Quote:
Originally Posted by GreenMoss
I think I might have been taught to avoid. Being the baby and the only girl; shy too with a shy mother. I was sheltered and reigned in when being a playful kid and naturally testing adventure. Also mistakes, mistakes in my family where always a reason to kind of withdraw from whatever it was and to avoid it the next time around. I think the healthy way of regarding mistakes are that they are necessary to learning. I still have trouble when I make a mistake in internalizing it.
But I often wonder... is there anyone that can say they got through childhood unscathed? I see with some of the young people I work with too much praise and coddling can lead to a rude awakening when they reach adulthood, in that not everyone is going to reward them for everything they do. Or they are very self-centric and not considerate of others. Is that just a thing with US children?
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Don't know about US children but rewarding children can be good depending on the reward. If the reward is not material is ok. I mean carefull. But, I'm not a can of material rewards. I think that the unconditional affection whether the child is right or wrong is the best. So, (s)he won't be scared of failure and feel confident enough to explore world in his own.
I can't avoid the teacher I have inside me, surfaces from time to time.