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Mistakes: What Parents Can do to Help Their Children be Less Fearful about Mistakes and Setbacks (page 2)

By Robert Brooks, Ph.D.
Dr. Robert Brooks

In contrast, youngsters with low self-esteem are more likely to assume that they cannot modify situations in which they made mistakes, resigning themselves to the belief that they will continue to fail and that success is illusory. In my role as a youth basketball coach a child once told me, "I will never make a foul shot." He was convinced that he would never be able to do so, a perception that limited the probability of success in the future.

As a psychologist I have heard a wide spectrum of remarks reflecting a sense of hopelessness in youngsters when confronted with failure or the possibility of failure. Some are direct expressions of very low self-esteem while others represent self-defeating attempts to escape from a sense of failure. Such remarks include:

"Why should I try to study? I will fail anyway."

"Everyone is better than I am in spelling. Things will never get better."

"My saxophone is bad, that’s why I can’t learn to play."

"My parents did not buy me the right kind of glue. If they did, the model plane I made would not be broken."

If we subscribe to the basic tenets of attribution theory then we can ask the following question, "How do I say and do things with my children so that they will develop a healthy attitude towards mistakes and setbacks, that they will learn that mistakes are expected and accepted?" I would like to share some thoughts about what parents can do to nurture a positive mindset in children about mistakes.

Serve as a Model: Children are astute observers of the ways in which their parents handle mistakes. As parents we have countless opportunities to model for our children a healthy attitude towards making mistakes and dealing with setbacks. It is for this reason that I often ask parents how they think their children would answer the following question, "What do your parents do when they make mistakes?" At some point I would like to write a book titled, "Children’s Perceptions of How Their Parents Deal with Mistakes." Many parents at my workshops have half-joking, half-not, said, "Please don’t ask my kids that question."

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