they get so frustrated at their child for having a tantrum. Well, children need boundaries, they need consequences that make sense, and this needs to come from a parent who is calm and collected, someone who has the ability to reason with logic and not emotion. Acknowledging a child's and parent's true emotions is necessary. It's important to be honest about how we feel so when the child grows up, he or she won't end up learning to disassociate from his emotions, or not understanding what will make him happy, angry, sad, anxious... it all starts at home.
Having the ability to empathize will not make this world a weak place, I think it will make us able to understand and accept that we all make different choices in life, and there should be no fear for people who are different. Instead, we can ask questions to learn more. I have not experienced being more scared after learning something new. It's this lack of respect and this constant feeling of superiority that castes a need for offense or war against "those who are not like me." I feel more at ease and at peace with the world with each sparkle of knowledge I put in my pocket. (My partner likes to disagree with my world view, and I accept it because of his life experiences and his culture. I will not alter my beliefs because of him though.)
Positive guidance techniques
This was brought on by a family member disagreeing with my methods and reasoning for dealing with negative behaviors. I admit I'm still stubborn and will run my point through the wall to make sure someone understands and respects my perspective, but it's only to prove that there are many ways to see a situation, no view is better than the other; they are just different. I said I ignore negative behaviors and a person said that is a wrong way to go about it. I felt a little attacked, and I wanted to spew all my knowledge of my guidance and discipline class, my three years' worth of studying and practicing certain ABA techniques in the classroom, clinic, people's homes as well as in my own life. ABA principles are basically conditioning, so it's reinforcing the behavior you want to keep, and extinguishing the behavior you want to get rid of. It's very basic rules, extremely difficult to be consistent at especially if there is an emotional barrier between the person who has the negative behavior and the person who is trying to alter the behavior. I think having the ability to work with children who are not related to me (even though I truly care for them) has enabled me to develop this necessary skill to do what is necessary despite the emotional ramifications.
Many parents become numb at the sight of their children crying. They feel like they don't want to be the bad guy, or they get so frustrated at their child for having a tantrum. Well, children need boundaries, they need consequences that make sense, and this needs to come from a parent who is calm and collected, someone who has the ability to reason with logic and not emotion. Acknowledging a child's and parent's true emotions is necessary. It's important to be honest about how we feel so when the child grows up, he or she won't end up learning to disassociate from his emotions, or not understanding what will make him happy, angry, sad, anxious... it all starts at home.
Having the ability to empathize will not make this world a weak place, I think it will make us able to understand and accept that we all make different choices in life, and there should be no fear for people who are different. Instead, we can ask questions to learn more. I have not experienced being more scared after learning something new. It's this lack of respect and this constant feeling of superiority that castes a need for offense or war against "those who are not like me." I feel more at ease and at peace with the world with each sparkle of knowledge I put in my pocket. (My partner likes to disagree with my world view, and I accept it because of his life experiences and his culture. I will not alter my beliefs because of him though.)
Positive guidance techniques