Friday 30 March 2012

Time Out For Parents. A New Parenting Resource From X plus Y



Warning. Children!

Time Out For Parents.

Who is it for?

Designed for parents of younger children (0 – 9) Time Out for Parents covers general parenting principles. With a focus on prevention its five 2 - hour sessions help parents recognise the good and the positive things they are already doing and consider any changes they may want to make.

“Thank you for the parenting course. It has completely changed the way we operate as a family and has helped us all.”
“The parenting course gave me my life back. I finally learnt some ways to deal with my son and I’ve never looked back.”

What does it cover?

What children really need – understanding each child is different yet all have the same basic needs.

Emotional security – knowing what boosts and what damages self-esteem, helping children express feelings well plus listening skills.

Setting limits – the importance of boundary setting.

Keeping safe – including bullying, stranger-danger.

Problem solving – applying positive principles to different problems.

Contact Colm for details and bookings.

(Positive Parenting: www.parenting.org.uk)

Wednesday 21 March 2012

Let Your Child Have You For A Day.

In the midst of a recent conversation at a parenting event I was attending I heard the phrase, "Sometimes I feel like I am just a taxi for my children!" It was said with a humourous grumpyness. How many of us have thought and felt the same, especially when you get the feeling that you are living your whole week at the local Leisure Centre and your children's times for their various classes are all higgledy piggledy and a logistical nightmare.

There is an upside and maybe I am saying this because our schedule is fairly reasonable this term. Who knows what will happen after Easter! But, the opportunities our children have at their disposal to be involved in a wide variety of groups is amazing. In my childhood days such choice was absent, partly because of geography (we lived in a relative backwater) but there has also been an explosion of availability, coupled with greater access through families being more mobile..............lots more family cars around.

The other upside is that you might find yourself having time alone with one of your children, once a week in the car. You have them and they have you. And those times can be very valuable. Sometimes a child will tell you all sorts of things when you have them on their own. Like, what is or is not happening at school, friendship issues, things about music and more.

You may of course have all 5 children at the same time and that's a different matter! It's called a nightmare - you know, at the Leisure Centre from 4 - 6.30 because there is no other way to organise it!

Whether it is 'forced' on you by their activity programme or something you deliberately plan for, it is worth nurturing one-to-one times with each of your children. Particularly if things have not been going well with a child, it can remind you as a parent that you still love them, they are great away from whatever it is that stresses them and it gives the child the blessing of a parent all to themselves without sibling rivalry. A child, the quieter one, the youngest one, can 'get lost' in a larger family because parental time is taken up with all else that is happening.

Let your child have you for a day or an afternoon. Let your teenager have you for an evening. Manage the former and the latter may be possible.

Tuesday 20 March 2012

The Master Chef Marriage.

“We have a unique relationship. We are like an old married couple.” John Torode talking about his working TV friendship with Greg Wallace on ‘Master Chef.’


The papers have been covering the story of the demise of the marriages of John Torode and Greg Wallace, the presenters of the hugely successful series of ‘Master Chef.’ 5 marriages between them.

When you read about the life-styles of these two men there are tell-tale signs which flag up the need for vigilance. Previous broken marriages. Exhaustive TV work schedules on top of their other work, leaving time for little else. The adrenalin of success and the fame that comes with it. Serial infidelity, in one case. Any relationship under such pressures is going to suffer.

Strain need not but often does lead to estrangement, drifting apart. In most marriages emotional drift is the most common cause of break-up. Not necessarily because of heavy work loads, fame etc . It can also be the result of quietly losing touch with one another in the very ordinary lives which the majority of us live. Tell-tale signs don’t of course mean inevitability but they do act as red light warning signals and the presence of real risk. They should alert us to restorative action.

In the exalted atmosphere of fame and fortune Matt Damon, who has a 3 year old, a 5 year old and a 15 year old, speaks of making sure that he spends no more than two weeks away from his wife and children. It is a two week rule: they won’t be apart as a family for longer than two weeks and so far he and his wife have managed to keep it to one week. On a day to day basis he and his wife get the kids off to school and then have an hour together when they have coffee. They are creating a lasting legacy for their children.

Each couple needs to work out how to regulate their own relationship. For most of us in the ordinary run of the mill lives, it is about creating space, diaried space when we date our spouse once a month on the anniversary date of our wedding and on a daily basis, creating catch-up time. And if circumstances allow and can be arranged, an annual weekend away together.

The recipe for a drifting marriage can often begin with something simple. You make time for each other as a priority. Talking and listening time. Fun, doing-things-together-time. Non- children time. Reconnecting and reviving the friendship which mattered so much in the early days but may have become obscured and lost. It has to be an intentional part of how you take care of your marriage. And, very importantly, keeping work and success in perspective.

The oft-quoted cliche is true, no one on their death bed ever said they wished they had spent more time at work.




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Thursday 8 March 2012

"Other People Should Come On This," she said.



From an evening of Marriage Preparation at a local Church the following comments were made:

He said, "I was nervous and fearful about coming on the evening but having been here I feel very motivated about our relationship.I am very glad that we came along."
She said, "I was excited about the evening and I feel really motivated about getting married."

He said, "I felt just ok about the prospect of the evening. Now I feel motivated."
She said, "I was feeling ok about coming and now I am reassured."

He said, "The information about the 5 Love Languages was excellent."
She said, "I thought the sections on Communication and Bad Habits-Good Habits were excellent."

He said, "I really appreciated the section about Bad Habits-Good Habits."
She said, "I think it would be good for other people to come on this."

They all said, "The section on Forgiveness in Marriage was very good."

'Love Well - Live Well'- An evening of Marriage Preparation by 'X plus Y'

Monday 5 March 2012

Parent-Talk. An Evening For Parents. P7-S1



Find Out About:
The 5 Stages of Parenting.
What really matters to children?
Staying Connected.
Can The worst of times can be the best of times?
Being a Positive Parent.
Worried about substance abuse and young people?

Where? The Olive Grove Cafe, Southside Road, Kingsmill, Crown.
When? Wednesday March 21st 8pm – 10pm

Cost. £5 per Parent/s

Learn from others, share good practice - Find out about other resources.

 “Believe me, my children have more stamina than a power station.”
Robbie Coltrane.
 “I feel very blessed to have two wonderful, healthy children who keep me completely grounded, sane and throw up on my shoes just before I go to an awards show just so I know to keep it real.” Reese Witherspoon.
 “There is no joy like parental joy, no pain like parental pain.”
Rob Parsons.

An evening organised by The Olive Grove, 6 Southside Road and presented by
Colm Black, X plus Y Ltd., www.xplusy.co.uk

If you wish to attend please get in touch at info@xplusy.co.uk
Places are limited.