Parenting: The Importance of Understanding Dianetics (Part 3)

This is the third in a series of posts on the subject of using Dianetics as a parent.  The first andsecond posts focused around how I use Dianetics as a parent, with my kids.  But there’s that other part of being a parent – taking care of oneself so that parenting doesn’t drive you crazy.  :)

ADDRESSING YOURSELF

Stephanie with her Husband Russ 

With my Husband, Russ

Time after time I have seen or heard about a relatively minor situation that was made so much worse simply because the parent could not just stay calm and handle the child or became really reactive himself or herself. I’ve done it plenty of times myself. There are also situations brought about wholly by the irrationalities of the parent, being enforced or played out on the child. I think if we honestly want happy, able children, and we honestly want happier families, that we have a responsibility to better ourselves and improve our own abilities to handle life and the people in it. I have always found I do much better and am much happier if I take the responsibility for things that happen and how my life goes. By taking responsibility I don’t mean “taking the blame”. I mean simply recognizing that I cause things, good or bad, in any situation I encounter. Others do too of course, but how am I causing things and how can I create a better scene?

Well, a major way that one can do that is to handle their own reactive mind and the consequent irrationalities, fears, and unwanted emotions or behavior. I have found that as I have handled more and more of my reactive mind and gone up the Bridge, not only did I become happier and more successful, I became a much better parent. This has made my job as a mom all the more rewarding, has improved my kids’ experience, and has really been a gift.

StephanieStephanie Croman is a Scientology counselor in Austin, Texas. She has three wonderful daughters. When she is not helping others or doing things with her kids, she is often helping herself to a good book or trying to somehow make a dent in all the movies in her Netflix queue.

 

Parenting: The Importance of Understanding Dianetics (Part 2)

Dianetics has so many uses within the family. Many have been covered in articles on the Scientology Parent website: how to handle injuriescalm and quiet birthingassists to help moms during pregnancy and after the birth, etc. Yet in some ways this only scratches the surface of the use of this subject.

My last post on the subject centered on the value of knowing Dianetics to know what you’re looking at when kids (or your spouse) is acting up.   The next part of the picture is:

OK, SO NOW WHAT?

Ok, so now I know the kid is just being reactive, and it isn’t really them. Now what? Well, sometimes that depends on the situation–sometimes it’s simple and sometimes it takes a little cleverness. But isn’t that parenting?!

However, here are a few of the ways that my parenting is influenced by my understanding of Dianetics and the reactive mind:

The reactive mind tends to kick in more easily when a person is hungry, tired, or a little ill. So with kids, one of THE easiest and simplest handlings can often be to just get some decent food into them or get them some rest. It’s amazing how different the child can behave or respond with just these very simple things handled.

Also, if they are in the middle of being reactive, it’s not necessarily the right time to try to correct them on something, teach them something, or get into these big discussions, particularly if you’re upset yourself. The truth is they’re not totally there and listening and able to really receive what you’re trying to get across anyway. So I usually just skip it, until they are out of the drama and are more themselves and we can have a real communication about it (if needed).

If there is something I need to handle or get done with the child while he’s in the middle of this drama, I appeal to the person himself and the analytical side as directly as possible, ignoring the rest as much as I can. You might say that the person is still there, but he’s a bit “buried” at the moment with whatever has kicked in. I go on the assumption that the person himself CAN overcome the reactive mind and take the reins more, at least to some degree. I always try to grant strength and importance to my child’s rationality and ability, NOT their reactive mind. For example, sometimes one of my kids will be “Rowr-rowr-rowr-howl!”, and it’s not handling with regular communication. So I might say, “Hey, honey, I realize that your body is probably hungry, and sometimes that can make us feel upset. I’m in the middle of making breakfast, so we’re going to handle that very shortly. But while I get breakfast ready, I need you to go ahead and just handle yourself and get your body dressed. I know you can do that. So you get dressed, and by the time you’re done, we’ll eat.” Or let’s say one of my kids is yelling at me or being sassy or rude. I have rights too, and I don’t treat them this way. I might let them know, “Hey, I don’t know exactly what’s going on right now, but this isn’t you. You are a very nice person, and usually really great and cheerful. The way you’re treating me right now is not okay. I don’t treat you that way and I expect you not to treat me that way. So whatever is going on, I need you to handle it. Get some food, take a walk, go lay down for a while, do something fun, or whatever you need to do, but I need you stop acting this way with the family.”

If I’ve asked them to do something and they are fighting me or being dramatic, and they just don’t respond to my appeals, logic, or communication, I just try to stay relatively calm and get them to do whatever I told them to do. First, I just acknowledge whatever they have to say and repeat whatever I told them to do, multiple times as needed until it gets done. (Then when they do it, thank them for doing it!) If I still can’t get it done, I move their body for them if required. Let’s say the kid is throwing a wall-eyed fit and just won’t knock it off. Well, then pick her up, take her to her room, set her inside, let her know you’d be happy to have her come back and join the family when she can settle down and be more herself, close the door and walk away. Do it as calmly as possible–you’re the one setting the example of proper behavior with others, so getting angry, screaming, and being reactive yourself isn’t usually helpful. Let’s say the kid continues to refuse to brush her teeth. Well, let her know you understand that she doesn’t want to (or whatever she might have said), but that we need to take good care of our teeth so they keep working right. Then just guide her gently into the bathroom and put the toothbrush and toothpaste in her hand.

