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Why Kids Tell Lies and What to Do About it

Monday, January 25th, 2010
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Ian.jpg
Photo by whirledkid
Catching your child in a lie is maddening, painful and upsetting.
What else does he lie about? How can I trust him? Behavioral therapist James Lehman explains why kids tell lies and suggests a better way for parents to deal with it.

Q: When your child lies to you, it hurts. As parents, it makes us angry and we take it personally. We feel like we can never trust our child again. Why does lying cause such anger, pain and worry for parents?

James: Parents are understandably very afraid of their children getting hurt and getting into trouble, but they have very little protection against these things as they send their kids out into the world.

Kids learn from other kids and from external media, and this makes parents feel unsafe because they can’t control the information and ideas that their children are exposed to.

Your kid’s honesty becomes the connector between what’s happening to him on the outside world and what happens at home. You need him to tell you honestly what happened today, so that you can honestly decide if that’s best for him. You need him to tell you what he’s doing so you can decide if that’s going to help him meet his responsibilities now and in the future. When parents don’t get the right information, they’re afraid they’ll make the wrong choices for their kids.

When your kid lies, you start to see him as “sneaky,” especially if he continues to lie to you. You feel that he’s going behind your back, that he’s undermining you. You begin to think that your kids are “bad”. “ Because, certainly, if lying is bad, liars are bad. It’s just that simple.

Parents need to make their kids responsible for lying. But the mistake parents make is they start to blame the kid for lying. It’s considered immoral to lie. But when you look at your kid like he’s a sneak and an operator who’s undermining your authority, it’s a slippery slope that starts with “You lie” and ends up at “You’re a bad person. ”

I think that perception of your kid promotes more lying. If your child thinks you think he’s “bad,” he’s going to hide the truth from you even more, because he doesn’t want be bad. Even though they are lying, kids don’t want to disappoint their parents.

Q: Let’s look at it from the child’s perspective. What’s going in on a child’s mind when they lie to their parents?

James: Kids know lying is forbidden. But they don’t see it as hurtful. Not the way that parents see it as hurtful. So a kid will say, “I know it’s wrong that I ate a sugar snack when I’m not supposed to. But who does it hurt?” “I know it’s wrong that I traded my dried fruit for a Twinkie. But it doesn’t really hurt anybody. I can handle it. What’s the big deal?” That’s what the kid sees.

When they don’t see it as hurtful, there are two different value systems operating: the family’s value system that says this is forbidden and the kid’s value system that says if it’s not hurting anybody, what do you care?

The kid rationalizes his actions and justifies his behavior with the idea that it doesn’t hurt anybody. The outcome is a dishonest situation. A lie.

When you get to adolescence, of course, the stakes get much higher. But the thinking remains the same. Kids smoke pot and drink and say, “Well it doesn’t hurt anybody. My friends smoke pot and it doesn’t hurt them.

I know drinking’s wrong, but my parents drink and it doesn’t hurt them. I can handle it. I’m older than my parents think I am. ” They know it’s forbidden. They either don’t see it as hurtful, or they rationalize the hurt away.

Q: So what’s the best way for parents to deal with lying, so that they don’t feel hurt and resentful about it and so that the child learns not to lie?

James: The first thing you have to do is be careful of is giving lies too much power. If you have a kid who’s mad at you or feels aggravated and powerless, and if he feels he can gain power over you by telling you a lie, he’ll use dishonesty to get that power.

He’ll withhold information and lie by omission when you’re trying to get the truth. He’ll give you little pieces of information, and that makes him feel powerful. It’s a trap for parents. Honesty is important, but if you communicate that too strongly to your children, they will use that to have power over you. You have to keep these things a certain size so that they’re not used against you.

The second thing to remember is that you have to understand the power of the culture that kids go into. It’s a very powerful culture that exerts a lot of pressure to “fit in. ” They may feel guilty if they lie to their parents. But, again, they’re thinking, “This isn’t that hurtful, and my parents just don’t understand. ” Of course, parents do understand. They’re frightened, and they should be.

So I think that parents have to assume that kids are going to tell them lies, because they’re immature and they don’t understand how hurtful these things are. They’re also drawn towards excitement, and their parents aren’t. It’s not like the good kids aren’t drawn to excitement and risk, and the bad kids are. It’s not that the good kids don’t lie and the bad kids do lie.

They’re all drawn to excitement, and they’ll all have a tendency to distort the truth because they’re kids.

