Our oldest son has always struggled during the winter months. It’s dark and cold up here in Canada and there’s a long stretch of school between the holidays and his break in April.
His self talk can be pretty negative. He’s so hard on himself, gets frustrated and often it can spiral into a lot of self-doubt and low self-confidence.
The other day as I was getting into the car after a meeting I got a text from my husband:
“He’s having a rough day.”
Usually, if I get a text like this, it means my husband is done and he needs me to be fresh when I walk in the door. More often than not, the roles are reversed (I do it to him all the time) and it’s a great trick we learned in parenting therapy at Connected Parenting.
When I walked into the kitchen, SJ was struggling with homework. His jaw was clenched and he said through his teeth:
“What’s an adjective? Daaaaaaaaddddddd!!!! WHAT’S AN ADJECTIVE????
Anxiety was high. Face was red. Body stiff.
“It’s a word that describes a noun, buddy. “ My husband explained, “It describes a thing. A person, a place or a…”
“NOOOOOOO! NO it’s NOT! It IS the thing!!!! This is asking for an adjective and I’m asking you to tell me what it is! You’re WRONG dad!!! You’re NOT LISTENING.”
My Husband is awesome. He’s a great dad. He’s calm, and engaged, and super patient. But he was getting nowhere. And SJ’s anxiety was rising.
Suddenly I remembered an article that Anabelle Listic wrote for our blog last week. In it, she described how using sticky notes with positive messages around the house really helped to get her through the winter blues .
I know that nonverbal language is almost always really successful in moments of stress; I learned this while I was studying and practicing RDI with my nephew.
I also learned (much to my own dismay) that often, despite the best intentions, the mere sound of my voice at such times was almost always a trigger for my nephew and also for my own son.
I said nothing but took out a sharpie and a stack of stickies and started writing:
“Smart”
“Sweet”
“Creative”
“Kind”
I stuck them on to his arm, chest, homework, and hand.
“Mooooooommmmmm!!!!!” My son screeched. “What are you doing?”
I paused, waited for connection and when I could see he was invested in the answer, I spoke as few words as possible:
“These are adjectives. They describe you.”
As punctuation, I stuck a fifth one, “handsome” right to his forehead.
A giggle. Ice breaker.
Then I wrote the word “stinky” and slapped it on his dad.
A laugh.
Then he started writing his own.
“Can I have these?” he asked
I nodded.
He began to write adjectives, mostly on the “stinky” train of thought. More giggling. His anxiety began to dissolve. Soon he was back at his homework.
Thank-you Anabelle. I forgot how simple things can be somethimes. I know you’re not a parent yet, but one day, you will make a great one.
Awesome! I love this story of smiles.
It was a great moment :) Gotta hold tight to it and remember it next time we hit an impass :)
Wow…that’s a great idea…I’ll have to try this with my 11 yr old asd son :-)
Thanks guys! I was so grateful that Anabelle Listic ‘s voice came into my head right when I needed it the most!
I am going to have to try sticky notes!!! Even with my son, with limited language skills. This would be an icebreaker when anxiety hits.
Always looking for something new to bring to the table…thanks! )))
It was really hard for me to remove verbal communication in the beginning. But it was SO worth it. Everything becomes much more deliberate and meaningful. RDI really helped me with the learning curve and Anabelle reinforced it for me.