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Parenting
Resources -
Press Releases
Building
Your Child’s Self-Esteem
By Paul C. Holinger, M.D., M.P.H., author
of What
Babies Say Before They Can Talk
Self-esteem takes root or withers
depending on how you handle your child’s signals of fun—interest and
enjoyment—and validating and attending to the signals for help—distress,
anger, fear, shame, disgust, and dissmell. As parents you are the most important
people in your baby’s world. You provide your child with his first
definitions of himself. You tell him through your every word, gesture,
and action just how important he is and how he is perceived by the
outside world. Over the coming months and years, as
your child matures and becomes an adult, his self-esteem will become a
more complex web of interlocking emotions and thoughts about himself and
about how he sees and is seen by others. It’s common for growing
children and as well as adults to fluctuate between episodes of high and
low self-esteem over the course of months or years. However, a solid
foundation of self-esteem—built by appropriate responses to a child’s
signals and nurtured throughout childhood—will help most people maintain
a basically optimistic view of their lives and their future over the
course of life’s ups and downs. Your goal now, with your baby, is to
help him develop a sense of himself that is reasonably solid and stable.
As he grows, that will allow him to perceive his talents and abilities
accurately, respond to life with flexibility, and look at his goals and
capacities realistically. Of course, the real key is loving the
very essence of your child—loving and valuing the child for himself or
herself, who he or she is.
But this is often easier said than done—especially if the parents have
not been loved and valued. Yet, understanding the nine signals can be
useful here too: Much of the child’s essence is wrapped up in her
interests and enjoyments; and understanding and attending to the
negative signals can help prevent the cycles of frustration, hurt, and
anger which can so contaminate the parent-child relationship and erode
the child’s internal world.
The Foundation of Self-Esteem From the first days of your baby’s
life, you can lay the foundation for self-esteem by responding
appropriately to your child’s signals for help (distress, anger, etc.)
and fun (interest and enjoyment). Many experts believe that another
important building block of self-esteem involves a child’s experience of
competence. Competence is initially achieved as a result of the brain’s
capacity to create order out of the disorder of all the incoming
stimuli. An infant’s inherent ability to develop competence lays the
foundation for later, more sophisticated mastery of interaction with the
world and people, which in turn may produce a sense of self-esteem. One
part of this development, as a child grows, is learning that he is able
to exert control over external events. Another, as he interacts with his
environment, is learning how to adapt in a healthy way to the external
world’s social requirements and expectations.
How to Help Your Child Build Self-Esteem
Focusing Appropriate Attention on the Child.
Babies thrive when they feel they are of genuine interest to you and are
the center of your universe. They use their nine signals to express
their entire range of emotions. When a baby cries, or fusses, or coos,
she expects you to react with as much enthusiasm or distress as she does
about what is happening to her. What parents sometimes forget is that
to babies those reactions of distress are proportional to the situation.
Not being able to get a hold of a ball that rolled into a corner is
terrible! And your baby wants you to pay attention to him when he
announces it in no uncertain terms. He finds himself incapable of
righting the situation himself—no matter what he does, he’ll never be
able to reach the ball. Talk about frustration! So he asks for your help
in the only way he can—by making a scene. If that doesn’t elicit your
sympathy and attention, if you don’t respond and help your baby out of
his distress, he will begin to think that his problems don’t really
matter, how he feels doesn’t count. Instead, if you take the opportunity
to pay attention, validating and confirming his feelings and
perceptions, you will help your child become confident.
Provide Reward and Praise.
Along with paying attention, reward and praise from you are essential to
child’s self-esteem. You must never forget how much your child wants to
be like you and to be liked by you. Kids need to hear that you approve
of them and think they are wonderful. They long to see the “gleam in
your eye” that signals love and approval. You can’t assume they know how
you feel. They don’t. They need to be told, over and over and over. In
the long run, reward and praise tend to be better and healthier
motivators than fear and shame. Of course, whenever you’re dealing with
behavior, it is also important to explain to the child the pros and
cons, the reasons and rationales, for whatever issue is at stake.
Offer Protection. If a
child perceives the world as threatening or dangerous, it is almost
impossible for her to feel brave and strong, to know that she can make
her way through it successfully. But when you respond to your child’s
negative signals of distress and anger by allowing expression of the
signals and then removing the triggers, you have begun to give her the
tools to deal with the world. When it comes to feeling confident,
nothing helps a helpless baby like knowing she can depend on you to
shield her from danger and distress.
How Self-Esteem is Damaged Some parents inadvertently diminish
their children’s self-esteem by interfering with or belittling their
signals for interest and enjoyment. This triggers the automatic,
built-in response of shame, and shame erodes self-esteem. In my clinical practice, I frequently
work with families in which both the parents and children have a variety
of troubles related to a poor sense of self and self-esteem. The adults
in these families often don’t understand how feelings and emotions work.
The family ends up in a toxic situation because there is a mismatch
between the child’s expression of emotional needs and the parent’s
ability to respond appropriately. Often, then, the children fail to
develop a solid sense of self—who they are, what they like and don’t
like, a confidence in their perceptions and feelings, and so on. The
resulting tension that develops between parent and child can contribute
to the erosion of his self-esteem. The child may become angry,
defensive, intolerant, and inflexible, or withdrawn, self-destructive,
envious, and fearful. In fact, a whole variety of the less pleasing
personality traits can be directly attributed to a person’s lack of
belief in his own essential worth. Think bully. Think timid. Think
depressed, depleted, and drained. These different qualities result, in
part, from a lack of self-esteem. The results of these kinds of parenting
missteps can be heartbreaking. But the results of positive parenting are
tremendous. You and your child are able to enjoy one another’s company,
to delight in the deepening of your friendship. You gain access to the
delightfully quirky way the world looks to a child. You learn as your
baby learns. You gain confidence in your parenting skills; your
self-esteem increases. Over time, you become ever more able to allow
your child to grow into a unique, self-confident being. And because she
has a solid sense of self, she will become capable of forming fulfilling
relationships and of maintaining a healthy autonomy.
Author: Copyright ©2005 Paul C. Holinger, M.D. |
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