I think parents have to deal with lying the way a cop deals with speeding. If you’re traveling too fast, he issues you a ticket. He’s not interested in a lot of explanations from you. He’s just going to give you a consequence. Look at it the same way with your child. He didn’t tell the truth, whether the truth was distorted, omitted or withheld.

There should simply be consequences for that. The first time you lie, you go to bed an hour early. The second time, you lose your phone. It should be something that the kid feels. You lose your phone for twenty four hours. You lose your phone for two days. You lose computer time or TV time.

The consequences have to make the child uncomfortable or they don’t change anything. The idea is that the next time he’s faced with telling you the truth or lying, he’ll recall how uncomfortable he was when he did the consequence for lying, and he’ll tell you the truth instead.

The consequence should be about the lying. If there’s a separate consequence for the incident, that should come down separately. If you come home later than your curfew and you tell me the truth, you may still lose going out Friday night, but you won’t lose your phone. If you lie to me, you lose both.

Parents should not focus on the morality of it. Just be clear. Lying is wrong, it’s hurtful and, in our home, we tell the truth. But don’t make it a moral issue. Make it a technical issue. You broke the law. You broke the rules. These are your consequences.

When a cop writes me a ticket, he doesn’t follow me home or argue with me. He hands me my ticket and he drives away. Approach the consequences for lying the same way. Don’t argue about it or get into a big discussion. Discuss it in a structured way: “What were you trying to accomplish by doing that?” Not “Why did you lie? You know how much lying hurts me. ”

Just ask what he was trying to accomplish, then point out that lying is not the way to solve his problem. Compliance is the way to solve it. Talk about it after things have cooled down, not in the heat of the moment. Explain what will happen if he lies again. “If you lie to me about the dance, you’re not going to the next dance and I’m taking your phone for twenty four hours. ” Just keep it really simple.

Copyright 2007. EmpoweringParents. com


Animated Kids Bible: Towering Pride and True Lies



Why Kids Lie: How Parents Can Encourage Truthfulness

For 30 years, behavioral therapist James Lehman has worked with troubled teens and children with behavior problems. His practical, real-world approach to managing children has been taught to parents in private practice and now through The Total Transformation Program, a step-by-step program that teaches James’ methods and helps parents change their children’s behavior. www.TheTotalTransformation.com

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Teaching your Kids About Money – 5 Simple Tips

Sunday, January 24th, 2010
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The Value of Money
Photo by J. Mark Bertrand
You may get a surprise answer when you tell your kids that you have no money to buy something, they probably will tell you to charge on your credit card. For most of kids, money is for spending. Kids have this miss interpretation about money because most of us do not start talking about money with our children early enough. Kids need to understand more about money, they need to learn up the value of saving and investing, and it’s not just for spending.

So, how to get start to teach your kids about the value of money? It is never too early for your kids to learn about the value of money and how to budget and save. To make thing simple, here are 10 simple ways which will help you to educate your children about personal finance and managing money:

1. As soon as children can count, introduce them to money.

Take an active role in providing them with information about money. Take whatever opportunities come up to teach kids about money. Take them grocery shopping and encourage them to read the prices and explain to them why you want to buy things on sales and why you shop at a discount store & etc.

Observation and repetition are two important ways children learn. So, you take whatever opportunities come to teach you kids about money and let them learn over and over again.

2. Learning by example

Teaching children about money does not mean sitting them down every Saturday morning to a lecture on the vagaries of stock markets. In the main it means including them in the daily running of the household.

This includes involving them in planning the household budget, explaining the differences between needs and wants, telling them why you have life assurance, and why you need a retirement plan.

You also need to set a good example by creating a spending plan with your family. Show to your kids that setting up a budget doesn’t have to be complicated.

3. Give Your Kids Allowance

Most experts agree that giving kids an allowance helps them to build money awareness. It’s better to make mistakes at 13 with $30 than at 33 with $30,000.

The experts recommend giving a dollar amount to match their ages. So a 10-year-old kid would get $10 and so one. This is money just for being part of the family and taking care of basics, such as picking up toys, making beds and not leaving towels on the bathroom floor. Give kids total control over how they spend their allowance. The whole point is to let them learn from their mistakes.

4. Create opportunities for your kid to earn money

Create opportunities for older children to earn additional money with jobs such as washing the car and mowing the lawn. This is the time to instill appreciation for a job well done and getting paid for your efforts. Teach them that they can get what they want through hard work, not because they are entitled to it.

