Relationships involve ongoing and circular patterns. Think of it as a dance. One person triggers a reaction, which triggers a counter-reaction in the first person.

So you have a choice: You either can escalate with your child, or you can engage positively. Escalation leads only to more anger and control battles. Engaging positively increases the chances your child will calm down, and you will be a healing parent.

Here are some tips for engaging positively:

Know your triggers. The more you know yourself, the less likely you are to become emotionally triggered. For example, if you grew up in a family where honesty was an important value, you might get angry and upset when your son lies.

Don’t take it personally. It is crucial to avoid taking your child’s negative actions and attitudes personally. Remember, this is about your child’s fears and negative expectations, not about you. Continuing with the previous example, realizing you are very sensitive to the issue of honesty, you can remain calm and focused on creative solutions. You are proactive, not emotionally reactive.

Be prepared. Having the knowledge and skills of Corrective Attachment Parenting enables you to offer your child learning opportunities. You are providing a healthy balance of love and limits and serving as a good role model. Knowing what to do leads to success. A successful parent is a confident parent, and confidence breeds even more success.

Practice patience. Slow and steady. Change takes ongoing practice over time. Persevere towards your goals. Each child changes in his or her own time. Know the unique needs and timetable of your child.

The scenarios below show examples of engaging negatively and positively:

Negatively

Parent: Clean your room.
Child: No, and you can’t make me.
Parent: (Angry and yells) You better clean your room, or you’re in big trouble.
Child: (Louder) I hate you! (Runs away)

Positively

Parent: I need you to clean your room.
Child: No, and you can’t make me.
Parent (Remains calm) You have a choice. Clean your room and come swimming with us later, or don’t clean your room, and you will not join us for swimming. Either one is OK with me. Which do you want to do?

This is an excerpt from the book Healing Parents: Helping Wounded Children Learn to Trust & Love.