Articles on Child Matters:
It Is Always About Me, Isn't It?
A characteristic of childhood thinking is the child’s assumption that whatever happens “is all about me.” The tendency of children to blame themselves for their parents’ difficulties causes them great pain, and if this kind of “it’s all about me” thinking persists into adulthood, it can do considerable harm to their personal relationships. As adults, many people still believe they are defective and that if people really knew them they would be rejected.
Children under the age of ten have yet to develop a concept of multi-causality. Consequently, they explain out-of-the-ordinary phenomena as having occurred because they made them happen. Young children do not see their overly critical parents for what they are-overly critical. As children they cannot understand that their parents might have, let us say, a drinking problem, which distorts their personalities and behavior. Rather, children believe that if they are criticized it must be because they really are bad and the proper cause of all the criticism that comes their way. Similarly, if things start to go wrong between parents, children think they are the reason or that they can provide the solution.
Several clients have brought home how extreme the discrepancy can be between the logic of the adult and the emotions of the inner child. In one case, Mary, a bright and attractive professional woman was trying to deal with a relationship breakup. She explained, “I really don’t know why I am so upset. This relationship had to end since he couldn’t get along with my daughter. He’d made it clear that he did not want to raise another child and since my child is only six he was unable to commit…so why am I devastated?”
I could have tried to assist Mary by strengthening her resolve, but she didn’t really need me for that. She was perfectly capable of coming up with every logical, rational reason under the sun why the relationship wasn’t viable and was best ended. She had intelligent friends to assist her with that, too.
My job was to redirect Mary to her childhood. Her own father had left the family when she was six. Using the child’s “it’s all about me” way of thinking, she had decided that if only she had been good enough, or worthwhile enough, her father would not have left. Her goodness would have made him stay. She felt the same way about her breakup with her boyfriend and was re-traumatized by it. Indicatively, she told me that there was a part of her that wanted to try to make the relationship work at any price, so that this time it would be different, even though she could see with her adult mind that the relationship was not really a good one. She didn’t even know the man that well. Talking it through, she became able to see that most of the feelings she had about her partner were a projection from the past and not based on reality.
When the final break came, Mary was able to be caring and not caustic or blaming toward him. She said, “I know that he is a good person and means well and has always been honest with me.” Saying this was progress for her, because in past relationships she tended to get angry with her partner and blame him for everything that went wrong between them. She had begun to make sense of the strength of her feelings, and her adult and child were more integrated. Working through the stages of the relationship without reverting to blaming her partner gave her an opportunity to deal with the pain in her past, understand herself more deeply, and become more conscious in relationships.
I have seen many individuals who believed that their partner’s bad behavior was their fault, thus taking responsibility for someone else’s destructive behaviors. One client told me that she had “caused” her husband to break her leg during a beating by saying something provocative to him. I attempted to explain to her that her partner’s assaultive behavior was not only illegal, but inappropriate, but to no avail. She persisted in believing that she was the “cause” of her partner’s physical attacks on her.
In my marriage, we have to be attentive to the tendency we both have to feel overly responsible for things. We usually have to work on getting our signals straight when one or the other of us is in a bad mood and withdrawing. We try to head off the possibility of the other feeling blamed or guilty by saying to each other things like: “I have had a really bad day and I feel like I need to withdraw, but it has nothing to do with you.” We find this kind of proactive measure very useful.
Copyright 2005 Linda Miles Ph.D
Dr. Linda Miles is deeply committed to helping individuals and couples achieve rewarding relationships. She is an expert with a doctorate in Counseling Psychology, and has worked in the mental health field for over thirty years. She has been interviewed extensively on radio, TV, and in newspapers and magazines. Find more relationship ideas and relaxation techniques on her web site and in the award-winning book she co-authored, The New Marriage: Transcending the Happily-Ever-After Myth, and Train Your Brain: For Successful Relationships, CD.
http://www.drlindamiles.com/
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Why are your children getting sick in DayCare?
You may be thinking that your child is getting more cold’s lately, or maybe it’s a tad bit worse. You’ve just come home from the doctor and your baby is diagnosed with the RSV Virus. Anyway you look at it your pediatrician will elude to the fact that you probably picked up these viruses at “daycare”
Anytime children hang around with other children there is an increased chance of picking up viruses. It’s pretty simple and this law applies to everyone. You live in a glass bubble you won’t get sick, you go out and you take the chance of getting ill.
But, there are some occurrences in child care centers that really do increase the chances for illness. So it’s my duty to tell you why you may see your child getting sick and what you can do about it.
As a parent you have either decided to have your child attend a family center or a group center. Family centers are licensed for up to eight children and group centers are licensed for many more children. One simple fact is that the more children that are present the more chances you take for introducing illness. Very simple, but something you should think about. Group centers are known to be germ factories simply because of the numbers of children that are present.
Another item to keep in mind, it that parents do sometimes send their children sick to daycare. Parents will give their child Tylenol in the morning to “mask” the fever that the child has. By afternoon the Tylenol has worn off and the caregiver has figured out what the parent has done. The caregiver then calls for the sick child to be picked-up. Daycares do remind parents that sick children should not be brought into daycare, but many times parents have no alternatives and feel that they must go to work.
Daycare’s must clean and sanitize toys and equipment daily. This definitely cut’s down on germs and viruses spreading. Also, children’s hands must be washed before and after eating and after bathroom breaks. Hand washing is the #1 way children and daycare facilities can cut down on illness.
Some children for whatever reason seem to get more viruses and illness than others. There just is no explainable reason, but some children I’ve had in daycare are always ill and others never seem to get ill.
All in all, most childcare centers are healthy places with few occurrences of major illness. Congratulate all the caregivers who do their job in keeping things clean for your children.
©CG Groth Inc.
Christine Groth
19 Dec 2006
Christine Groth, author and mentor of Instant Daycare Profits Home Study Course. Instead of sending her twins to daycare she decided to open a daycare her home and now makes more money than most professionals. To receive her free newsletter Go to====> http://www.instantdaycareprofits.com.