Family gatherings are not like the Coke
commercials.
Prepare young children in advance. Show them
pictures of the family if they don't
remember everyone and tell them enough about
their relatives for the people to seem real.
Modify expectations concerning the
children's behavior.
When children are tired and excited, they
need help in calming down and coping with
frustrations. Their behavior will not be
predictable so don't overreact. Don't
humiliate the child when he does something
shocking (and embarrassing). People with
children will understand, those without
can't possibly so don't try to explain.
Respect children. They are not to be
exhibited.
Please don't ask them to show off. Let
them be themselves. Give them permission not
to hug or kiss anyone they don't want to
embrace. If a child is uncomfortable with a
relative, don't force the association. If a
relative insists on the child kissing or
hugging, step in and protect the child with
"Perhaps she needs to get to know you
better first."
Don't talk about the child in front of
other people if the child is over 12
months of age.
Very young children will assume they are
the star attraction, demand attention, and
quickly become unbearable. Older children
will be embarrassed, start sulking, and will
quickly become unbearable.
Practice being polite before you get
there, not on the spot.
Teach the children to say
"hello" and answer simple
questions (What's your name, how old are
you?) but don't expect (or force) them to do
it until they are five years of age.
Relax your standards.
Rules and regulations need to be flexible
during such times. If the other children are
allowed to do it, don't single yours out
unless their life is at stake. If the other
children are not allowed to do something,
your children should follow the same rules.
Discipline with courtesy.
If a child must be corrected or stopped,
do so quietly without embarrassing the
child. An unruly child needs to be removed
from the situation, given an opportunity to
calm down, provided with some rest time and
given some parental attention. Try
not to overreact. You don't want to end up
more embarrassed than the child.
Take care of your own.
Don't try to reform other's children.
Take care of your children's needs.
When kids feel good, they act better. Try
to see that they eat properly, get enough
rest (too much attention from relatives can
be exhausting), and enough physical
exercise. They also need quiet time alone
with their parents.
Pay absolutely no attention to what
others think of your parenting skills.
Family gatherings are no time to prove
what a good parent you are. Whether your
children are well-behaved that day or act
like heathens, nothing you can do or say
will change anyone's opinion of the
situation. If they care about you, they will
support you. If they make ugly, cutting
remarks, they don't care about you and their
opinion is therefore worthless.
Pay absolutely no attention to what
others think of your children.
Anyone who needs to compare children has
their own problems. What they think is
therefore worthless. If you are fortunate
and receive compliments on your parenting
ability or your children's behavior, say
"thank you" quickly. Things must
be going well for the moment and it probably
won't last long.
If you have a difficult child, no one can
possibly understand and you'll never change
their attitude. The best you can do is hope
that they get one of their own someday.