Help Your Childs Self Esteem

twins' self esteem
twins’ self esteem

 

If you are like most parents you want your child to have a healthy sense of self-esteem.

It seems that many believe that many of society’s problems stem from the low self-esteem of people while they were a child. So we need to help your child’s self-esteem

 

Which would not be far-fetched. Many experts in the child development area generally agree that parents and other adults who are important to children play a major role in laying a solid foundation for a child’s self-esteem development.

 

Many teachers and parents of young children all see the need for good self-esteem in children. What that usually means is that children should feel good about themselves.

 

With young children, self-esteem refers to the extent to which they expect to be accepted and valued by the adults and peers who are important to them. There are ways to help your child’s self-esteem in many ways.

 

In young children, self-esteem is a self-fulfilling prophecy. When children are confident about or feel confident about their social, physical and intellectual success then is more likely that they will succeed in these areas of life.

 

It appears that children that feel less confident have more feel that they will fail or are more likely to fail. Children that have a healthy sense of self-esteem feel that they are accepted more by the people who care about them.

They feel that those adults would be upset if anything happened to them and would miss them if they were separated.

 

Children with low self-esteem, on the other hand, feel that the important adults and peers in their lives do not accept or care about them very much.

 

In the child, early life self-esteem can be related to their perception of how important adults in their lives judge them.

 

Early in life, the foundations of self-esteem are laid with the development and attachments with the adults who are responsible for them.

 

When a child cries and an adult readily respond with their needs so they tend to feel valued and loved.

 

Children come to feel loved and accepted by being loved and accepted by people they look up to.

 

As young children learn to trust their parents and others who care for them to satisfy their basic needs, they gradually feel wanted, valued, and loved.

You can always help your child develop and maintain healthy self-esteem by helping him cope with defeat as well as success in life.

 

In the moment of failure remind your child that you still love and support him and always will. Later, when the initial emotional response has passed, talk with your child about the situation.

Sometimes, it is important to point out that most people are not good at everything they try.

Tell them we are all human and no one is perfect so everyone will have success and failures in life.

 

Show them, LOVE!!!