Boundaries with Kids Quotes
Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
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Henry Cloud4,663 ratings, 4.31 average rating, 461 reviews
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Boundaries with Kids Quotes
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“The wise parent lets the child’s world teach him the lessons of life and then empathizes with his pain. Then he learns to respect the outside world’s limits as well as his parents”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“Begin with the end in mind,” says Stephen Covey in his best-selling book The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. Beginning with the end in mind is a trait of people who do well. It is also a trait of people who parent well. When we understand that a major goal of parents is to develop a person of good character, we have gotten closer to that goal.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“Is your home a retreat from responsibility, or a place of movement and growth?”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“Encourage your child to think for himself, disagree, and talk about his feelings while accepting your authority.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“Children raised with good boundaries learn that they are not only responsible for their lives, but also free to live their lives any way they choose, as long as they take responsibility for their choices. For the responsible adult, the sky is the limit.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“With reactive boundaries, you fight the friend who constantly bugs you. With proactive boundaries, you decide you don’t need that kind of a friend.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“1. Whose problem is this?
2. What can I do to help him experience the problem?
3. What am I doing to keep him from experiencing the problem?”
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
2. What can I do to help him experience the problem?
3. What am I doing to keep him from experiencing the problem?”
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
“Remember that parenting is a temporary job, not an identity. Kids with parents who have a life learn both hat they aren't the center of the universe and that they can be free to pursue their own dreams.”
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
“Mature, healthy people need other people; they don't isolate themselves...Needing love isn't being immature. Rather, it gives us the energy we need to go out and slay our dragons.”
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
“Be careful not to give your child the impression that you love her perfect, performing parts more than you do her mediocre, stumbling parts.”
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
“A boundary is a "property line" that defines a person; it defines where one person ends and someone else begins.”
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
“Other children communicate with actions, such as tantrums, yelling, name-calling, and running away. The trick is to disallow this form of expression and encourage verbal communication. “I want to know what you are feeling, but I want to hear you tell me instead of show me.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“A child needs to internalize a model of someone who has a life of her own. The parent whose life is centered around her children is influencing them to think that life is about either becoming a parent or being forever served by a parent. Let your child know you have interests and relationships that don’t involve her. Take trips without her. Show her that you take active responsibility in meeting your own needs and solving your own problems.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“If a person’s character makeup determines his future, then child rearing is primarily about helping children to develop character that will take them through life safely, securely, productively, and joyfully.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“It's hard to give up playing God when you've been doing it a long time.”
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
“Our kids aren’t an annuity for our retirement, social system, or medical frailty.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“strict. But the real issue is this: Is what you are doing being done on purpose? Or are you doing it from reasons that you do not think about, such as your own personality, childhood, need of the moment, or fears? Remember, parenting has to do with more than the present. You are preparing your child for the future. A person’s character is one’s destiny”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“In fact, to the extent that you can be separate from someone is the extent to which you can truly love him or her.”
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
“Children hide from relational consequences more than the known logical consequences of their behavior.”
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
“When you are a parent, you help create a child's future.”
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
― Boundaries with Kids: How Healthy Choices Grow Healthy Children
“Safe people will help you help your child.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“God designed the universe according to his nature, life works better when we do it his way. When we are caring, responsible, and attuned to him, we have a better prospect of a good life. Reality is on your side. It is constructed so that immaturity causes your child some discomfort; ownership should bring some measure of satisfaction and fulfillment. Allow your child to experience both realities so as to learn boundaries: “Diligent hands will rule, but laziness ends in slave labor” (Proverbs 12:24).”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“Direct communication is the best way to go through life. But many people do not deal with others in that fashion. Instead, they practice avoidance (ignoring the person or the problem) or triangulation (bringing in a third person) or overlooking.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“This is a perfect picture of what you want to develop in the soul of your child: a desire to do the right things and to avoid the wrong ones because of empathic concern for others and because of a healthy respect for the demands of God’s reality.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“Parents get into trouble when they don’t empathize with their child’s pain. They either overidentify with the pain of the child and give in, or they get angry at the child’s pain and go to war. Empathy and keeping the limit is the answer for both extremes.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“Proactive boundaries go beyond problem identification to problem solving. Your child needs to know that in protesting, she has only identified the problem, not solved it. A tantrum doesn’t solve anything. She needs to use these feelings to motivate her to action, to address the issue at hand. She should think about her responses and choose the best one available.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“Frustration is a key ingredient to growth. The child who is never frustrated never develops frustration tolerance.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“We parent in the present without thinking about the future. We usually deal with the problems at hand. Making it through an afternoon without wanting to send our children to an eight-year camp in Alaska seems like a huge accomplishment! But one goal of parenting is to keep an eye on the future. We are raising our children to be responsible adults.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“Children don’t learn this from a book. Kids learn about loving and rescuing at home. When your child sees that Mom, Dad, and his siblings don’t need him to parent them, he learns that he can love others without taking responsibility for them. He can enter freely into relationships knowing that he can obey the Law of Empathy but can also say no to those things that aren’t good for him or are someone else’s burden. Let him skin his knee and get up and get the Band-Aids without your rushing over to coddle him. Let him observe you having a bad day, but know that you’ll take care of yourself. As you help your child learn the difference between loving and rescuing, he will also be learning how to pick kids who don’t need someone to take on their problems: kids of good character, kids to whom your child can say no without fear of losing the connection.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
“child wearing you down, it might mean a couple of things. First, you may be in a state of deprivation, either because you are isolated from supportive relationships or you lack time to yourself. We can’t keep boundaries in a vacuum. Get into regular, helpful relationships, or arrange for some time to yourself to fill up your tank. Remember that parenting is a temporary job, not an identity. Kids with parents who have a life learn both that they aren’t the center of the universe and that they can be free to pursue their own dreams.”
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
― Boundaries with Kids: When to Say Yes, How to Say No
