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Differences from Birth: Responding to the Temperamentally Difficult Child (page 5)

By Robert Brooks, Ph.D
Dr. Robert Brooks

Accepting children for who they are is not meant to suggest that we refrain from helping our children modify those characteristics of their temperament that are causing them and the adults in their lives distress but rather that our assistance must be done with empathy, compassion, and caring. Caregivers must recognize that we as the adults must have the insight and courage to take the initial steps to accommodate to the child’s style rather than expect the child to adapt to what we want. Parents and other adults must strive to provide what is called in the child development literature a "goodness-of-fit" between our expectations and the child’s inborn temperament. In essence, if the temperamentally difficult child is to have an opportunity to lead a happier life filled with satisfying relationships then it is the adults who must at first accommodate within reason to the child’s style rather than expecting the child to accommodate to theirs.

Third, we must understand how best to arrive at this "goodness-of-fit"? I believe to do so we must adopt a "crisis prevention" or proactive position rather than a "crisis intervention" or reactive approach. Without realizing it many parents tend to be reactive, that is, they react from moment to moment to their children’s behavior and as a result feel harried, hassled, and even helpless. It is especially important to become a "proactive" parent when we have temperamentally difficult children who can so quickly perceive the world as unfair and who can react with such intensity to various situations.

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