Article

Goal-Setting for Kids ~ 3 Parenting Tips for Building a Champion Character

Topic: ParentingBy Jea Tracy, MSSPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 822 legacy views

Legacy rating: 3/5 from 3 archived votes

Goal-Setting is the bridge to success. Success builds character. Inside you’ll find the bridge for seeing, sensing, and saying goals. Use this bridge to help your child build a champion character.

Parenting Advice for Goal-Setting:

"Champions aren't made in the gyms. Champions are made from something deep inside them -- a deep desire, a dream, a vision." Muhammed Ali, an American boxer

Goal-setting is a mental sport. Great athletes see, sense and say their goals. Why not teach your child how to become a champion by rehearsing the vision, the feeling, and the words in one magic moment?

The Goal-Setting Problem:

Let's say your Emma loves to practice her flute. At home her gentle music sends peace throughout the house. Her teacher wants her to play a solo at the school concert. Emma's a nervous wreck just thinking about it. What can you do to calm her down? How can you help Emma build a winning attitude?

First Parenting Tip for Teaching Goal-Setting -- See it Clearly:

Ask Emma to see clearly what her eyes will see when playing her flute at the concert. Perhaps she'll say, "the crowd of adults and kids." That picture could increase her nervousness. You might suggest she see her music stand with a sheet of music. If she likes your suggestion, tell her to take a moment and see it clearly.

Second Parenting Tip for Teaching Goal-Setting -- Sense it Actively:

Ask Emma to create the feeling she would like to have when looking at her music. If she says, "I don't want to be nervous," ask her for the opposite of nervous. If she answers, "not scared," keep asking. You want her to create a positive feeling word. Let's pretend she says, "Confident." Tell her to take a moment or two and experience a confident feeling while mentally picturing the music stand with her music.

Third Parenting Tip for Teaching Goal-Setting -- Say "I am":

Tell Emma to make up a goal sentence beginning with the words, "I am." By beginning the sentence with "I am," Emma is telling her brain that she is playing confidently at the concert right now. Next ask her to complete the sentence. For instance, she might say, "I am playing my flute with confidence."

Goal-Setting -- Putting it Altogether:

Now it's time to put the picture, the feeling, and the words together in a single moment. This could take several tries to accomplish. Here's how:

Tell Emma to imagine seeing the music stand with her music. Then ask her to see them with a confident feeling. When she's done, tell her to see the music stand and music with that same confident feeling while saying, "I am playing my flute with confidence."

Goal-Setting Summary:

When Emma can see, sense, and say her goal altogether in one moment, tell her to practice it every night before she falls asleep and before she rises each morning. This rehearsal is the mental sport that prepares her for becoming a champion.

Why not unleash the champion within your child's character? All it takes is practicing a clear vision with a confident feeling and positive words.

Article author

About the Author

Jean Tracy, MSS publishes a Free Parenting Newsletter. Subscribe at http://www.KidsDiscuss.com and receive 80 fun activities to share with your kids. Teach your kids to be winners with Jean’s Goal Setting Kit at: http://www.kidsdiscuss.com/parent_resource_center.asp?pr_id=kd004

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

Are you tired of disrespectful talk from your kids? Do your children respond with eye-rolling and sarcasm to everything you say? Most—if not all—kids go through phases when they are sassy, mouthy, or disrespectful. As a parent, it’s hard to know when to let it slide—and when to address the problem. James Lehman explains where to draw the line—and tells you how you can manage sassy talk in your home.

Related piece

Article

Remember how you felt when you brought your baby home from the hospital for the first time? When your child was an infant, you probably acknowledged that you were anxious and unsure of what you were doing at times—most new parents are. In my experience, those kinds of feelings continue as we raise our kids—we just stop expressing them to others.

Related piece

Article

When you are at peace with having a baby or not having a baby, then what will be, will be. You will either have one (as you were supposed to) or you will not have one (as it was not meant to be). Accept the fact that God has a plan for your life, which may not include children. If you don’t ...

Related piece

Article

One of the most challenging aspects of being a mom is managing the expectations of yourself and others. Motherhood is a world of compromise, flexibility and negotiations. It’s a balancing act between doing what you want to do and doing what you have to do.

Related piece