Posts Tagged ‘Parenting’

The Parenting Aspergers Resource Guide Volume 2

The much awaited follow to The Parenting Aspergers Resource Guide. It covers the 7 Most Common Problem Areas for Children with Aspergers and How To Cope with Them.
The Parenting Aspergers Resource Guide Volume 2

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    Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by admin - September 22, 2011 at 2:42 pm

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    Parenting Book – How To Parent Together!

    Parenting Book By Parent / Child Relationship Expert Helps Parents With Discipline, Step Parenting & Blended Family Issues.
    Parenting Book – How To Parent Together!

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      Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by admin - September 18, 2011 at 8:46 am

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      Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by - May 30, 2010 at 6:00 pm

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      Four Common Sports Parenting Challenges

      I’m a youth soccer coach and sports mom/stepmom to four young athletes aged 8 to 19. Our kids dance, skate, ski, run cross-country, and play soccer, lacrosse, football and basketball.

      As a sports parent, I’ve dealt with sports kids who:

      1. Are stars in practice but choke up during competition (and then get angry at themselves).

      2. Worry too much about what their coaches and teammates think of them.

      3. Don’t know how to communicate with coaches who give negative feedback.

      4. Feel pressured to play—even when they’re sick or injured.

      These are just a few of the tough situations I’ve faced over the past 14 years, since our oldest first began playing sports at age five, These are challenging situations, and I can tell you, the answers aren’t easy to come by!

      For example, what do you say to a child or teen who regularly gets angry at himself for making mistakes during a game?

      You can help your child modify his expectations about making mistakes. Sometimes kids try to be too perfect on the playing fields and expect to not make any mistakes. Modifying their expectations can help them perform without the burden of constant frustration.

      Every day as sports parents, you face so many other tough—and interesting—situations. Believe me, how you react to these issues is critical to your child’s self-confidence and success as an athlete! (I’ve made enough mistakes to know).

      One really important challenge for kids in sports today is a phenomenon called social approval. Young athletes with social approval challenges focus too much on what they think others may or may not be thinking about them. We also call this mind reading because young athletes have no idea about what others are really thinking!

      They often make things up and things that are not really positive or confidence-enhancing. It’s your job as a sports parent to be aware of such mental game challenges. You can become the “mental game” coach in ways that boost your kids’ confidence and happiness in sports.

      Award winning parenting writer Lisa Cohn and Youth Sports Psychology expert Dr. Patrick Cohn are co-founders of The Ultimate Sports Parent. Pick up their free e-book, “Ten Tips to Improve Confidence and Success in Young Athletes” by visiting http://www.youthsportspsychology.com


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      Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by admin - March 13, 2010 at 6:38 pm

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      Parenting and Sports for Your Kids

      Understanding what your child needs and giving them insight into what will help them out the most is an important part of learning to raise a child. Sometimes, this is not seen as easily as others, but it is important to keep the right influences in perspective. As a parent, one of the best things you can give your child is the ability to decide whether they want to play in sports. 

      Sometimes, encouraging your child to join a sport isn’t as easy as it looks. Of course, as a parent, you understand the benefits of them going outside and being part of a physical activity. Most likely, you have also seen the benefits of working on a team and working towards accomplishing goals that are in sports specifically. This is important to keep in perspective with what your child needs. Even though you may see it as beneficial, it may not be to their benefit. 

      One of the most detrimental things you can do to your kid is force them to take a sport. At first, it is good to encourage them to try, and make your best efforts to getting them to all of the practices and all of the games. It is your position and your role to make sure that they participate in a physical activity, and specifically a sport, if you believe that it will be good for their mental and physical health. 

      The perspective of this is how much you should encourage your child to join a sport. If you force them to go to the sport, it may turn them off from physical activity. You will want to see why the child or youth doesn’t want to join a sport, and find alternative routes to help them get physical activity. This can help them to overcome any problems they might be having with the physical sport. The important key is to help them find something that they love to play in order to enhance their physical activities. 

      If you want to make sure that your child is getting the exercise that they need, as well as some fundamental values, then encouraging them to join a sport is one of the best ways to do this. However, when you do this, you will want to make sure that you are offering them what is needed by them both physically and mentally. This will help to give them the support they need and encourage them to participate in the sport whole heartedly and effectively.

      Read about how to play lacrosse and history of lacrosse at the Lacrosse Rules website.


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      Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by admin - March 12, 2010 at 11:18 pm

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      Top Ten Sports Parenting Success Strategies to Help Maximize your Child’s Sports Experience

      Do you have strategies in place to help your child succeed in their sport? Do you have a plan to be the best sports parent possible? What are you doing now that helps your child reach their fullest potential?

      As President of The International Mental Game Coaching Association, one of my goals is to spread the concepts of mental toughness and self-coaching throughout the world. I want children to become more self-reliant, have higher self-esteem, make better decisions, learn better judgment, manage their stress, engage the zone in performance and achieve to their full potential. As their parent, you are an integral part of this success path.

      Here are some sports parenting success strategies you can use to help your child.

      1. Create a supportive, organized environment the day of competitions.

      2. Help them get enough practice before games to make their performance automatic and confident.

      3. Manage their schedule so they have balance between sports, school and social activities.

      4. Reduce their overall life stress so they can be refreshed and relaxed going into practices and games.

      5. Help them create and maintain realistic expectations about their sport.

      6. Be a great listener and be empathic when they need to share strong emotions, especially after a loss.

      7. Get to know their coaches, and understand their coaching styles, systems and expectations, and help your child work within these.

