Letting your toddler make mistakes
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Ever get the impression your toddler thinks he's just as big and powerful as you? Don't worry; it's not your imagination gone haywire. As far as he's concerned, he's the master of his own domain -- until a few short years later when he comes face to face with the scrutiny, evaluation, and faultfinding from others. Unless we teach him how to see mistakes, defeats, and failures in a different light, our self-confident little dynamo will grow up feeling like he's being judged by everyone, strangers included. Dr Elisa Medhus explains.
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Once that happens, every blunder turns into a weapon that sabotages his self-esteem rather than a tool to help him make better decisions in the future.
Why does this happen?
Simple. We're all pack animals, and toddlers are certainly no exception. (Heck, mine probably howl at the moon and roll around in disgusting stuff from time to time.) And like all pack animals, we have a strong need to belong to a group. However, kids seldom learn that this need can be satisfied in two ways -- earning acceptance by offering unique contributions or roles that benefit the pack or begging for acceptance, making all choices contingent upon whatever will win them pack approval.
By choosing compliance over contribution, kids see failure as the obstacle that keeps them from being welcomed into the fold.
When kids learn to fear failure, they resist making any choice that carries the risk of defeat and therefore humiliation. But if they shy away from learning new skills, taking on new adventures, taking positive social risks, or exploring the unknown, this "decision paralysis" can lead to underachievement.
Instead of striving to reach their fullest potential, they learn to delegate their difficult choices to the media, their peers and the popular culture shaped by both. So unaccustomed are they to following their own inner compass, that as adolescents and adults they're no longer able to reason consciously and clearly.
A poor sense of self-awareness allows inner dishonesty to strengthen so that self-deceit, excuses, denial, and rationalizations lower the threshold to irresponsible, even immoral choices.
When this happens they're at the mercy of those whose values may not reflect the ones we've encouraged in them and influences that may not have their best interests at heart as we do.
Steppingstones to success
As parents, we can raise our children to both welcome and learn from the mistakes they will surely make during their lives rather of being shattered by them.
We can teach them to see failure as steppingstones to success rather than events that determine their identity and self-worth. We can help them view defeat as a tool for personal growth rather than certain ostracism from the pack.
With this new perception, children are unfettered in their pursuit of personal excellence, which, when it boils right down to it, is what we really want for them for them.
Here are some suggestions that will give your children these valuable tools:
If Sarah is repeatedly denied what she excels in, eventually, she'll grow to shun goals altogether.
The next attempt, bring up how he keeps on trying. The third attempt, point out how he correctly lined up some of them, and so on.
By unmasking the advantages to each failure, children become more accepting of their own shortcomings and mistakes.
Once our children use their mistakes and failures as a tool to help them learn and grow instead of weapons that sabotage their self-worth, imagine the repercussions! They'd be more willing to take the positive risks crucial developing important life skills -- skills that will lead to independence, self-confidence, and the strength it takes to make choices based on their sense of right and wrong rather than their need for acceptance.
In the end, we'll be blessed with children whose choices contribute good -- not misery -- to the world and the future.

