I just can't enter the month of Thanksgiving without thinking about appreciation and gratitude. Your mission this week, if you choose to accept it, is to write someone a note of fondness, admiration, appreciation, and/or gratitude. For inspiration, consider this exercise.
The November "Expressing Appreciation" Challenge
Join us on Mondays in November for specific strategies to increase our gratitude practice.
Our family's rituals of connection
Hellos and goodbyes are part of our family's rituals of connection. They say "You are important to me." Each family has their own unique rituals that are important to them. If we are unsure of what rituals we want for our family, we can make some up! Here's a great resource to help us to do that: the rituals of connection card deck in the Gottman Card Decks app.
Instructions (from the app): "Select a card and discuss whether you would like to incorporate the ritual in your relationship, and if so, exactly how it should go, who should do what and when, and how it should end. Be sure to talk about if and why this is important to you, and how this ritual was handled (or mishandled) in your family or in previous relationships."
I think about you when we are apart
How can we let our families know that we think about them when we are apart? This week let's do something for our partner and children that tell them that they are worth thinking about when we are not together. It might be:
- a little, inexpensive gift (their favorite gum or candy, a flower that was pretty, or anything that they would enjoy)
- a text message that just says "I'm thinking of you" and "I'm looking forward to seeing you soon"
Purposeful hellos
What does a great "hello" look like to your family members? A warm hug? A kiss? Words of affirmation? What says to them "You are special to me. I missed you. You matter."? Do they need a few minutes to unwind or do they need to connect right away?
- Some rituals to consider here
- Kids often like to have choices about how they are greeted. This is respectful and is a form of abuse prevention by teaching them that they can control the way that they are touched. Here are some fun examples from Dr. Becky Bailey's Conscious Discipline program.
Great goodbyes
The challenge this month is to share greetings and goodbyes that show our family members how important they are to us. Our goal this week is to say goodbye with an "I love you. Have a great day! I will be thinking about you, and I am looking forward to being together again." A few great goodbye resources:
- The song "My Mama Comes Back" by Lou Gallo
- The (kids) book "The Kissing Hand" by Audrey Penn, and the song "A Kiss In My Pocket" by David Kisor
- The (parenting) book "I Love You Rituals" by Dr. Becky Bailey
- Transition rituals
Greetings from Seattle
I am so thankful to be here and part of this amazing training. I’m a Bringing Baby Home Training Specialist in training!! I taught my sections and it was great! Thanks and congratulations to this new group of Bringing Baby Home educators!
First day as a training specialist in training!
Special announcement! I’m in Seattle today and super thankful for the opportunity to join the Gottman Training Specialists to lead the next group of future Bringing Baby Home educators. I’m officially in training as an upcoming Bringing Baby Home Training Specialist! Hope to post pictures tomorrow! Woo hoo!
Greetings & Goodbyes: the 6 second kiss
The challenge this month is to share rituals of connection within our families.
We start by sharing greetings and goodbyes that show our family members how important they are to us. So this week, when you say hello or goodbye to your partner, make the kiss a good one! Aim for a 6 second kiss! Check out this video for inspiration. Although I don't know this lady, her video is inspiring!
Open Ended Questions: What if...
Our goal this month is to improve our skills at asking open ended questions, so that we can get to know one another over time. This week we are getting to know the things that our partner hopes and imagines (the "what if's". Here are some questions to get you started:
- If you could live one other person’s life, whose life would you choose and why?
- If you could live during any other time period in history, when would you choose to live and why?
- What do you imagine your life would be like if you lived 100 years from now?
- If you could design the perfect house for us, what would it look like?
- If you could choose any other career or vocation other than what you do now, what would you choose and why?
- If you could wake up tomorrow with three new skills in which you excelled, what would they be and why?
- If you could change into any animal for 24 hours, what would it be and why?
- If you could live in any other country but your home country, which would you pick and why?
- If you could experience being any other person for 24 hours, who would you pick and why?
Check out the Gottman Card Decks app for more.
Or improve your skills at Bringing Baby Home on October 13-14.
Open Ended Questions: The Future
Our goal this month is to improve our skills at asking open ended questions, so that we can get to know one another over time. This week we are getting to know each other's hopes for the future. Here are some questions to get you started:
What do you want your life to be like in, say, three years from now?
How do you see your work changing in the future?
How do you feel about our physical home? Any architectural changes you’d like to make?
What kind of person do you think our child(rent) will become? Any fears? Any hopes?
What are your biggest worries about the future?
What goals do you have for our family?
What goals do you have just for yourself right now?
Where would you like to travel?
What adventures would you like to have before you die?
Check out the Gottman Card Decks app for more.
Or improve your skills at a Bringing Baby Home class, including a new class starting January 24, 2022.
Open Ended Questions: The Present
Our goal this month is to improve our skills at asking open ended questions, so that we can get to know one another over time. This week we are getting to know each other's daily experience in the present. Here are some questions to get you started:
- Is our child like anyone in your family? Who?
- How do you think we could have more fun in our life?
- Who are your best allies and close friends right now? How have they or you changed?
- How have your friendships changed lately? Have you grown closer to some friends? More distant from others?
- Who in your life is most stressful for you? Why?
- What do you need right now in a friend?
- What things are missing in your life?
- Have your goals in life changed recently?
- What are some of your life dreams now?
- What would you change about our finances right now?
- What kind of year has this been for you? Tell me the story of your proudest moment.
- How do you feel about your family right now? Have these feelings changed lately?
- How do you feel about work right now?
- How are you feeling about being a mother/father?
- What do you find exciting in life right now?
- What is one way you would like to change?
Check out the Gottman Card Decks app for more.
