by Become A Nanny: http://www.becomeananny.com/blog/tips-for-teaching-kids-about-compassion/
Helping
your child learn to feel compassion and empathy for others is one of
the most important lessons you can instill in them as a parent.
As
bullying and cruelty become more prevalent, and children and teens are
resorting to extremes to find relief from the torment of their peers,
helping your child to understand how important it is to respect the
feelings of others can make a very real difference in the world around
her.
While it’s not always easy to help a child grasp such an abstract
concept, there are steps you can take, as a family, to make the concept
of being compassionate more understandable.
Model Compassionate Behavior
Just as your child
learns to mimic your mannerisms and speech patterns, she’ll also take
most of her cues about how to treat her peers, elders, animals and the
environment from you as well. Making a conscious effort to model
compassionate, altruistic behavior in everyday life is one of the most
effective ways of ensuring that your child also learns to behave in such
a manner.
When your child sees you treat the world around you with
compassion, she will instinctively follow the shining example you’ve set
for her.
Take Opportunities to Talk about Caring for Others
When your child is confronted with images of violence, cruelty or
bullying through television, movies and even her everyday interactions
with the world, it’s important to take the opportunity to talk about how
she thinks the victims of those actions feel and how she might be able
to help.
With these examples to examine as points of reference, a
largely abstract notion can become more concrete and easier to
understand. Take the time to discuss empathy and compassion every day,
especially when events or images bring the issue to the forefront.
Volunteer as a Family
Spending time as a family
performing volunteer work can give your child not only an up close and
personal view of compassion and empathy in action, but also the
satisfied feeling that comes with making a positive difference in the
world.
Making an effort to choose volunteer activities based upon your
child’s existing interests, the age-appropriateness of the tasks
involved, and her ability to immediately see a perceptible difference
due to her actions can help your child understand that helping others is
both important and rewarding.
Working together as a family can also
strengthen bonds, give you an opportunity to continuously model
compassionate behavior, create talking points for later discussion, and
allow you to monitor what she’s exposed to in the course of her
volunteer work.
Teach Kids to Stand Up to Bullying
While your
child should understand that it’s never acceptable to approach a bully
in a confrontational or violent manner, and that retaliation isn’t a
solution to the problem of bullying, you should also encourage her to
make an effort to stand up to school bullies in a compassionate and
productive way.
Reporting harassment of another child to school
authorities, making an effort to befriend children that aren’t easily
accepted by their peers, and never engaging in bullying activities are
all effective ways of combating the problem without retaliation.
It’s
also important to explain that standing aside and doing nothing to
assist a victim of bullying or laughing at cruel pranks is the same as
condoning the treatment her classmate is receiving.
Donate Outgrown Toys and Clothes
When your child
outgrows her toys and clothing while they’re still in serviceable shape,
it’s a good idea to get her involved in the sorting and packing
process, and then let her accompany you when you go to make a donation.
Seeing that the belongings she no longer needs are finding good use in a
needy home can instill the importance of charitable giving, and ease
any pangs of separation anxiety she feels.
Practice Random Acts of Kindness
Keeping your
eyes open for small acts of unexpected kindness that you and your child
can perform together can not only help her understand the concept of
altruism, but can also help to make it an everyday practice. Look for
ways that you and your child can help whenever you’re out together; in
no time, she’ll be spotting potential random acts of kindness herself.
While it’s not always a popular notion with harried parents, allowing
your child to keep a pet can provide her with an everyday incentive to
be compassionate and caring for a living being that needs her help to
survive. Smaller pets, like fish or hamsters, can be just as effective
as dogs or cats.
Depending on your living situation and schedule
constraints, adopting a pet for your child to take responsibility for
can be another very effective way of passing along a lesson in
compassion.
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