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Children's Discipline: How To Resolve Divorce Parenting
Differences?
By Ruben
Francia
Did you know that inconsistency on matters of discipline
gives double messages, produces anxiety and can be very
confusing to your children? Children need to know where they
stand in their behaviors. It is therefore critical for parents
to resolve their differences in matters of children's
discipline.
Since divorce parents leave on a separate house, they often
differ in their rules and expectations for their children.
People tend to view individual differences in terms of right
and wrong. The adage holds: "If you are not with me, you are
against me." In marriage, people call it incompatibility. In
divorce, these differences sometimes resulted to expensive
litigation, each trying to force the other to change and stop
being different.
The matter of disciplining children can be the source of
conflict among divorce parents. Each parent has different ideas
as to what the appropriate discipline should be. Each viewed
the other's proposal of disciplining as wrong. The consequences
of their dispute were that there was ineffective or no
discipline at all.
To turn differences into a unified discipline, parents
should resolve the differences according to children's best
interest. They can adopt the approach as listed below:
1. Make an agreement with your former spouse on what is
realistically expected for your children. These should be based
on the children's age, their temperament, their ability to
follow directions, and the divorce structure of the family.
2. Come to some meeting of the minds on what values are
highest priorities for each and on which behaviors you both
agree are important to nurture in your children.
3. Discuss with your former spouse your preferences for
discipline to see if there is an opportunity for consistency
across households.
4. In areas where there is an opportunity for consistency
across households, make an agreement with your former spouse
that whatever approaches are agreed upon, both of you will be
consistently using the same when the children are with you.
5. Write the agreements down, review them and be sure they
are workable.
6. In areas in which you differ, find a compromise that you
both can live with and stick by it.
7. Set clear expectations for the children at each home.
Explain to the children that there are certain rules at mom's
house and certain rules at dad's house.
8. Never argue in the front of the children about
disagreements in discipline approaches.
Help your children know where they stand in their behaviors.
Get resolve your differences in matters of children's
discipline. Support each other.
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