Parenting Difficult
Children
online conference transcript
Howard Glasser, M.A.
is our guest and talks
about coping with a child who has a behavioral disorder like Oppositional
Defiance Disorder (ODD) or Conduct Disorder (CD). Mr. Glasser is the executive
director of the Tucson Center for the Difficult Child and is the author of Transforming the Difficult Child: The Nurtured Heart
Approach.
David
is the
HealthyPlace.com
moderator.
The people in green are audience members.
David: Good
Evening. I'm David Roberts. I'm the moderator for tonight's conference. I want
to welcome everyone to HealthyPlace.com. Our topic tonight is "Parenting
the Difficult Child." Our guest is Howard
Glasser, M.A., Executive Director of both the Tucson Center for the
Difficult Child and the Children's Success Foundation and is the author of
Transforming the Difficult Child: The Nurtured Heart
Approach.
Mr. Glasser maintains that most ordinary methods
of parenting and teaching inadvertently backfire when applied to
Attention Deficit Disorder (ADHD) and other challenging
children (like those with Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) and Conduct
Disorder (CD), despite the best of intentions. Mr. Glasser says his approach,
which he claims achieves great results almost always without the need for
medications or long-term treatment, works the best.
Good evening, Mr. Glasser and welcome to
HealthyPlace.com. We
appreciate you being our guest tonight. So we're all on the same track, could
you please define for us the phrase: "difficult child?"
Howard
Glasser: I like the word, intense. A child can be intense for
many reasons, such as emotional, temperament, neurological or biochemical
reasons. It almost doesn't matter, they are simply overwhelmed with the
intensity that they have.
David: In
your book, you mention that one of the common themes of these "difficult
children" is that they become stuck in patterns of negativity that they
can't seem to get out of. First, what do you mean by that? And, secondly, why
do they get stuck in these patterns?
Howard
Glasser: The teacher and the parent really decide if the child is
out of the reach of their strategies when they see the child getting worse.
Some children simply form the impression based on their experiences and
observations that they get more out of people, bigger reactions, more
animation and emotion and excitement, when things are going wrong. Our
responses to positive things are relatively low-key in terms of the
"energy" we radiate. The child feels relatively invisible for the
good things they do and starts to feel more successful when they involve us in
relation to their negativity. They get stuck when they continue to feel,
confirmed by our responses, that the above is true. They are not out to get us,
they are out to get the "energy" and are drawn by the stronger force
of the bigger payoff.
David: The
problem is, for many parents, they try everything under the sun to change the
child's behavior, but the troubling behavior continues. Then the parents become
frustrated, angry, and tired. What's a parent to do under these circumstances,
where nothing seems to work?
Howard
Glasser: Yes, the more the frustration, the bigger the lecture, the
louder the yeller. Thus, the bigger the "reward" to the negativity,
which is the last thing the parent wants to do. It happens very
unintentionally. The trick is to create a much stronger "experience
" of success and response to success.
David: So
what you are saying is very similar to that old parenting adage: "whether
it's a positive or negative response, as long as the child gets a response,
it's better than no response at all."
Howard
Glasser: That's true. It's like a check that has a one followed by
six zeros. The child hasn't checked to see that there's a negative sign in
front of it.
I can give you an example. In the world of
conventional parenting, that does work with easier children. When we ask a
child to do a task and they do, we say "thank you" or "good
job". We're "radiating" a very modest amount of energy. When
they don't follow the instruction, we tend to evolve our response to more high
key reactions.
David: So
maybe you can give us some instructions on how to be "more positive"
with our children?
Howard
Glasser: Normal parenting is the culprit. We subtly give
evidence that the child gets "more" through adversity. First let me
say that "catching children being good" is less than optimal for the
challenging child. At the end of the day, the parent or teacher of a
challenging child only has a few successes to report. It's too
disempowering.
The secret is in having strategies that
literally "create" a powerful level of success. And here are a few
ways to "cheat" in this beneficial manner. I like to confront
children with their successfulness. One great method is to appreciate their
success when the rules are NOT being broken. Therefore, at any given moment,
there is almost always success in this manner. The problem is that we typically
bring up the word "rule" when it's been broken and most adults wind
up richly "rewarding" the child with a lot of energy under those
circumstances. They are definitely not in a receptive mode to hear the message
and we've accidentally deepened their impression that they get more mileage out
of negativity.
I find that complements like "I love the
self-control you are using now by not arguing and not using bad words" not
only gives us much more opportunity to nurture successes, but it gives the
child a chance to experience themselves as successful in relation to the rules
and to feel valued.
