"Con tal de" la frase que utilizamos antes de tomar decisiones con respecto a nuestros hijos - podcast episode cover

"Con tal de" la frase que utilizamos antes de tomar decisiones con respecto a nuestros hijos

Jul 24, 202418 min
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Episode description

En el podcast de Rosario Busquets Nosti en Chayo Contigo hablamos sobre:

- "Con tal de" la frase que utilizamos antes de tomar decisiones con respecto a nuestros hijos.
- Temas de pareja
- ¿Cómo la mejoría del llanto NO tiene que ser completa en los niños?

Transcript

Yeah, I' m going good afternoon to everyone. How nice to be with you guys on a more chayo show with you. When you' re educating, you can realize that you fall into a trap when the phrase appears in your mom' s dad' s head as if you wanted to say no to your son, but as long as he doesn' t cry anymore, he doesn' t give you away, he stays still, he doesn ' t make you look bad, you end up saying yes. You just gave him permission, you just gave him the paddle. You ended up allowing

him what you didn' t want. You' re falling into a trap because you' re wanting to get out of the bad time as long as it doesn' t make the moment difficult for you. That clearly is, or does it mean that you thought you didn' t agree to grant, but as long as it' s still in that sentence, you ended up saying yes. That means that, beyond what we say, others are miseducated

according to your educational criteria. So abused when that little phrase appears in your thought, notice that when it comes to partner relationships, one of the great temptations that there are, especially at the beginning of the relationship, is that the couple becomes everything. We leave friends aside, we want to be with the couple all the time, because it is just part of this great emotion that the relationship generates and in that context of that relationship, suddenly we leave

everything. And couple relationships, in order to be healthy couple relationships, have to contain projects in common, but also personal projects, that is, the couple has to share. Obviously, if you want to have children, one of those projects in common is going to be the children, but also certain

activities or tastes where you share common interests. But it is very important that they enrich themselves at the personal level of certain activities or hobbies where, from the personal point of view, they can gain growth, that it causes them to bring wealth to the relationship, so that they become attractive or remain attractive to each other, because this is causing the admiration that one continues to have for the other. So locking up in each other ends up boring one'

s relationship. So always try to generate a personal development that can maintain the attraction to your partner when it comes to crying the cry of children, in general terms, is a complicated issue, because it is something that we want to diminish, but not that disappears. And that' s kind of confusing when it comes to education, because when we want, when there are inappropriate

behaviors, what we want is that proper behavior disappears. But in the case of crying, there' s always going to be a tangled theme there, because people don' t want crying to be in life anymore. We want the crying to stay in the life of a human being so that it has the function for which crying is useful. And crying is useful for venting situations that we cannot express with words and that help to somehow repeat the word, but vent emotions. So we want children to learn to use crying when crying

is really necessary, it is helpful. But we don' t want the crying to be disproportionately out of control. Then we want children to know how to make use of crying. So we want the child to have control over

the crying and not the crying control over the child. So teaching a child how to cry is a complex subject that we are going to need, to learn, to manage, and for that I am going to give them strategies throughout the days, because we don' t want the child to use crying as a manipulative scheme, but that crying is useful in the life of the child and remains useful in the life of the personati. Hello Tari hears notice that a person in the audience is a question that I thought was very important.

What validity When a problem merits, a divorce, what a question. What a question, because for what a couple would be, that strong problem, which would be infidelity, let' s say, is enough to divorce and separate. For another couple it' s not. Not making a fraud, for example, having made a robbery. For some it' s unpublished, no, and then I get away from you and I don' t want to know. And for others it' s good, because there'

s some kind of contuvernium that' s going on. So I can' t tell you this way with cracked board that yes and no, because in the consultation it' s this same topic with this couple Luis and Fernando is not explosive and it' s over. And for Mary and Joseph it' s not going to be something they' re going to work with and they ' re going to live with. What I do think it is is to

question it has to do with violence. Not okay sexual violence that has to do with incest constant abuse of these, at these levels, physical violence in range and constant beatings. I do think it' s better to live apart, because apart from everyone else, children live that anguish constantly they don' t know what' s going to happen and being witnesses to violence is the same as living violence. We know that now without people knowing it. That

is certainly the case. It seems that reason has to be validated by the person himself and sometimes validated by us. Not to say yes, you also have the right to break this not be what it is for you to live better, so that there is more harmony where the best five people can live well and one maybe, I will live sad or isolated. Well, it ' s a matter of numbers. If it' s a question, it ' s about your values, but I can' t tell you which one.

