Students have been practicing mindfully listening to others with their whole bodies in order to detect the underlying feelings and needs that the speaker is conveying. The best way for children to learn this social skill is for the adults in their lives to respond to them with empathy. Try asking your child how they use every part of their body to listen to others.....
Empathy: Foundation of Emotional Health
By Dr. Laura Markham AhaParenting.com
When a parent bestows the gift of empathy on a
child, that visceral connection changes everything.
I see parents and
children make breakthroughs every day. And guess what makes the most
difference? Empathy. If we can actually see things from our child's
perspective, everything changes.
This doesn't mean
agreeing with our child, or letting him do whatever he wants just because we
understand why he wants to. But it does mean that while our child doesn't get
everything she wants, she gets something better: Someone who understands and
accepts her, no matter what. It also means that once we understand our child's
perspective, we can intervene to help her meet the needs that she was trying to
meet all along, from connection to feeling valued.
Empathy is the
foundation of emotional intelligence; it’s also the foundation of effective
parenting, according to John Gottman, the author of Raising
An Emotionally Intelligent Child. Why? Because it’s essential to your ability to understand your
child and connect with her. Because it will prevent you from visiting on your
child all the issues from your own childhood. And because without it, your
child simply won’t feel loved, no matter how much you love her.
Empathy is often
defined as seeing things from the other person’s point of view. But empathy is
actually a physical event, controlled by the insula in our right brain. The
structure of the right brain is formed during the first two years of life,
before your baby becomes verbal. Scientists suspect that the right brain is the
orchestrator of intimacy. The insula connects the brain with the heart,
digestive organs, and skin.
So when our heart
leaps, or our stomach turns, or our skin crawls, the insula is sending us a
message. And when we feel deep empathy, we feel it in our bodies. That means a
more accurate definition of empathy is “feeling” from the other person’s point
of view.
Empathy strengthens
the relationship bond. Empathy helps the child to feel understood, less alone
with her pain and suffering. Empathy heals. And the experience of empathy
teaches the little one about the deepest ways that humans connect, providing
her with a launching pad for every future relationship.
How do children
develop empathy? It happens naturally, as part of healthy emotional
development, as long as children experience empathy from their caretakers.
That's why parenting with empathy is a double gift to your child: In addition
to your empathy helping him learn to manage his emotions, experiencing your
empathy will also help him to develop empathy for others. This giving of
empathy is also a gift to you, because children who feel your empathy are much
more cooperative in accepting your guidance. Translation: It makes parenting a
lot easier!
But most parents find
the idea of parenting with empathy anxiety-producing. How exactly do you “do”
it?
You already know.
Every time you say, “I know how you feel” or “Looks like you had a hard day,”
you’re being empathic. Every time you rise above your own feelings to see
things from your child’s point of view, that’s empathy.
Sounds simple, right?
Then why is empathy so powerful? Imagine empathy as a mirror that you hold up
to your child. Your acknowledgment of what he’s feeling helps him to recognize
and accept his own feelings, which is what allows them to resolve.
Humans are creatures
of passion. Emotions are constantly arising within us, influencing our moods
and actions, and then passing away. Think of the strongest emotions you’ve felt
in the past month, and then imagine how powerful your child’s emotions are,
given his inexperience and intellectual immaturity. Kids are swept with
passionate feelings many times a day. They need their parents to help them learn
to navigate this world of emotion, so that they don’t get swamped by its
intensity. Most of the time, when children (and adults) feel their emotions are
understood and accepted, the feelings lose their charge and begin to dissipate.
We don’t have to act on them, or even to like them, merely to acknowledge their
presence.
Repressed feelings, on
the other hand, don't fade away, as feelings do that have been acknowledged.
Repressed feelings are trapped and looking for a way out. Because they aren't
under conscious control, they pop out unmodulated, when a preschooler socks her
sister, or a seven year old has nightmares, or an eleven year develops a
nervous tic.
Our acceptance of his
emotions teaches our child that his emotional life is not dangerous, is not
shameful, and in fact is universal and manageable. Everyone has felt this,
there’s even a name for it! He feels understood and accepted. He learns that he
isn’t alone to cope with the crush of his powerful emotions. What Empathy Isn’t:
Permissiveness.
You can (and should)
set limits as necessary. And then acknowledge his unhappiness about those
limits. Don't be defensive. It's important to your child that you're able to
tolerate his disappointment and anger at you, and that you love him even when
he's not in touch with his love for you.
Solving the problem.
Your goal is to let
him get past his upset so that he can begin to think about solutions himself,
not to solve it for him. When he expresses his feelings about something, you'll
want to listen and acknowledge, rather than jumping in with solutions. That
means you'll have to manage your own anxiety about the issue.
Agreeing.
Accepting his feelings
and reflecting them does not mean you agree with them or endorse them. You are
showing him you understand, nothing more, and nothing less. And if you’ve ever
felt understood, you understand just how great a gift this is.
Probing.
"Tell me how you
feel" is not empathy.
Empathy is mirroring whatever she's showing you.
Trying to change the feeling or cheer the
person up.
I promise you,
empathizing with the bad feeling is the fastest way to let it dissipate.
Arguing her out of the bad feeling just pushes it under to resurface later.
After she has a chance to notice, accept, and express the feeling, she will
feel ready to move on to a change of scene and topic. And you've given her the
message that ALL of her is acceptable, including her yucky feelings.
Arguing with the feeling.
That just invalidates
him.
What Empathy Is:
Listening without the pressure to solve
anything.
Don't take it
personally. Breathe. Detach.
Acknowledging and Reflecting.
"You sure are angry at your
brother." or
"You seem worried about the field trip today."
"You seem worried about the field trip today."
Resonating.
Match your reaction
with his mood. Being a bit downcast because his team lost the soccer game
doesn't merit a reaction from you as if someone had died. Similarly,
mechanically parroting "It can be hard when your boyfriend splits up with
you" is likely to evoke hysteric rage from your teen.
"When children feel understood, their
loneliness and hurt diminish. When children are understood, their love for
their parent is deepened. A parent's sympathy serves as emotional first aid for
bruised feelings. When we genuinely acknowledge a child's plight and voice her
disappointment, she often gathers the strength to face reality." -Haim Ginott
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