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Week
3 of April: Unselfishness and Sensitivity
In
Connection with Richard and Linda Eyre
Editor's
Note: This month
the Meridian Family Value of the month is UNSELFISHNESS AND SENSITIVITY.
Click
here to read this month's overview article). Each week during
the month we will post an update in Meridian, illustrating a couple
of the Eyres' favorite methods for teaching the powerful value of
LOVE to each age group. Remember that you can also go to http://www.valuesparenting.com/
for still more ideas and teaching methods. Thanks for your
interest and participation. There are tens of thousands of
parents concentrating on this value this month. It is a way
of saving this disrespectful society of ours ― one family
at a time! Send us your feedback, and if you want a free children's
CD on the value of Honesty, see the instructions at the bottom of
this article.
Methods for Teaching Unselfishness and Sensitivity to Pre-School
Children (second weekly installment on methods)
The “Put
Yourself in the Picture” Game
This game
lets children practice at empathizing with someone they have never
met or spoken to. Watch for pictures in magazines that show
people in situations that are unusual to you and your children.
These could range from a man on a horse in the mountains to a girl
in a magazine clothing ad. Almost any magazine has several pictures
or advertisements that will work for this exercise.
The game
consists of looking at the picture and attempting to describe
how the person in the picture feels. This can start on a
physical level as you try to imagine what he sees and hears, whether
she is cold or warm, and so forth. Then try to go beyond the physical
and speculate how he or she might feel emotionally. Have a discussion
about it. Let each person imagine how the subject feels and express
his or her own observations.
A variation
of the game is to give each player a different picture to study, then
have them give a short speech or write a brief theme on what the
subject feels.
“How Do
You Feel?”
This can
help small children be more aware of their own feelings as well
as those of others. Use the world feel more often, Say, “How
do you feel about…” or “I feel…” Encourage children to use the word
frequently. Discuss feelings whenever the opportunity arises.
Methods for Elementary School Age
The Nose
Watching Game
This game
will further increase children’s awareness of other people. While
on a trip or outing together — or even while shopping or running
errands — see how many different kinds of noses you can observe.
Later discuss the most interesting noses you noticed and how no
two are alike.
The Looking-and-Listening-for-Needs
Game
This can
help children begin focusing the seeing and listening skills on
opportunities for service. Tell the children that this game is an
extension of the nose-watching game. Only this time we’ll be looking
not at people’s noses but at their needs. Explain that needs are
a lot harder to see than noses. To see needs, you have to look hard
and listen hard. Someone might be feeling just a little discouraged
and need some encouragement, or a little insecure and need a compliment.
Or someone might feel left out and need a friend, or useless and
need to be asked to help. or there might be more obvious needs like
a hungry child or a lonely older person.
Select a
day for the game, a day when you can be together for dinner in the
evening. During the day keep track of how many needs you can notice
and identify. Take notes. At dinner that night give reports on those
notes and discuss and compare them.
The Secret-Buddies
Game
This game
helps children shift their attention to another family member and
experience the satisfaction of doing things for that person anonymously.
Put each family member’s name (including parents’) in a hat
and let each person draw a name secretly. Spend the week ahead playing
“secret buddies,” during which each person tries to find little
things he or she can do for his buddy anonymously (from carefully
anonymous notes, compliments, and gifts, to fixing or cleaning secretly).
At the end of the week give a prize for “best deeds” and another
for “best secrecy.”
Methods for Adolescents
Three
Daily Priorities – the Three S’s
This can
help adolescents become effective goal setters and ensure that they
think of extra-centered as well as self-centered possibilities or
goals. Help children get into the habit of spending five minutes
each morning setting up three simple goals for the day ahead:
- The most important thing they
can do that day for school (a particularly important
test, assignment, etc.)
- The single most important thing
they can do for themselves that day (eat well, exercise,
get enough rest, etc.)
- One key thing that they can do
for someone else that day (help a little brother or sister
with something, be nice to an unpopular person at school, pay
a particular person a compliment, etc.)
The idea
is to get children to stop to think about three priorities
for a few moments each day (school, self and service). Just asking
the three questions will help an adolescent get his mind above his
own worries and insecurities. And doing one important thing each
day in each area will give you, the parent, a great many opportunities
for praise and encouragement.
The Listen-and-Paraphrase-and-Add-Feeling
Game
This game
will help improve children’s listening and interpretation skills.
Explain to adolescents that the listening ability your family worked
on earlier is just the start for being able to understand other
people’s feelings. You have to listen, understand, and then try
hard to put yourself into the other person’s shoes and imagine
what he feels.
Then introduce
the following listening game: One family member asks another what
happened to him that day. The second person tells some experience,
and the first person repeats back or paraphrases the experience,
visualizing it as though it had happened to him. He then indicates
how he thinks the other person felt.
For example,
twelve-year-old James says to ten-year-old Pat, “What happened today?”
Pat says, “Oh, we had a math test and I thought it would be easy,
but the teacher asked a lot of questions form the chapter I
didn’t study and hardly any from the chapter I did!”
James responds,
“So you thought you were prepared for the test, because you did
study, but you mostly studied one chapter, and when you took the
test, most of it was on another chapter — one that you hadn’t studied.
I’ll bet you felt kind of frustrated, and maybe you felt a little
bit mad at your teacher for tricking you or for not telling you
what chapter to study.”
It’s surprising
how much children enjoy this kind of discussion (once they get the
hang of it) with their siblings or with their parents.
And there
is no better training for the development of real concern.
See you next
week for more methods.
Closing
Note: Many have asked if there are actual teaching tools to assist
parents in teaching the Meridian family value of the month to their
children. The Eyres have been involved with a series of values-teaching
CDs called Alexander's Amazing Adventures, which give 5-14 year
old children a vicarious (and dramatic) experience with each month's
value. By special arrangement, Meridian readers who have been following
this column and participating in the value of the month can now
receive, as a free gift, the HONESTY CD from this series.
Simply send a self-addressed, stamped 5 X 7 or 8 X 10 envelope (the
padded ones are best) to the Eyres at 1098 Augusta Way, Salt Lake
City, Utah, 84108 and they will send you the gift CD. (You
will need to put $0.87 [87cents] in stamps or postage on your return
envelope.) Please respond only if you have been reading and following
the column, and please do not ask for more than one copy of the
CD. We hope this gift will help make the value-of-the-month
concept even more effective within your family.
© 2006
Meridian Magazine.
All Rights Reserved.
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