But violence. So, uh, when you exercise the value of fidelity in a couple relationship. Notice that one of the ideas that is always put into people' s lives is a mistaken idea that values are exercised all the time, that at all times in your life you are living in values. And the reality is, no. Values are exercised at the time when the opportunity to lack value is presented and, instead of lacking value, you exercise it, that is, while you are working, you are not being faithful.

He is being faithful in the moment when the opportunity to be unfaithful arises and in that moment you decide to be faithful you are honest in the moment when you are expected to be true and tell it. But if at that moment the temptation to steal something or jain is not involved, you' re not being honest. We are what requires specific moral value when the temptation to

lack moral value appears. So a person can say I have been faithful all my marriage, not faithful in the times when the opportunity to be unfaithful presents itself and you are not. And that is what makes it valuable for a person to be able, at a specific time in his life, to abide

by the different moral values. So if you haven' t been presented with the opportunity to be unfaithful, because you still don' t know if you ' re faithful, think about what moral values are those that have tested you in life and, therefore, about that moral values is what you know if you' ve been able to show what capacity you have to face them. I' m very happy when I receive emails like this one that I'

m going to share with you. I' m thirteen years old and I ' m sending you this email because this year I suggested cutting my hair. I' ve got it pretty long. My mom said yes. But the problem came when he saw the cut that I want to be made, because, in his words, it' s a child' s cut. So then he told me not because you' re going to look like a kid.

I kept insisting. It should be clarified that this happened a week ago and at my insistence he justified himself saying that your grandmother will not like it and your aunts will scold me for giving you permission. So first ask your dad to continue with a series of homophobic comments and other derogatory comments towards people

with tattoos painted hair. I feel like my mom thinks you do that makes people less professional that makes them look like criminals all because of my hair and a comment I said I' d like to paint my hair when I' m in high school. Now, going back to my dad' s situation to his argument that I didn' t cut my hair. It was that I never liked how women with short hair look, and my dad also occupied the argument what your grandmother is going to say and also homophobic comments, to

which, then, I don' t know why this situation. My parents think I belong to the LGBT community on the grounds that they label my attitudes as unfemale. But I don' t identify with a sexuality, as I ' m aware that I don' t have the maturity to define it and my doubt is really wrong and I should change my attitude and my tastes. Oh doctor I hope you read it look. The reality is that the size of your hair cut has absolutely nothing to do with a preference or sexual orientation,

nothing you see. However, yes, many times parents feel very generational pressures and how suddenly are they good or bad dads? How they are seen according to their own parents and how they want to receive approval around this. It is neither right nor wrong for parents to want to give a non- permission before certain ages to cut or not to cut their hair. And I

fully understand your frustration. I think that if you take a little care of the tone in which you propose things and you can make your parents feel that you want to try on this occasion having short hair and that hair is something that will grow, but that you want to live the experience and that this has nothing to do with this and that, if they allow you to explain to your aunts, to your grandmother that this is something that you like and

that you want to try this as part of an experience that you want to live and that have nothing to do with whether they are good or bad parents. Well, you probably get permission out there, but there' s nothing wrong with you trying it and, of course, they have nothing to do

with sexual orientation or anything related to this. If we continue with this that I had commented a couple of segments ago on the program about crying, when we want to handle the tantrum theme, we will not succeed in making the crying go away. In fact, we don' t have to make the crying go away, but we do have to go looking for that tantrum where there' s a lot of behavior. Exaggerated, words, knocks maybe to

the wall to throw things. First eye and this is very important. We will seek to reduce the frequency and or intensity of that behavior to know that we are on the right track until then the behavior is reduced only that crying appears when it corresponds, in the corresponding amount and in the manner in which

it corresponds. But we are not going to feel completely satisfied only when the child no longer cries, if the number of times he cries is decreasing, the intensity with which he cries, the frequency with which he cries you go on the right path, and then there comes an important element. Recognize your son that improvement so he can identify her as well. It' s time to fire today' s show. I' d just leave them with an idea that' s whenever you' re going to give your teenage son an

opinion, don' t hide behind that opinion an order. If you want to give him a warrant. Give him the order in a clear way. If you' re going to give her an opinion, be perfectly clear to yourself as your dad, your mom, they may not follow your opinion and do things as your son or daughter prefers them to be flushed. I' m looking. This was chayo with you. Audio Centre

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