5. Teach them about budgeting & credit card

Before your teenagers heads off for college, they need to learn before hand on budgeting and credit card which will help them to avoid plastic problems. College’s teenagers are the most favorate market for credit card companies. College’s teenagers will start to get preapproved credit card applications in mail and email.

You may want your kids to go off to school with a debt card intead of credit card. So that they can’t spend more than what they go in their account.

In Summary

Kids need to understand about money and how you get it into your hands as adults. Take whatever opportunities come up to teach your kids about money so that they understand that money is not just for spending and the consequences of over uses of money by withdrawing cash advance and charge everything to credit card can lead them to trap into financial crisis.


Rich Dad’s Rich Kid, Smart Kid: Giving Your Children a Financial Headstart



Math for the Real World



The Kids’ Money Book: Earning Saving Spending Investing Donating



The Thing About Money – Earn It, Save It, Spend It, Share It (Teaching Young People How to Make a Money Plan)



Jim Cramer’s Stay Mad for Life: Get Rich, Stay Rich (Make Your Kids Even Richer)



Financial Peace Jr.: Teaching Kids About Money! : “Cool Tools” for Training Tomorrow’s Millionaires!



Personalized Wallets for Boys – Kids Designs



Personalized Wallets for Girls – Kids Designs

Cornie Herring is the Author from http://www.studykiosk.com This site is an informational website on credit basics, debt consolidation and bankruptcy. Visit her “Money Matters” blog for more money related information.

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How do you feel about attachment parenting?

Sunday, January 17th, 2010
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does anyone here know about attachment parenting?

Thursday, December 24th, 2009
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if so what do you know and what do you think of it?
the reason i ask is because i would like to know what other people think of it (if they’ve even looked at it as an option).
i just have to tell everyone that i will be leaving this question to be voted on to prove how much americans don’t agree with attachment parenting but rootofnowt is right. it is the right thing to raise your children in a loving and caring environment. and it doesn’t turn them in to wussies but it also doesn’t turn them into sociopaths.

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Sure Jo Frost for Child Care: What you need to know about the first year of the most reliable American Nanny

Sunday, December 20th, 2009
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  • ISBN13: 9781401309060
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description:

For first time, the beloved nanny of America has all the warmth, love, and experience to bear on that most important and worrying time: a baby’s first twelve months. Its unique blend of humor and empathy, Jo Frost gives parents the practical information and emotional support they need to embrace the challenge of the first year of their baby. It provides clear guidance to moms and dads to become the joyful, confident parents that make a family – a little. . . More>>

Sure Jo Frost for Child Care: What you need to know about the first year of the most reliable American Nanny

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LSS2: Small Changes::7 Random Facts About Pregnancy

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009
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Image taken on 2007-10-09 04:56:14 by brungrrl.

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what do you know about ATTACHMENT PARENTING philosophies?

Monday, November 30th, 2009
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How do you feel about them? Which ones?

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Implantation bleeding during pregnancy is Scary. Reassuring facts about Implantation Bleeding

Friday, November 13th, 2009
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What is implantation bleeding?

  It is not unusual that some women experience implantation bleeding in early pregnancy. Any vaginal bleeding outside implantation bleeding of pregnancy is regarded as a threat of elimination, that the pregnancy is threatening to miscarriage. About 25% of all pregnancies in fact eliminate, but 50% of all threatened miscarriages settle and a normal pregnancy happens.
  When implantation bleeding happen?

  Implantation bleeding occurs very early in pregnancy as a direct result of the fertilized egg (your growing baby) burying and snuggling way of investing in your uterus. Implantation bleeding occurs about 10-14 days after the egg is fertilized or when conception occurred. This is also around the time of menstruation, you should expect.
  Signs of Implantation Bleeding:

  Points implantation bleeding can vary from one pregnant woman to another. It is usually mild and is much lighter than a normal menstrual period.
  The color of implantation bleeding:

  The color of implantation bleeding can vary form bright red to brown implantation bleeding. Bright red implantation bleeding means that there is an active area of bleeding within the uterus and the blood flows from the site of implantation of the Gulf very quickly. May indicate that implantation has just happened.
  Brown implantation bleeding is the color of old blood. When you get brown implantation bleeding usually means that when the fertilized egg buried way in the womb, a little blood was released. The bleeding that occurred at the time of implantation in the uterus remained for some time, so from the moment you see it in your underwear or when you wipe yourself it appeared as brown implantation bleeding.
  How long does implantation bleeding last?

