How to help your child thrive

Claire Small
Authored by Claire Small
Posted Monday, May 25, 2020 - 10:48am

Helping your child thrive means fighting for them; it means bonding with them and encouraging trust, and it also means teaching them the right values right from the start. It can be difficult, but with these three pillars, your child will thrive no matter the obstacle.

Fight for Your Child

Not every child will be perfect, whole, and healthy. Birth defects occur; sometimes the brain is overactive. There are endless challenges that people face during childhood that they may or may not grow out of.

All of this can be difficult to deal with, but if you have the added burden of guilt, it can feel near impossible.

Some birth defects and learning disorders are genetic and there is nothing anyone could have done. Others? When it is the fault of your medical practitioner that your child suffers for their entire life, then you need to fight for your child.

Birth injuries, even deaths, are far more common than you think, and you need to fight for the compensation you can earn by hiring a professional like Diane Rostron, birth injury lawyer. This isn’t to extract payback; it’s to get the money you need to pay for additional support systems that they will need to adapt and lead a relatively normal life.

Fighting so that your child can get the best care to help them with any difficulty is how individuals thrive. How this looks compared to others does not matter, so long as they grow strong.

Encourage Open Communication

One thing every parent of a teenager will tell you is that they start to shut you out. It is a natural part of maintaining independence and most will grow out of it. Or rather, if you have a strong, supportive bond with your child they will grow out of it. They will learn to rely on you more as equals than as an authority figure. 

In order to encourage this supportive bond you need to encourage open communication. Make it obvious that they can turn to you if they are feeling unwell, if they don’t know what is happening with them, if they are drunk at a party and don’t have a ride home. You need to be the one they turn to, because with a strong enough support system, they can truly open their wings and fly.

Teach Your Child

There is so much that you can teach your child that they won’t ever learn in school. One of the first things you should try to teach is that everyone makes mistakes and that there are ways to handle it when they do. Projecting an image of perfection can make it difficult for kids to open up when they have done something wrong because they see a mistake as the ultimate failure.

Teach your kids the right values, and learn with them. Even in a non-philosophical sense, learning alongside them can be excellent to help you bond and expand their skillset. Take an art class together and show your child how much fun it is to learn throughout their life. Expand their understanding of the world, and more importantly, what they enjoy doing in it.

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