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When your Academy Award contender acts out in public!

QUESTION:

Dear Adele,

We need help! Our young son will soon be deserving of an Academy Award for his acting out behaviour in public! When we are out of the home, he seems to purposely decide to misbehave and act out, knowing we will not respond as skillfully as we normally do alone. And he is absolutely right! We admit that we often cave to his desires because we do not want to be judged by others as overly strict disciplinarians, harsh or inept parents. Please help us with some ideas on how to handle his acting out in public!

Mom of an Academy Award Contender


ANSWER:

Dear Mom of an Academy Award Contender,

Take it easy on yourself Mom of an Academy Award Contender. Children of the best of parents act out in public sometimes. Yours is no exception. Unfortunately, when they do this, it destroys the confidence of the parents and leaves them feeling that they have somehow failed the children. Parents may think that others judge them as mean or stern or incompetent. If truth be told, most of us feel empathy for parents of the child who is acting out in public because most of us have been there with our own kids!

I have a couple of ideas which you can add to your repertoire for the next time this situation occurs. Some of them come from an article entitled “14 Tips for Parenting in Public”. Hopefully a few will be of assistance to you in this pretty common parenting challenge.

Two good reads on this subject are ‘What to do when your kid acts out in public” by Malia Jacobson and ‘Acting Out in Public: Is your child’s behaviour holding you hostage?” by James Lehman. Both authors offer some explanations for this kind of comportment and additional strategies for dealing with your little one in public.

I will conclude with some inspirational quotations about children’s behaviour which might serve to inspire you, Mom of an Academy Award Contender.

Children need love, especially when they do not deserve it.”  — Harold Hulbert

A child seldom needs a good talking to as a good listening to.” — Robert Brault

Parents have become so convinced that educators know what is best for their children that they forget that they themselves are really the experts.” — Marian Wright Edelman

Sincerely, Adele


I'm looking forward to your questions! Email me at maryadeleblair@gmail.com and please put Heart to Heart in the subject line. Note that all columns will remain anonymous.

Photo: Austin Pacheco, Unsplash

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