  Most cases of implantation bleeding last for a few minutes a few days. If implantation bleeding lasts more than a few days, then it may be a sign of vaginal infection or a threatened miscarriage.
  How heavy is implantation bleeding?

  Heavy implantation bleeding is unusual. The only thing you might notice with implantation bleeding is pink or brown discharge when you wipe after going to the toilet.
  Cramps with implantation bleeding:

  Cramps with implantation bleeding can happen. You may even experience cramps or bleeding. The reason you may experience cramps with implantation bleeding is because the fertilized egg buries into your womb, caused by the muscle of your uterus contract. These type of contractions to nerve endings and may result in mild to moderate menstrual like pains for 24-48 hours.
  What to do if you have signs of implantation bleeding:

  Do not panic if you have any of these signs of bleeding implantation. Remember 50% of all cases of implantation bleeding resulting in a normal pregnancy.
  You know the type of your blood. Depending on the blood type of your partner if you are rhesus negative blood type then it may be necessary to have an Rh-immune globulin injection within 24 hours of any pregnancy bleeding.
  If you suspect that you may be pregnant and your bleeding is from implantation bleeding then do a home pregnancy test. This home test should remain positive. If it is positive and not know your blood factor Rhesus, then call your provider for consultation for possible Rh-immune globulin.
  Never insert a tampon, douche, or have sex while you are bleeding.

  Keep track of whether the bleeding is increasing or decreasing and how many pads you use.
  If you feel your pregnancy bleeding is heavier or lasts longer than the above ranges then call your health care provider for consultation immediately.
  Bleeding during pregnancy is scary. Fear you can read your unborn child. Intra uterine fear can stay with your child for a lifetime, so constantly reassure your baby that he or she is wanted and loved. Want to learn more about how the pregnancy is like the baby from your view, then check my birth, a conscious choice. at http://www. PregnancySuccessCoach. com

  It can also be very interested in a fantastic message telepathically dictated to me for humanity from my son when he was seven weeks. Yes you read correctly! Can I communicate with the baby's emotions from inside and outside the womb. Down load this free message AMAZING at http://www. PregnancySuccessCoach. com / Message_For_Humanity. html
  If you ask me a personal question about your pregnancy or an issue in your life, then visit http://www. PregnancySuccessCoach. com / Ask_Hannah_Section. html
  Hannah Bajor. N. C. M., M. S. N.
  Certified Nurse Midwife
  Pregnancy Success Coach

Hannah Bajor, C.N.M.,M.S.N. The Pregnancy Success & Holistic Health Coach has rightly earned her title! During her twenty-year active midwifery career Hannah has delivered over a thousand babies and cared for thousands of women before, during and after pregnancy. She has specialized in high-risk pregnancies and as a midwife has seen almost every possible complication during pregnancy.


She has a master?s degree in nursing and is a certified bereavement counselor for miscarriages and baby loss. She holds numerous certifications in the field of energetic healing. She is author of two highly acclaimed books: “Birth, A Conscious Choice” and “Sex Education For Students”.


Having personally experienced a miscarriage, unsuccessful infertility treatments, and a near death experience following the birth of her second son. As time passed, Hannah was driven to take her midwifery skills, her intuitive ability, and her knowledge about the energy anatomy of pregnancy and her formula for increasing fertility on an international scale. She is now in great demand for her international one-on-one coaching telephone practice and workshops. Her coaching and workshops serve to heal and empower women experiencing infertility, pregnancy, birth, miscarriage, adoption, abortion and post partum depression.

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How do you feel about that attachment parenting?

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009
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Seems a bit too out there for me, I feel sorry for the children. How do the parents go about driving a car or even being in a car, would they use a child seat or what?

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Success as a Foster Parent: Everything You Need to Know About Foster Care

Saturday, October 24th, 2009
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  • ISBN13: 9781592577477
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product life DescriptionChange a child it! Reap the benefits of becoming a foster parent. More than 600,000 American children is to strengthen the health care system each yearÂ-and the number is growing. This is the number of good-hearted people willing to become foster parents. But what it takes to become a foster parent and how does one begin? What about your family? What does it cost? Success as a foster parent has the answers to these basic questions and mu. . . More>>

Success as a Foster Parent: Everything You Need to Know About Foster Care

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