How can we deal with our two-year-old when she grabs her friend's
toys? What might we say to a four-year-old who refuses to let
other children slide on the playground? How can we talk with a
teenager about the chores he has left undone - again? How do we
protect our children when their choices endanger their safety?
What resources will help us work with our own anger, frustration,
or pain when communication with our children seems strained or
non-existent?
As parents, we are constantly faced with situations like these.
Multiply the children and the challenges mount. Add the pressures
of work (or unemployment), money (or lack thereof), time,
relationships, and other commitments, and the pot threatens to
boil over. Then, for some, there are the stresses of raising
children alone, without a partner, extended family, or community.
And there are myriad additional challenges many parents face. It
is no wonder parents yearn for support, guidance, and relief. Yet
when we turn to parenting books or experts, the advice we find is
often contradictory and may not align with our own values and
hopes for our children and families. Even when we do find an idea
we want to try, changing habits and patterns in relationships can
be enormously challenging in itself.
In this booklet, I present to parents and others who are
connected with children a brief introduction to how Nonviolent
CommunicationSM (NVC)
may support their parenting in practical, immediate ways. I
particularly hope to address parents' yearning for deeper
connection with themselves, their partners, and their children,
and their desire to contribute, through parenting, to fostering
peace in the world. The approach I describe, as you will see, goes
beyond immediate solutions and into the realm of personal and
social transformation.
This booklet explores a variety of topics and situations and
offers ten exercises to help you put into practice what you are
learning as you shift or adapt your parenting approaches. However,
it is by no means a comprehensive exploration of NVC and
parenting. I have not touched upon many topics that have come up
in my workshops and classes, on the NVC-parenting email list, and
in my own life. I hope, nonetheless, that what I have covered here
will be practical enough to offer you some concrete tools for
deepening connection with your children, and exciting enough to
encourage you to consider learning even more. If you choose to put
these ideas into practice and they make a difference in your
family life, I would love to hear from you.
For a review of the basic steps of NVC and additional
information on NVC, see the back of the booklet.
"Power-over" versus "Power-with"
When parents want children to do something their children don't
want to do, it's often tempting to force the children's compliance
by using the enormous physical, emotional, and practical power
adults have over them (by practical, I mean that adults have much
greater access to society's resources and control over the course
of their own - and their children's - lives). Yet I am convinced
that attempting to coerce a child to do something she or he doesn't
want to do neither works effectively in the short term nor
supports families' long-term needs. (The only exception comes when
there is threat to health or safety, in which case NVC suggests
that we use non-punitive, protective force.) In NVC, we refer to
using power to enforce what we want as "power-over," in
contrast with using power to meet everyone needs, which we refer
to as "power-with."
Maria, a parent who had read some of my articles, asked me a
question that points directly to the temptation to use the control
we have over resources to influence a child's behavior (note that
all people's names have been changed):
I've been "bargaining" with my two-year-old son
Noel using rewards and consequences, and sometimes it seems to
me that it's quite effective. At least, it gets him to do what I
want, such as eat the food on his plate. Yet I'm somehow
uncomfortable with this. Is there a problem with rewards and
consequences if they work?
I do think that there is a problem with rewards and
consequences, because in the long run, they rarely work in the
ways we hope. In fact, I think that they are likely to backfire.
Marshall Rosenberg explores this point by asking parents two
questions: "What do you want your child to do?" and
"What do you want your child's reasons to be for doing
so?" Parents rarely want their children to do something out
of fear of consequences, guilt, shame, obligation, or even a
desire for reward.
In this context, when I hear parents - or parenting experts -
say that consequences are effective, I often wonder what they
mean. I believe "effective" usually means that parents
get compliance from children - that children do what parents tell
them to do - at least for a while. Both the goal (compliance) and
the means (rewards and consequences) come at a price. They not
only involve fear, guilt, shame, obligation, or desire for reward,
they are also often accompanied by anger or resentment. And
because rewards and consequences are extrinsic motivations,
children become dependent on them and lose touch with their intrinsic
motivation to meet their own and others' needs.
I believe that the most powerful and joyful intrinsic motivation
human beings have for taking any action is the desire to meet our
own and others' needs. Both children and adults act out of this
intrinsic motivation when they feel genuinely connected to
themselves and each other, when they trust that their needs matter
to the other, and when they experience the freedom to choose to
contribute to the other.
If we want our children to experience intrinsic motivation for
doing what we ask them to do, we can shift our focus away from
authority and imposed discipline and toward paying as much
attention as possible to everyone's long-term needs. This may take
more time in the moment because it means going beyond the present
problem and remembering what matters most in the big picture. Yet
the time is worth the investment. In the long run, families can
experience deeper connection, trust, and harmony, and children can
learn powerful life skills. I believe that most parents find these
goals much more appealing and exciting than mere compliance.
Instead of rewards and consequences, NVC offers three starting
places for connecting with others: offering empathy, expressing
one's own observations, feelings, needs and requests, and
connecting with oneself through self-empathy. In the next three
sections, I will explore each of these options in relation to the
question Maria asked me.