Description |
xix, 203 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm |
Note |
Includes index. |
Contents |
Twenty-four-hour womb service -- Independence 101 -- "No screaming, no biting, no dairy products, no sugar" -- "Wait 'til your father gets home" -- "Cut the drama!" -- "I'm calling Lily!" -- He's in the middle of his own movie -- "But I'm not tired!" -- "And what are we going to do about this?" -- Liar, liar, pants on fire -- It's a hard-knock life -- Spooky, spunky, and sleepy - Appendix: More commonly asked questions - Index -- About the authors. |
Summary |
Parents often inadvertently confuse love with overindulgence. They don't want their children to suffer a moment of frustration or be deprived of any desire. But in truth, a balance of frustration tolerance and gratification is necessary to become a resilient and responsible adult. Of course, every child is difficult on occasion, but true brats are constantly selfish, demanding, and incapable of listening. Their parents must regularly plead, cajole, and bargain with them to exert some control. So what makes a child become a brat in the first place? And what can a parent do--or not do--to keep their children from becoming brats? Since being a mother is her most important role, renowned actress Marilu Henner has often turned to Dr. Ruth Sharon, a highly respected psychoanalyst, for advice on raising her own children. Together, in I Refuse to Raise a Brat, they have created a practical and accessible guidebook based on Dr. Sharon's fundamental observation: Adults with the greatest emotional difficulties were generally overgratified, overprotected, and overindulged as children. Consequently, parents need to allow their children to work through their frustrations at an early age and not consistently indulge them. |
Subject |
Child rearing.
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Discipline of children.
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Parent and child.
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Added Author |
Sharon, Ruth Velikovsky.
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ISBN |
0060392665 |
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