Keywords
Search:

Childhood friendships

Encourage your children's friendships by inviting their pals to your home.

By Christine Langlois

Problem friends
Sometimes parents are dismayed to find their child has become friends with a kid who bullies other children, misbehaves at home, or gets into trouble at school. Nobody wants his child to have such a negative relationship, but what's the best way to handle it? First, take a look at your own family situation; children usually look for others who are like them and who share their values, or others whom they admire. Ask yourself if there's anything in your family's situation that might affect your child's choice.

Although you want to discourage your child's harmful friendship, don't waste time criticizing the friend or forbidding them to get together. Criticism may make your child feel the need to rise to his defence, or the two may find ways to continue the banned relationship anyway. Concentrate instead on your own child's behaviour when he's with his friend. If you don't see a change, you may not have anything to worry about. In one Swedish study, researchers paired delinquent kids with very positive children and had them spend time together. They found that neither group had much effect on the behaviour of the other. However, if your child's behaviour is changing for the worse, take action. Tell him you're unhappy about it. Remind him of the limits and expectations you have for him in your household. Tell him if you're worried about what might happen to him if he acts like his friend, and make sure he understands where the behaviour could lead. Make it a logical argument, not an emotional one, and avoid attacking the friend. That will forestall your child's impulse to jump to his friend's defence.

At the same time, do whatever you can to encourage more desirable friendships. Help arrange activities with other children, and encourage your child to invite them to your house. The damaging friendship will likely sputter and die on its own. You are the major influence on the friends your child chooses, but as she grows older, she is less influenced by her parents' opinions. You still need to be aware of who she's spending time with and what they're doing. Meet the friend's parents if possible. Their values and attitudes could be an early warning of trouble.

When your child doesn't have friends
It's heartbreaking for parents to see their child left out of activities or ignored by others. It's also hard on the child who is left feeling lonely, inadequate, and full of self-doubt. There are many reasons why a child might have no friends.

Create opportunities for your child to make friends, and create a welcoming climate for her friends in your home. Get your child involved in organized activities that both pique her curiosity and provide opportunities to meet others with similar interests. Contact parents of other children in her class or on your street to arrange after-school play or weekend outings.

Find an opportunity to watch your child interact with others. Perhaps you could volunteer to help out on a school trip. If you spot relationship problems that are causing trouble, discuss them at home. Ask your child how he feels about a particular behaviour that you've seen. Get him to think about what he wants from a relationship and how he expects to bring that about. If his behaviour is causing him problems, ask how he might have behaved differently. Also ask your child's teacher how your child interacts with others and where the problems lie, if there are any. Teachers are often the first to spot trouble.

Develop a few simple strategies that your child could use to overcome her problem. Give her suggestions about how to initiate conversations or to deal with her shyness. Help her practise the skills at home first, if she's willing. Young children are still learning about social interaction, and what's obvious to you is quite new to them. Be involved, but don't intrude. It's natural to want to fix the problem yourself, but your child will be resentful and embarrassed if you push too hard or complain about the situation in front of her peers. And if you take care of everything, she won't learn how to deal with social situations herself.

Excerpted from Raising Great Kids: Ages 6 to 12 by Christine Langlois. Copyright 1999 by Telemedia Communications Inc. Excerpted, with permission by Ballantine Books. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

« Previous

Read more:
How to establish rites of passage for your child
Slowing down to meet your demands
Fatherhood, revisited

Check out:
CanadianLiving.com Friends & Family
CanadianLiving.com Relationships


For inspired articles and ideas when you're on the go, get Canadian Living Mobile!
Access Canadian Living's smart solutions for everyday living anytime, anywhere -- and best of all, it's FREE! Get it now: visit m.canadianliving.com on your BlackBerry® or iPhone™.

Your Comments

Comment reported

Thank you for reporting this comment as inappropriate.

Back to Comments »

Add your comments

Please fill in all required fields (*).

Back to Comments »



Most popular videos

  • Slow Cooker Butter Chicken

    We've married our sumptuous butter chicken recipe with the ease of the slow cooker to create the ultimate Slow Cooker Butter Chicken. Food director Annabelle Waugh walks you through the steps in this video for a restaurant-worthy dinner every time.

  • Slow cooker pulled pork

    Watch how to create this tender, succulent pulled pork recipe with minimal effort and positive results every time.

  • 5 effective ab exercises

    Canadian Living fitness expert Pamela Mazzuca Prebeg shows you how to tone your abs with five exercises you can do at home.