David: We
have a lot of audience questions. Let's get to a few of those:
KFIELD: Hi.
I came into this chat tonight because my husband and I really need help with
our 13 year old son. He seems to thrive off the negative and that is a lot of
what he is getting lately. My son has been involved with the juvenile court
system three times since August and he doesn't seem to be learning from it. His
probation officer feels he has no respect for authority and actually thrives
off this negative feedback he is receiving. How do you focus on the positive
without ignoring the negative. I feel like that is giving in?
Howard
Glasser: I agree with you that ignoring the negative is NOT
the answer. The answer is in first playing hardball with successes, while not
giving energy to the negativity WHILE STILL having a simple way of saying
"you broke a rule" and absolutely delivering a consequence. It's
actually not that hard to do. I've worked with over 1,000 court cases in this
age group in the last five years.
David: I bet
for the parents, Mr. Glasser, you have to do a lot of "biting your
tongue" during the negative stuff, at least initially.
Howard
Glasser: The power of a consequence is only optimal when there's a
lot of energy to successes and none to negativity.
snorider:
Mr. Glasser, I understand the "larger reward for success," but then
what does one do about the disagreeable behavior? How does one react to
that?
Howard
Glasser: Once a parent understands that it's so easy to fall in the
trap of feeding the negativity and they take a stand to refuse to do that, it's
really not that hard. Some parents get to be masters at it very quickly.
For example, let me tell you why these kids are
often so great at Nintendo. While the child's playing the game, the world makes
total sense. The incentives are clear and the limits are clear. All the
evidence of success, the bells and whistles and the scoring, happens when
things are both going right and not going wrong. If they break a rule, they
simply get a consequence without the big deal or the energy. That structure
creates a scenario where they want to excel and they don't want to break rules.
We can transpose that to life.
auntamber2:
You mentioned that a child can be intense for many reasons, including
neurological, emotional and biochemical. I would like to understand HOW using
more positive reinforcements can correct biology--if we are dealing with a
severe mental illness (my 9 year old son is bipolar).
Howard
Glasser: I work with ODD (Oppositional Defiant Disorder),
ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) and
Bipolar children all the time. The reversal comes from
strengthening the undeveloped pathways or creating new pathways of health. You
need to believe in the miraculous. I do, because I've seen so many
transformations where a child moves entirely to using their intensity in
positive ways.
David: To
reiterate, you are saying, when it comes to correcting a child's behavior, be
clear, but low-key about it. Save your high energy levels for praising positive
things about your child.
Howard
Glasser: That's a good summary. The only thing I'd add is that a
huge typical approach to negativity is to give a lecture or a stern reprimand.
The parent will always feel that they are being clear. However, from my point
of view: a two minute lecture to a difficult child, no matter how good the
lecture, is two minutes of negative "reward" and a five minute
lecture is five minutes of "reward".
David:
Here's another audience question:
lostime:
What happens if you are throwing a "happy praise parade" for every
success, and still dealing with a kid-o who melts down unpredictably, and
becomes aggressive and violent?
Howard
Glasser: That could happen. Most parents will interpret this as the
praise is not working. On the contrary, it is working but the child has not
quite shifted to believing that they can keep you involved through success.
They don't trust it yet and they simply resort to the old guaranteed way of
getting the bigger responses.
Also, typical praise like "good job"
or "thank you," etc., is definitely not powerful enough for a
challenging child. They need greater proof that they've really been seen and
that they don't have to go to the trouble of acting-out to have you involved
and to not be invisible.
David: Can
you give us an example of the type of praise, then, that would get through to a
challenging child?
Howard
Glasser: Great question! Besides giving recognition when rules
aren't being broken, another powerful way to promote feelings of success is to
be very appreciative of the values you hold; like respect, responsibility, good
attitude, good self-control, etc., when even a glimmer of those things are
happening. The problem is that even though we are all desperately trying to
teach those qualities, we mostly bring those words up when the child has been
disrespectful or irresponsible and we wind up rewarding the very thing we least
want to reward with our energized responses.
I like cheating in this regard. If I walk up to
students, and even when nothing special appears to be happening, I will
confront them with their good choices. For instance: "Billy, I really like
that you are choosing to be respectful right now. You are focused on the work
and you're not getting distracted."
Another example is: "Alex, I appreciate
that you are being responsible right now. You came in the class and got started
on your journal without being told. It's also showing me a good attitude."
I don't want to fall into the trap of waiting for a bad attitude or
irresponsibility to happen for him to feel visable. I don't give the child a
chance to fail. Even a consequence can become a success when used
strategically. I always congratulate a child when they've finished their
consequence and gotten back into control. They still might need to do what they
were asked to do, but they've been successful in getting their consequence
over.