We’ve all had some moment (or several) where we’d like to throw the kid out the window, so to speak. With a better understanding of people and the mind through Dianetics, I’m usually successful with finding a rather better solution. : )

StephanieStephanie Croman is a Scientology counselor in Austin, Texas. She has three wonderful daughters. When she is not helping others or doing things with her kids, she is often helping herself to a good book or trying to somehow make a dent in all the movies in her Netflix queue.

 

Parenting: The Importance of Understanding Dianetics (Part 1)

Stephanie - a Scientology counselor at the Church of Scientology in Austin Texas, here with her three girls.

Dianetics has so many uses within the family. Many have been covered in articles on this site: how to handle injuriescalm and quiet birthingassists to help moms during pregnancy and after the birth, etc. Yet in some ways this only scratches the surface of the use of this subject.

Dianetics includes the use of particular (and very effective) techniques, but it’s more the understanding of people and of the mind that I find I use with others, including my children, on a day to day basis.  Following are a few ways that I’ve found Dianetics of indispensable use as a parent:

KNOWING WHAT I’M LOOKING AT

With a good understanding of Dianetics, I know the parts of Man, I know the parts of the mind. I thus understand the person in front of me better and where they might be coming from or why they might be acting the way they are. As a result, I tend to be more tolerant of the foibles of others, and I make better decisions and bring about better solutions in handling others.

A person is made up of three parts: his body, his mind, and the spirit (which is the person himself). The mind has two parts: the analytical and the reactive (see video here). There is much more to be known about this, but those are a couple of fundamentals.

So, how does this help me as a parent? As a wife? Easy. What about a child throwing a tantrum? What about a child “acting out” irrationally? What about a child who is completely overreacting, sobbing about something we consider so minor? What about a child who fights going to bed tooth and nail because of irrational fears? How about a husband who’s punching a hole in the wall or a wife who is an anxious, irrational nag? In such situations, I know what I’m looking at. It isn’t the person themself. It isn’t the analytical mind. I am looking at the reactive mind playing out before me.

Just knowing and taking a moment to recognize this, I’m already a step back from it, and can handle the situation better as a point of cause, rather than being at effect. At least I can try! Jumping into such a situation with a lot of force, threats, yelling, crying, or anything else just plays right into the reactive mind and tends to make the situation worse. Recognizing that it is simply reactive helps me solve it. It can also lessen any tendency I might have to take it personally, get really upset, or go reactive myself.

StephanieStephanie Croman is a Scientology counselor in Austin, Texas. She has three wonderful daughters. When she is not helping others or doing things with her kids, she is often helping herself to a good book or trying to somehow make a dent in all the movies in her Netflix queue.

 

Why Parent-Child Relationships Go Sour


"I'm driving the tractor, daddy!!"

“I’m driving the tractor, daddy!!”

Probably one of the most oft-reiterated themes that you’ll find in various Scientology texts with respect to parenting is the subject of exchange, and the importance of the child being able to contribute back to the family.   One such reference I came across recently was the following:

“Parental-child relationships are sour, really, only for one good reason. And that is because the child cannot contribute equally to the parent contributions. This demonstrates the child to be much less powerful than the parents; it makes him–puts him in a bad way.”

L. Ron Hubbard
from the Thought, Emotion and Effort Lecture Series – lecture entitled Dead Men’s Goals, Part I

It’s something that I think requires constant thought by the parents.  Not the flow of “when will that good-for-nothing kid start helping out around here?”   That obviously leads nowhere.  But instead, as a parent, constantly thinking of the best ways to allow your child to contribute to the household – in ways that will make them feel that they are contributing.

When your kids are babies, the main way they can contribute is to make you laugh – to make awesome baby sounds and do cool baby things and make you happy.    But as they start to be able to understand their environment, it takes more and more cunning as a parent to figure out things they can accomplish around the house that allow them to contribute too.

Grandmary Hanging with DJ by the Froggies
Spotting Frogs in the pond in the back yard

 

 

I had my mom up visiting from Florida the past two weeks, and it was great having her here – as she thinks the same way.  At every turn, she had my daughter up on the kitchen counter helping to make dinner, or cutting out biscuits to put into the oven.  Whether or not she actually was any help in this is completely beside the point.  The point was, when I got home from work, there was my daughter, beaming, saying “HEY DADDY LOOK AT THE DINNER WE MADE YOU!!!!” Obviously, she felt pretty good about helping.

My son, just being a bit past one, only has one major chore around the house right now – and that’s shutting any doors that need to be shut.  He’ll get upset if you bypass him, but if you’re sitting in the middle of the floor and get a concerned look on your face and say, “Hey – can you shut the door for me?” – he’ll get all happy and yell “SHUT!!!” and run over & shut the door.

Likewise, it’s also the easiest way to upset either of my kids – tell them they can’t vac out the house, they can’t clean up their spills, they can’t pick up their blocks, etc, etc.  It’s about the fastest way to create a hellion out of my cute kids.   And as kids grow up, that’s the fastest way to convince them that they are good-for-nothings that don’t work.

I’m sure as time goes on and my kids get older, it will take less and less “cunning” to allow them to remain helpful around the house.  But I’ll bet that if I keep allowing them to contribute however they can, it won’t require cunning to make them help at all.