Teaching a child to make a decision

We don’t presume to tell anyone how to make decisions, although there’s plenty of room in the business world for more practice.

We talked in our last post about teaching the Camper to have an opinion, and how having an opinion is pretty fundamental to making a decision.

We’re good at decisions. We’ve had lots of practice, and we are never short of an opinion on anything, funnily enough. But our willingness to take the lead was a source of tension with the private agency. We kept tripping over ‘the line’ drawn by the ‘experts’, and they weren’t giving up territory to anyone. You could argue that they thought they were doing their job. But we think they needed to learn the lesson we’ve just taught the Camper.

We recently gave the Camper real life experience at making a decision. It was in relation to an event that happens every single day of her life. Her approach was to see how she felt just before the event each day, and we had to adjust our responses to accommodate her.

Now we can tell you that even though the event itself was minor and mundane, the Camper’s capriciousness about it began to take its toll. And if we pushed on through and thwarted her - that is, we made the decision for her - we’d get one of the meltdowns that parents can only shudder at.

‘She wanted routine’ you might mutter. You’re right, she did. But she’s a forthright little character and just imposing a routine on her wasn’t working. We tried that.

So we taught her to make the decision.
We explained why it was important to us and the workings of the family that mundane, routine things ran smoothly.
We explained why it was important to her
growth and capability.
We explained how important
cooperation was in our family.
We
explained clearly what we wanted from her.
We told her she needed to
make a decision about what she was going to do each day.
We
discussed her options with her.
We gave her a weekend to
think and talk about it, before making her final choice.
We explained that her
final choice would be it for a set period of time.
And just to make sure the point got across, we chose an extra-curricular activity, described how she
relied on our cooperation to get her there, and explained that her willingness to cooperate each day would directly influence our cooperation. We didn’t threaten to stop the activity completely, but the risk for her was constant interruptions to it.

Bingo. While the preparation took a week or so, behaviour changed overnight. No kidding. And it’s stuck.

What’s happened of course is that the activity has become a habit. The Camper no longer spends any time ‘thinking’ about it, she just does it. We knew that, and Happy Camper has learned it. She’s learned some self-discipline. And we think we’ve started to teach her an important life lesson about expending her energy and emotion on the things that really matter. Gold stars all round.

Oh, and the lesson for the agency workers? If it’s a good placement, focus on the important stuff, and trust us to make some good decisions for the child.
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