      8. Make sports participation fun and stress learning and life lessons.

      9. Allow your child to make as many of their own sports decisions as possible, and to learn from those decisions. Don’t shield them from the reality of their behaviors. Allow natural consequences to teach them about the world.

      10. View sports as a life-long learning process, one that you and your child can share.

      So there you have it, the top 10 success strategies sports parents can use to make their kids experiences in sport excellent.

      To read our companion article, The Fears Kids Have In Sport: How Parents Can Help Their Child Succeed In Sports
By Identifying And Processing Their Child’s Mental
And Emotional Concerns, go here:

      http://www.mentalgamecoaching.com/IMGCAArticles/ParentsAndSports/KidsFearsInSport.html

      For a comprehensive overview of your child’s mental abilities you need an assessment instrument that identifies their complete mental strengths and weaknesses. For a free, easy-to-take sports psychology assessment tool, visit:
http://www.mentalgamecoach.com/Assessments/MentalGameOfSports.html



      We also offer extensive resources with which to improve your child’s entire mental game.

      Bill Cole, MS, MA is one of the world’s leading mental game coaches who consults with athletes of all levels including children, amateurs and professionals. Mr. Cole is the founder and President of the International Mental Game Coaching Association, the global leader in certification of mental game coaches. Read over 400 free articles on sports psychology at http://www.mentalgamecoaching.com/index.html or call 408-294-2776 for more information.


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      Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by admin - March 8, 2010 at 3:10 pm

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      20 Mistakes Sports Parents Make With Their Kids: Don’t Fall Into These Sports Parenting Traps

      How is your sports relationship with your child? Are you supporting your child in their sport the way they need to be nurtured? Do you understand your child’s sport experience? Do you create an environment that helps develop your child through their sport career? As founder and President of The International Mental Game Coaching Association I certify coaches, coach kids and adults and consult to parents, coaches and officials. I continually hear about parents who make numerous mistakes in their desire to achieve sports success. I’ve been coaching for over 35 years and have seen these issues up close and personal. Take a look at these common mistakes parents make with their child’s sports experiences. How many of these would your child say you make? How many of these can you avoid making?

      As President of The International Mental Game Coaching Association, one of my goals is to spread the concepts of mental toughness and self-coaching throughout the world. I want children to become more self-reliant, have higher self-esteem, make better decisions, learn better judgment, manage their stress, engage the zone in performance and achieve to their full potential.

      20 Mistakes Parents Make With Their Kids In The World Of Sport

      1. Lecturing their child about the sport’s techniques and strategies when they never played the sport, or played at a low level.

      2. Criticizing, judging or lecturing their child about their performance under pressure when they themselves have never competed, or competed at a low level, and do not understand the pressures of competition.

      3. Failing to create a supportive, organized environment the day of competitions.

      4. Treating officials and staff with less than full respect.

      5. Rushing their child’s early sport technique development, when that should be the slowest, most careful period of all, to gain solid fundamentals that last a lifetime, which don’t need to be corrected later in their career.

      6. Placing unwanted pressure on their child by framing competitions as being “Must win”, “Can’t lose”, “An important event”, “Critical competition”, and the like.

      7. Pushing their child into a sport or competition before they are ready.

      8. Failing to see the value of sports lessons as preparation for life itself.

      9. Allowing their child to get away with poor behavior by making excuses for it, or by failing to exert parental standards.

      10. Failing to match their child’s sport choice to their temperament, sensibilities, talents and values.

      11. Projecting their own insecurities, worries and nervousness about their child’s performance onto their child, especially before a competition.

      12. Not allowing their child to own their sport experience, and thereby learn from their mistakes, and instead doing everything for their child.

      13. Performing a post-competition analysis sooner than their child would like it.

      14. Asking “Did you win?” after a competition, rather than saying something that carries less pressure.

      15. Failing to listen and to allow their child to process their feelings after a difficult practice or stressful competition.


      16. Smothering their child, by hovering around every sport activity their child attends, from practices to training session to competitions (known as being a Helicopter Parent).

      17. Failing to support or respect the coaching staff.

      18. Displaying poor sportsmanship.


      19. Failing to be a role model for the behaviors they want their children to display.

      20. Taking it as personal criticism when their child makes requests for them to modify their parenting behavior.

      So there you have it, the 20 mistakes sports parents make with their kids. To see our larger article with the 77 mistakes parents make, go here:

      http://www.mentalgamecoaching.com/IMGCAArticles/ParentsAndSports/MistakesParentsMake.html

      For a comprehensive overview of your child’s mental abilities you need an assessment instrument that identifies their complete mental strengths and weaknesses. For a free, easy-to-take sports psychology assessment tool, visit:
http://www.mentalgamecoach.com/Assessments/MentalGameOfSports.html



      We also offer extensive resources with which to improve your child’s entire mental game.

      Bill Cole, MS, MA is one of the world’s leading mental game coaches who consults with athletes of all levels including children, amateurs and professionals. Mr. Cole is the founder and President of the International Mental Game Coaching Association, the global leader in certification of mental game coaches. Read over 400 free articles on sports psychology at http://www.mentalgamecoaching.com/index.html or call 408-294-2776 for more information.

      Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by admin - March 4, 2010 at 8:09 am

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