Education.com

Parenting Solutions: Perfectionist (page 3)

By Michele Borba, Ed.D.
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Step 2. Rapid Response

  • Lighten your child's load. Check her schedule: Is there any time for just downtime or play? Are there any activities that can be eliminated or reduced?
  • Teach her to be her own "timekeeper." If she works hours on her writing but actually does a great job the first time through, set a time limit on how long she can work on a particular activity.
  • Make sure there's time for fun. Encourage laughter and just sitting outside every once in a while and watching the clouds drift by. Teach your child she can always go back and finish up an activity, but give her permission to just plain enjoy life.
  • Teach stress busters. Show your child a few simple relaxation strategies, such as taking slow, deep breaths; listening to soothing music; walking; or just taking ten and lying on the couch, to help improve her frame of mind and reduce a bit of that intensity—at least for a few minutes.
  • Halt the "parading." I know you're proud, but stop putting your kid on center stage to always perform. It's all right on the soccer field or in a musical concert, but lower the curtains in your home. Do you reinforce her professions of greatness by agreeing with her? Do you encourage her by reminding her of other talents she's overlooked? Are you cheering her "know-it-all" attitude because you feel it is the sign of high self-esteem?
  • Help your child handle disappointment. The inner dialogue of a perfectionist is self-defeating: "I'm never good enough." "I knew I'd blow it." So help your child reframe her self-talk by teaching her to say a more positive phrase that's less critical and judgmental and more based in reality, such as "Nobody is perfect." "All I can do is try my best." "I'll try again next time." "Believing in myself will help me relax."

Step 3. Develop Habits for Change

  • Use children's literature. There are wonderful children's books you can use as conversation starters about the dangers of perfectionism, such as I'm Perfick! by Bernard Waber; Persnickity, by Steven Cosgrove, Will the Real Gertrude Hollings Please Stand Up? by S. Greenwalk; Be a Perfect Person in Just Three Days, by Stephen Manes; Dreams and Drummers, by D. B. Smith; What to Do When Good Isn't Good Enough: The Real Deal on Perfectionism: A Guide for Kids, by Thomas S. Greenspon.
  • Use a family mantra. One way to help your child realize that mistakes don't have to be seen as failures is to come up with a phrase to use as your family mantra. Here are a few favorites: "A mistake is a chance to start again." "Whether you think you can or think you can't, you're right" (Henry Ford). "You'll never make it unless you try." Then pick one phrase and say it again and again. You might even print out a computer-made sign and hang it on your refrigerator.
  • Teach taking a reality check. Perfectionistic kids imagine something horrid will happen if they hit the wrong note, don't stick the gymnastics move, don't make the standard they've set for themselves. Your role is to challenge their views so that they don't think in such all-or-nothing, black-or-white terms. Help them dispute their belief.
  • Kid: "Nobody who ever got a B got into college." You: "What about your cousin Kevin, who even had a few C's?"

    Kid: "I'll lose cleanup spot in the batting order if I strike out." You: "What about Babe Ruth? The year he hit the most home runs was the same year he made the most strikeouts."

    Kid: "I know the moment I pick up my pencil I'm going to forget everything I studied all year." You: "That's never happened in your entire life. Why now?"

View Full Article

Add your own comment

Ask a Question

Have questions about this article or topic? Ask
Ask
150 Characters allowed