Or improve your skills at a Bringing Baby Home class. (Now available: October 13-14, 2018 class in San Jose, CA)
Open Ended Questions: The past
Our goal this month is to improve our skills at asking open ended questions, so that we can get to know one another over time. This week we are getting to know each other's past. Here are some questions to get you started:
- How would you compare yourself as a mother/father to your own mother/father?
- How have you changed in the last year?
- What legacy do you want our family to take from your family? From your culture?
- What are some unfulfilled things in your life?
- How has your outlook in life changed in the past 2 years?
- What were the highlights and low-lights of your adolescence?
- If you could re-do any decade of your life, which decade would you choose and why?
- How have you changed as a daughter or son?
- How have you changed as a brother or sister?
- What relatives have you felt closest to and why?
- Who has been the most difficult person in your life (other than a partner or spouse) and why?
- Who was your childhood hero or heroine and why?
Are we partners? Or enemies?
When we need something, it is easy to look at our partner as the enemy instead of as a teammate. How can we work together as one team fighting against the issues that come up this week? How can we give our partner the benefit of the doubt? How can we look for ways to find compromise when our needs are in conflict? How can we use conflict as an opportunity to better understand who we are and what we need? Are there ways that we can take responsibility for our part of the problem? In the Bringing Baby Home curriculum, John Gottman says that these questions can reduce our partner's potential defensiveness because we are kicking the problem around together. We are working together as a team instead of against one another.
Gentle start-up: a key to expressing needs respectfully
According to the Gottmans' research, the way a conversation starts is likely the way that it will end. So if we start with criticism or contempt, we are likely to end with defensiveness or stonewalling. But if we start gently, we are more likely to have a productive conversation. Some keys to a gentle start-up include: expressing appreciation; making statements that start with "I", such as "I'm upset" or "I'm angry"; describing the facts of the situation; and clearly describing what we need. Check out this video from Julie Gottman to hear more.
Appreciation: a key to being heard
According to Dr. Gottman’s research, the masters of relationship had 20 times more positive interactions than negative interactions during everyday interactions, and five times more positive than negative interactions during times of conflict. Our ratio of positive to negative interactions is strong when our relationships are full of fondness, affection, gratitude and humor. When we create rituals that build gratitude and affection for one another, we are putting our relationship in what Dr. Gottman calls “the positive perspective”. When our relationships are in the positive perspective, we are more able to hear our partner’s needs.
When expressing our needs, it can be helpful to include what we appreciate and what we admire about the other person. When we express that, we can help our partner be able to hear us.
When we are deeply entrenched in the negative perspective, or when our needs have been building up, it can be hard to stop and express appreciation. In his book Love and Respect, Dr. Emerson Eggerichs describes this pattern as “the crazy cycle.” He says that when a man feels disrespected, he responds without love. When a woman feels unloved, she responds without respect. He says that the one who considers him/herself more mature should be the one who takes the first step towards expressing love and respect.
Expressing needs: calm down first
I wanted to start our expressing needs challenge with a quick reminder that it’s really hard to think clearly or have empathy for our families when we are physically upset (Dr. Gottman calls it “flooded”). If we notice that our heart rates are high and our bodies are tense, we may need to start off by taking a good break. What is the nature of a good break? It is at least 20 minutes long. It is thinking about something else besides the argument. By the time the break is over, our bodies are physically relaxed, and our hearts and minds are calm.
The August Challenge: Expressing Needs Clearly and Respectfully
The August "Expressing Needs Clearly & Respectfully" Challenge: https://mailchi.mp/3768881f81c2/aug-2018-expressing-needs-clearly-and-respectfully-challenge
Obstacles to filling emotional bank accounts: distraction
As adults, many conflicts begin when our needs go unmet. Maybe we express our need when our partner is busy doing something else. Or perhaps we feel scared that our partner won't be willing or able to meet our need, so we don't express it or we use hints to "test the waters." A key strategy of the Gottman Bringing Baby Home program is to express our needs clearly and regularly so that they don't build up or escape our mouths as criticism or contempt. (Dr. Gottman calls this a negative bid - expressing our bid, or request, in a negative way).
Interestingly, babies have similar strategies that they use when their bids are not met. Check out the videos below to see how babies act when they make a bid (express a need) and their parent does not respond.
So there are 3 things to consider here:
- to slow down and become more aware of the ways that our partners and our babies express their needs,
- to express our own needs clearly and with appreciation,
- and to make an effort to turn off our cell phones when we are spending time with those that we love so that we can be present in the moment.
See also: The dangers of distracted parenting
Baby Cues
This month we are exploring how to build our family’s emotional bank account by responding to each other’s needs. We are working to become more aware of how we each express our needs (bids). This week we are exploring the ways that infants and toddlers express their needs. We know that in the early stages of language development, parents have to be the detective to figure out what the cries, sounds, and movements mean. Over time, babies figure out that they can use their cries, sounds, and movements to have an impact on the people in their world. “They don’t realize that these sounds and actions have any meaning until their caregivers consistently respond to them. In this way, children gradually learn that the messages they send without words have an effect on other people, and they start to send these messages intentionally.” (http://www.hanen.org/Helpful-Info/Articles/Why-Interaction-Must-Come-Before-Language.aspx) So as we respond to our children’s sounds, gestures, facial expressions, and movements, we are filling their emotional bank accounts, teaching them that the world is a safe place, and also laying the foundation for future communication development.
Here are some additional resources to help us to improve our skills at reading our children’s cues:
Understanding Your Baby's Cues (YouTube video)
Baby Cues that Say "I'm Tired" (article with video)
Tired Signs in Infants and Toddlers (article with video)
