How often are you fully and completely present when you are with your
children? One of the greatest gifts we can give to our children is to be
fully present with them. This can often be a big challenge.
When my three children were growing up, I worked full time as a
counselor, wrote books, traveled on book tours, and pursued my
passion as an artist – in addition to spending time with my husband. The
only way I could be fully present when I was with my children was to set
aside “time alone” with them. “Time alone” was daily quality time I spent
with each of my children, doing whatever they wanted to do. During this
time I did not answer the phone or deal with the many issues of running
a household. It was time set aside to be fully present with them, not even
thinking about other things.
The message you give to your children when you don’t spend quality
time being fully present is that they are not important. When answering
the phone, or getting things done, or thinking about what you have to do
tomorrow is more important than being present with your children, they
get the message that being with them and really knowing them is not
very important to you.
When I was growing up, my mother was always busy. She never had the
time to just be with me. She never wanted to know about my thoughts
and feelings, or about how things were going at school. She never had
the time to play with me or just hang out with me. While she said that she
loved me and that I was important to her, I never felt it. Words don’t cut it
when the actions don’t follow.
If it is not important to you to just be with your children – talking with
them, playing with them, taking a walk, holding them, listening to them,
sharing love with them, gazing at them with love – then they will likely
not feel loved by you. No matter how many things you buy them, or how
often you tell them you love them, if they are not important enough to
you to REALLY be with them, then it is likely they will not feel loved and
cherished by you.
Your children need your focused attention, and when they don’t get it,
they may pull for it in various ways. They may chatter on and on, trying to
keep your attention. They may act out by fighting with each other, or by
not listening to you or going into resistance regarding chores,
homework, hygiene, bedtime, and so on. For many children, even
negative attention feels better than no attention. This may create a very
negative vicious circle, in that the more they act out, the less you feeling
like being with them, but the less you are with them in a loving and
attentive way, the more they may act out.
Think about how you feel when someone gives you his or her full
attention. Doesn’t it feel wonderful? How often does someone look you
in the eyes and give you his or her full attention? How often do you feel
really listened to and heard by someone? Unfortunately, many people
are so intent on being listened to and heard that they don’t listen and
hear.
The simple act of being fully present with your children will do more for
them than you can imagine. I have many clients who were deeply
impacted by a friend or relative who really listened to them – even if it
only occurred occasionally.
You have an opportunity to give your children a great gift – being fully
present with them with your love, compassion, empathy, interest, sense
of humor, playfulness, and affection. You have the opportunity each
day, even if it is just for half an hour, to fully cherish them.
They grow up so fast. Don’t miss this opportunity each day.
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