Saturday, December 14, 2019
Connect With Your Children After Work -The Muse
Connect With Your Children After Work -The MuseConnect With Your Children After Work On weekends, knowing whats going on with your kids can be as easy as watching, listening, and following (or running) along. But when youre working, it takes some skill to figure out wzu siche their little heads have been all day. Sometimes, kids offer up every detail- and other times, its a challenge to pry anything from them.Reconnecting with kids after work is often a matter of asking the right questions.When youre a working parent, you have to be okay with picking work at work, and then you have to be okay with picking your children. And when you pick your children, you pick them 100% in that moment, says Julie Breazile, Senior Manager of Family betreuung with Kindercare. I need them to know that theyre still my priority, and I need to build an emotional connection in that short amount of time during the week.While every kid responds to questions differently, its useful to have a set of tried and tested questions to get them talking. We spoke to moms about their techniques for getting to the heart of their kids day.The Right Question FirstJulie asks her 8 year old daughter Kayden and 5 year old son Brody multiple questions after childcare. The most important thing about the first question (How was your day?) isnt the question itself, but where it takes place In the childcare facility, with the teacher nearby.So the teachers are there, and theyre a part of the conversation, says Julie. If something happened that I need to follow-up about, it doesnt go a couple of days before I see that teacher again.Jennifer Tanous, a Senior HR Reporting Analyst with Kindercare, is also strategic about the first question she asks her kids, 6 year old Issa and 3 1/2 year old Naya. Her husband picks them up from childcare, and they immediately call her from the car.She asks them Did you have your best day ever?I try to have them go into every day with the idea that this is going to be their be st day ever, Jennifer says. Its a foundational part of her parenting philosophy- to let them know their mom wants them to live their best lives every day.While Julie and Jennifer pose different initial questions to their kids, both are strategic ways to let their kids know, right off the bat, that they cant wait to hear all about their day.Favorites and Least FavoritesThe second part of Julies questioning happens during their car ride home. First, she asks her kids what their favorite thing about their day was. I always start with the good stuff and get them to talk about that first, Julie says. Then she asks why that particular thing was good, and what they learned about that day.Then I try to dig into anything that bugged them or bothered them, she says. And then I start asking probing questions, and start digging into why they think that happened.The bulk of Jennifers questions happen during bedtime, when she asks a series of five questions, four of which are similar to JuliesWha t was the most exciting thing that happened to you today?What was the worst thing that happened to you today?What made you happy?What made you sad?Jennifer says her kids recognize the nuance between the questions. The first two elicit answers about things that exceeded or didnt meet their expectations. The second two tap into feelings.Julies digging into her kids responses aims for the same result. For both moms, their initial questions about highs and lows get the kids talking about the biggest moments of their day, which are often the easiest to verbalize. But the follow-ups address their day in emotional terms- something kids dont always know how to do on their own.Jennifer tells her kids, I dont want you to hide being sad, and I dont want you to hide being happy. I want you to share those feelings.Things Youre Grateful ForAnd Jennifers fifth question?What are you thankful for?Often, its the same things every day- family, friends, teachers- but it helps her kids reflect on their day through the lens of gratefulness. Its also a valuable part of their routine, and routine is comforting.Theyve gotten so accustomed to it, that if I give them a choice between reading or answering the questions, because we dont have a lot of time, they pick the questions, she says.Both moms say these questions help them connect with their kids, and let them know that theyre always there for them- even when theyre at work. And thats something both working parents and their kids can be thankful for.
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