For parents who want to help their children make friends and improve their social skills “Does Your Child Struggle with Social Interaction - And Are You Secretly Worried, Unsure How You Can Help?” Read on, if you need to know the best way to empower your child in overcoming social challenges…Dear Proactive Parent, You know how every single individual child within the same family can differ – sometimes radically – from the next. Even with the most positive parenting, some children suffer more during social development than others. You think back to your own painful or anxious childhood social experiences, and realize that some of these experiences were both normal and necessary. And some were not. Both of you want your little boy to have fun and enjoy the experience of childhood to its fullest. You want him to learn to: - Share with others
- Enjoy other children’s personalities - and have them enjoy his
- Respect other children’s differences
- Respect adults
- Be sensitive to the world around him
- Be aware, and open and warm
- Be courageous and adventurous
- Be prudent - and stay safe
You also don’t want to see him as: The child who somehow is never invited to his school friends’ parties The one who is always left out, never picked to join in other children’s games But sometimes, painful social struggles go even deeper than the casual cruelty of peers… or coping with shyness. What is Your Child’s Struggle? Even though all children learn through being taught how to share and care for others - as well as through making mistakes and experiencing the consequences sometimes things don’t go quite as you expect. Social clues and conflicts alert you to the fact that your child may have more challenges than “normal”. Sometimes, you receive an “actual problem” diagnosis - and you feel as if your world has been turned inside out. You realize you are now the parent of a child with a challenge such as Asperger’s Syndrome… or Autism… or ADD. When that happens, your family’s journey radically changes course. Sometimes, you haven’t had any sort of diagnosis yet: You just suspect something isn’t quite right. Your little boy is having anger management issues, or doesn’t engage with other children, or won’t look people in the eye...... |