Estapenss - March 12th, 2014

March 12th, 2014

March 12th, 2014
12:32 pm

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Brian DavisBrian Davis
family man hacker caveman explorer
Stop treating your kid like a child.

No, really. I'm serious.

Our son started talking early and one of his first tricks was to parrot what we said and how we said it. I know that it sounds cute -- and it was in the beginning -- but mostly it was maddening. We quickly realized that traditional parenting is really, reallycondescending.

Don't believe me? Try this experiment with your significant other:

  1. Give seemingly arbitrary orders without any context or reasoning ("Don't touch that.")
  2. Ignore feedback ("Do you want to go to the park? No? Well, we're going to the park anyway.")
  3. Ask rhetorical questions in a passive-aggressive fashion ("Do big boys cry?")
  4. Respond to frustration with more orders ("Stop pouting.")
  5. Deny autonomy at every opportunity ("Let me do that for you. You'll hurt yourself.")
  6. Impose arbitrary punishments ("Keep that up and I'm taking away your car keys.")

Be serious about it, just as if you were talking to a child. If, after a week of this treatment, you and your significant other haven't had a at least one bitter argument, then you are either extremely lucky or already mired in a dysfunctional relationship.

So, how do you parent a child without treating them like a child? Here are some tricks that have worked for us:

  1. Explain yourself. Kids ask "Why?" so much because they genuinely want to learn. At some point, they stop asking... and it's generally because we stop giving them real answers.

    When a child questions your instructions, it's a great opportunity to teach. When you explain the reasons and context behind a rule, you're giving the child the tools to build their own moral framework, to fill in the blanks between the rules they know and the ones they don't. This is fundamental to learning.

    Offering an explanation is also a great opportunity for your own reflection. If you don't have a good reason for a rule ("Stop making faces."), it's probably a crappy rule and you're probably taking yourself too seriously.
  2. Ask them questions. Play this game: See how long of a conversation you can have with your child by only asking questions.

    At first you'll be surprised at how much they talk. Then you'll be surprised at how beautifully complex their minds actually are. And then you'll be surprised at how rewarding it is to really get to know your own kid.

    As for the child, they will love the fact that you care enough to ask about their day, about their feelings, about their preferences, about all the trivial little things that loom large in a child's mind.

    Asking questions is the single strongest signal you can send that you're listening, that you love them, and that you care what they think.
  3. Give them options. A lot of a child's frustration stems from having no choice in anything. A lot of your frustration stems from having to make lots of tiny, trivial decisions every day that drain your mental batteries.

    Delegate some of those decisions to your child and you can solve both problems at once. Your child gets to feel like an important, contributing member of the family because they got to pick out which beans to eat tonight. You get to make one less decision. Win-win.

    This, more than any other trick, nips conflict in the bud. The child owns the decision now. They have no injustice to protest. Our son eats all his vegetables because he picks out which ones to buy.
  4. Give them space. Speaking as an American, we tend to be too controlling of our kids, denying them the right to have their own initiative and to make their own mistakes.

    A child has to fall a lot before they learn to walk. And they have to trip a lot before they learn to run. By giving them the space to trip and fall -- to experiment and to fail -- you're helping them learn faster.

    Now, that doesn't mean that you should just let your kid wander into traffic in order to learn the importance of looking both ways before crossing, but we parents tend to confuse inconvenience for danger.

    A good rule of thumb is to ask yourself this: "If my child screws this up, will it cost more than $20 to fix, hurt more than a scraped knee, or take longer than an hour to clean up?" (Adjust according to your financial/emotional/time budget.)
  5. Practice defensive parenting. Remove sources of conflict before conflict arises and both parent and child will be much happier.

    In our case, that meant moving valuables up high, getting rid of lots of sharp stuff, and plastering the bottom 3 feet of our walls with butcher paper. Our son gets to draw on the walls without... you know... ruining our walls.

    We also got duplicates of things we couldn't replace or remove. He has his own books, his own pens, his own wallet. That way he doesn't go around "borrowing" ours all the time.
  6. Ask for help. Kids want to help. By doing everything for them, we infantilize them and lull them into a state of dependency. It's great, as a parent, to feel needed, but it's also exhausting.

    Free yourself.

    Ask for help washing dishes. Ask for help cracking eggs. Ask for help moving the furniture.

    As they get older, ask for help with things that are just at or above their developmental level. It challenges them and it gives them a powerful sense of belonging.

    Remember the first time your parents let you park the car? Remember how exhilarating that felt? That's how a 3 year old feels when you ask them to help you sweep the floor.

    Give them that gift as often as you can. You'll be surprised how much they'll want to help.

That's all I can think of off the top of my head (and this is already too long). In the end, treating a kid like a person prevents a parent from needing "discipline" at all.

Punishment, deprivation, praise, criticism, distraction, and a lot of the other things people on this page have recommended don't actually do much to teach your child good behavior. More often than not, they teach children to be retributive, praise-seeking, or distracted.

Ultimately, parenting is not about control. Kids aren't irrational beasts out to deprive you of patience and silence. They're little people in need of understanding and a helping hand. And when they get what they need they're usually pretty spectacular.

It takes practice and time to change your habits, but after a couple of months you'll be amazed at how self-policing your kid is. Good luck.

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TimeEvent
03:54 pm

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The whole point of these security holes is that no-one thinks of them until someone thinks of them. 
 http://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2014/03/11/on-the-trail-of-advanced-persistent-threats/

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TimeEvent
05:39 pm

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He will be a tool while he lives and a statistic when dead. But for what it's worth, he will have this gift. In the moments of his death he will remember what he dies to protect. She may remember him, but he will never forget her.

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TimeEvent
11:05 pm

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Hey Spiceheads,

Thought that you would appreciate this...

Recently, we have been swapping out our old XP machines with new Dell PCs. We have been getting Dell 9020s (all-in-one) units. Bigger screens, newer hardware, save space - all great things!

We have been doing this for quite a few months without problems, until today...

A few moments ago - I get a call from the top of "Upper Management" who is reporting a severe IT problem. They go on to day that:

"For THREE whole weeks, an entire location has had no PCs and that their base units have all been stolen! They had been left with only having screens...! Its urgent and top priority for IT to get them new base units so that they can work and for us to then report the theft to the authorities..."

My heart just sank at how blind some people can be with the things around them...

How can it be that not one of 10 - 20 people in an office, everyday, are unable to figure out that the screen IS THE PC!

How can, not one person in the office, understand that the screens are the new PCs that have been mentioned in many, many emails - almost daily, before the project started! You would think that in three weeks somebody would have at least been curious and pushed the big ON button?!

How can the problem go all the way up management without one person thinking... WHATS THIS BUTTON FOR?!

How can it take three weeks to raise such a problem to IT!?

So, what 'fail' stories do you have where users have not understood the change in hardware or a release of new tech?

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