Who instigates most of the sibling fights in your house? Is the youngest looking for some attention from an older sibling? Or, the oldest taking out some frustrations on the middle one?
When we think we know who started it, the temptation is to referee and assign blame.
“Jimmy, if you can’t settle down like the others, there will be no story for you!”
“Jane, you’re older. Let your little sister have the toy!”
“There’s water all over the bathroom floor! Which one of you did this?”
When we do this, however, we’re creating roles or labels for our children: the aggressor, the victim, the responsible one. The risk we take? The label will stick, and our children will live up to our expectations.
This is the second in our series of 4 Key Principles to create the close, cooperative relationships we so dearly want between our children. (See March 23 for Principle #1)
Principle #2: “Put them in the same boat.” Or, another way of looking at it, STOP taking sides!
Taking sides encourages kids to point the finger with the hope of swaying a parent. Putting them in the same boat encourages an attitude of we are in this together, and underlines the idea that bystanders are responsible too. When it comes to conflict between children, it’s more important to find a solution than it is to find out who done it.
So shift your focus from one of blame to one of solutions. It will sound more like this:
“I’m willing to read stories when all is quiet.”
“Girls if you’re having trouble sharing the toys, why don’t you play separately for awhile.”
And if they try to blame:
“Boys, there’s water all over the bathroom floor.”
“Ben did all of the splashing, not me.”
“Did not!”
“It’s not important to me who did it. What’s important is what are you boys going to do about it?”
As the old adage goes, it takes two to fight. And if we constantly take sides, we cause resentment. Spreading shared responsibility can help siblings bond and work more cooperatively together.
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