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For many,
being a parent is part and parcel of married life. Parenting can
be said to be one of the most difficult as well as rewarding job
that a person can have. What makes parenting even more challenging
is the fact that the majority of us are never prepared for how our
kids will turn to be. In life, we do not have a school that we can
go to and graduate as a parent. Many times, we learn to do things
through trail and error or follow the footsteps of our own
parents. Nevertheless, we find that parenting, much to our horror,
is not only about providing food and shelter for our kids but also
about nurturing them to be better than who we are. It is here that
many of us as parents meet our biggest obstacles as our kids never
seem to understand the words that come out from our mouth even
though we speak the same language call English.
No doubt many
parents face this problem as their children grow older. The gap in
communication becomes wider and wider with age and we find that
out kids turn to their peers more than to us as parents for
counsel. The upside of things is that parenting need not be an
uphill struggle between your child and yourself. With the proper
strategy and right frame of mind, we as parents do have the power
to help shape our children lives positively. The key lies in being
able to communicate with them coherently and I find the book by
Adam Khoo and Gray Lee called “Nurturing the Winner & Genius in
Your Child” an extremely helpful and informative book in this
respect.
Adam Khoo, a
best seller author and peak performance trainer, and co author
Gray Lee, a certified Neuro-Linguistic Programming™ (NLP) trainer
and an MBTITM accredited facilitator have put together an
excellent book that helps explain why our children behave the way
they are. Together, these two highly qualified individuals have
trained and empowered over 350,000 people to change their lives
for the better. Their highly successful Superkids™, ‘I
Am Gifted So Are You!™’,‘Patterns of Excellence™’ and
‘Wealth Academy™’ programs have already been adopted in
several countries in South East Asia.
This book was
written based on the premise that the positive development of a
child is built upon on mutual active participation between the
parents and the child. This is where this book differs from most
of the other books regarding child development. As a parent
myself, I have to confess that at times, due to the stress of
modern life, we tend to overlook the emotional needs of our
children because we took it for granted that they understand the
adult world. I also have to admit that the time I invested into
reading this book did indeed enlighten me about several aspects of
parenting which never crossed my mind. One of the most powerful
concepts that I was able to grasp was that in order for us to
successfully develop our children mindset positively, is that the
changes have to come from within us first. Adam Khoo calls this
concept “Reframing the Mind”.
“Reframing
the Mind” basically refers to changing the negative mindset
and perception of a child to one that is positive in order that
the child can be empowered and grow in self esteem. And this takes
place at the contextual and as well as the content level of a
particular situation. The book was able to clearly illustrate how
this reframing of the mind works on both the parent and the child.
For example, on the parental level, when a child complain that it
is useless to further his or her studies and he or she prefer to
start working early, our response as parent should not be to
ignore their emotions and give them a typical response like
“Are you crazy?” Instead the book advices us as a parent to
first reframe our mind and approach the situation differently by
recognizing and respecting the perception of their world.
In addition,
the book is also filled with exercises that help parents to unlock
the potential in their children mind. For example, in Chapter 2 of
the book, it explains how we were all born with the innate
potential to be geniuses and using the transformational exercises
contain in the book, we can actually “unlock” our children
learning potential. The book also uses Adam Khoo when he was young
as an example. Using techniques like ‘Whole Brain Learning’,
‘Accelerated Learning’, ‘Mind Mapping’, ‘Brain Optional Learning’,
‘Super Memory Techniques’ and ‘Speed Reading’, he
transformed himself from being a slow learner into a gifted
student.
Overall the
book is well written and well laid out. The concepts and
philosophy put forward are explained clearly. And written with a
personal tone and at times humorous, it is easy to relate to what
the authors are trying to say. This is not surprising as the book
also reveal the authors own personal challenges and experiences in
their lives making reading this book all the more interesting and
enjoyable. At times, I cannot help but laugh at what the book
pointed out to me as a parent especially when it comes to the ways
that we had reprimanded our children.
Our world
today has changed tremendously from what it used to be. The ways
we communicate with each other have also changed in ways that we
could not even imagine 20 years ago. During our childhood years,
we were playing with diecast toys or stuffed dolls for the girls;
children today have computer games that are networked all over the
world. At a single click of the mouse, they can reach out to
almost anyone on the internet. Yet, despite all the conveniences
of modern communication technologies, we find ourselves drifting
further and further apart from our children. Ask yourself this,
does your child spend more time on the computer or with you? This
is one of the key issues that this book did point out me to me
while I was perusing through it.
Computer
games addiction is a very common theme among youngster nowadays.
We adults can never fully understand why as we have never
experienced the kind of “stress” that children nowadays go
through. Chapter 1 of the book helped me to understand the reason
behind the allure of computers games to children. One of the
reasons is that, children used computer games as a form of
regaining control of their lives although sadly within the
confines of the virtual world. And this in turn, teaches children
that instant gratification is the norm of life today. Unlike
before, we were taught appreciate the principle of delayed
gratification. With the exercises laid in the book, we can
actually discover the “root” causes of the problems faced by our
children and deal with them accordingly.
Unless we as
parents take the first initiative to learn to understand our
children better from their point of view, we will never to able to
bridge this communication gap. We cannot use the methods which our
parents brought us up with and impose them on own our children.
The world then as we know it is no longer as it used to be. With
that, we ourselves must realize that the old ways of parenting are
no longer applicable in our modern world. To nurture the
development of our children positively, we ourselves need to, as
Adam Khoo says, “Reframe our Mind” first. And that first
step starts by reading “Nurturing the Winner & Genius in Your
Child” and learning new strategies for effective parenting.
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