David: Mr.
Glasser's website is here:
http://www.difficultchild.com. We have two excellent sites
that deal with parenting difficult children. One is
Parenting the Challenging
Child. The other is the Child Development Institute.
troubleholt:
My daughter completely failed the 4th grade. She's now been placed in 5th grade
this year. She's doing good even after failing last year. Should I concern
myself with what happened last year or should I go from the here and
now?
Howard
Glasser: I would definitely go on from here. Many teachers are
simply in the same boat of trying to use normal techniques with kids who will
never respond and your daughter's response this year is an indication that the
teacher is skillful and can engage her successfulness.
dogre: My 16
year old son goes to a therapeutic boarding school . He has a diagnosis of
ADD (Attention Deficit Disorder), ODD (Oppositional Defiant
Disorder) and possible Conduct Disorder. No meds now. Could we make this work
for him and how long might it possibly take? How could we accomplish it with
him not living at home?
Howard
Glasser: I worked with several parents of 16 year olds in the same
situation this last summer. They began by promoting the accelerated level of
energizing success on their visits and via the phone. They also began their
stand on refusing to energize negativity while the child was still away.
AJ111: How
do you suggest handling the ODD behavior when the child is out of control,
i.e., screaming, name calling, slamming doors, back talking? I'm not sure of
the best way to handle this and make it clear this is not acceptable.
Howard
Glasser: You must always begin before the incidents, knowing full
well that future incidents will happen. The more intense the child, the more
intense the intervention. With Oppositional Defiant Disorder, what is called
for is a strong or forceful use of giving verbal recognition to the child when
the rules are not being broken. That's how you need to teach the rules, through
successes. Then, to promote successes, you'll need to have some kind of credit
system that's an extension of your mission. When those are in place, then you
are in a position to simply deliver an unceremonious consequence.
Most people are under the false impression that
the harsher the consequence or the more powerfully we reprimand or scold, the
greater the impact. That couldn't be further from the truth. The power of a
consequence comes from the delivery in an unceremonious way. The irony is that
if you get the level of success high enough and remove the response to
negativity, you can have an amazingly simple consequence work. The child has to
test to discover that there's no longer a big response to negativity, only a
result. All the big response now is for various successes.
Zigweegwee:
My 11 year-old son consistently reacts negatively to any positive comments. How
can I get him to desire the positive?
Howard
Glasser: This is not uncommon. He doesn't yet trust that he can keep
you involved through his success and needs you to convince him that he doesn't
any longer need to go to the trouble of being negative to keep you involved. To
be more convincing, you need to make the positives more substantial by using
more specifics and more details. You'll need to do more of them, and to give
more juice to the ones you do through voice quality and putting more heart and
authenticity in your comments of appreciation.
KFIELD: I
don't mean to sound desperate, but if I don't find something that works for my
son between now and January 8th when he is off probation, he will go to
juvenile detention for doing anything wrong and he doesn't seem to understand
that he is the only one who has control over this. He truly believes that no
matter how hard he tries, he will still end up in trouble.
Howard
Glasser: You can create a tremendous turnaround quickly with
strategies that are powerful enough. I can tell you are very motivated and that
will be your best resource. I really recommend reading my book, Transforming the Difficult Child. It will take you
through the steps. It's currently the best-selling book on
ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorderand ODD
(Oppositional Defiant Disorder).
Many people have just read the book and, by
following the recommendations alone, have reported great transformations. The
good news is when an intense child shifts his intensity to success, he become
way above average. The intensity is an asset. That's why I try not to medicate.
It makes the intensity go away and that's a great loss. The outcomes without
meds is so much better. Everyone gets to enjoy the new intensity and best of
all the parent winds up feeling like the hero. Who deserves that honor
more?
Elise123:
Does your approach work for kids with high functioning
autism or other
neurological disorders?
Howard
Glasser: I've used the approach with a few dozen children with
autism and FAS with
very good results.
David: I
want to mention that we have hosted support groups here at
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Thank you, Mr. Glasser, for being our guest
tonight and for sharing this information with us. And to those in the audience,
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Howard
Glasser: Thank you, everyone.
David: Good
night.
Disclaimer: We are not recommending or
endorsing any of the suggestions of our guest. In fact, we strongly encourage
you to talk over any therapies, remedies or suggestions with your doctor BEFORE
you implement them or make any changes in your treatment.
A couple of nights per week, we
hold topical mental health chat conferences. The schedule to this conferences,
and transcripts from previous chats,
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