
Psychologist Varkha Chulani stresses the need to have emotional
education made part of the school curriculum. Her reasons give parents something
to mull over
PUJA’S parents brought her to see me one day,
worried there was something wrong with their daughter. Over the last few months,
there seemed to have been a drastic change in her behaviour. Until then a
fun-loving, gregarious girl, she now kept to herself, speaking only when spoken
to and interacting minimally with family and friends. “She broods the
whole day,” her mother said.
“In fact, she has even
stopped attending the art classes that she had been pursuing with zest.”
Her friends, too, have noticed that something is amiss. “No matter how
hard her friends try to coax Puja to join them, she resists their
overtures.”
What had happened to change Puja’s behaviour
so dramatically? “Was there anything that had activated this behavioural
change?” I asked. After a strained silence, her mother began to cry and
revealed that Puja had failed std IX and had to repeat the class. Hmm, I thought
to myself, another victim.
I called Puja in and at once noticed that
she had developed a severe inferiority complex. She answered my questions in
monosyllables and appeared to be feeling ashamed. She regarded herself a
failure. She had concluded that she was a loser — someone who could never
succeed!
Why Emotional Education?
For Puja and for the umpteen
youngsters who go through similar such episodes of failure in their life, I
believe emotional education could be the answer.
Let me tell you how it all
began...
American psychologist Dr Albert Ellis invented the Rational
Emotive Behaviour Therapy (REBT) psychotherapeutic technique. He established the
Institute for REBT in New York City in 1959 in order to develop and propagate
it. Today, it is called the Albert Ellis Institute and has affiliates all around
the world.
Since the fundamental concepts of REBT were easy to
understand, many psychologists and practitioners began to think that it could
effectively be used in reducing people’s emotional disturbances and that
it could be made an important aspect in helping students solve their emotional
problems.
Thus was born The Living School, which taught students
from Grades 1 to 8 about emotional hygiene. Education in the management of
emotional health was made available not only to those children who were
considered emotionally immature, but to all children enrolled there. The school
wanted to ensure that when its children grew up and faced problems in their
life, they would be able to solve them creatively and efficiently and that they
would not find it difficult to think independently.
According to
REBT, emotional education does not only mean helping children to participate in
different programmes according to their choice, but exploring their likes and
dislikes without feeling embarrassed, and helping them to live life happily.
REBT does not fully agree with the commonly-held idea that
man’s personality is determined by his childhood experiences. On the
contrary, one of the fundamental principles of REBT is that emotional
disturbances revealed in children’s behaviour are largely caused by their
self-defeating attitudes, their exaggerated and rigid demands and their tendency
to avoid facing the hassles of living.
And just as these
handicapping attitudes have some biological bases, the children themselves and
the social conditions surrounding them play a part in strengthening these
attitudes. That means young children easily pick up irrational attitudes and/or
create such attitudes themselves. They then behave according to those attitudes
and to some extent, destroy the rest of their lives.
Some of these
irrational attitudes are:
* That they must get recognition and
appreciation from others.
* That they must achieve some outstanding and
dazzling success to prove their worth.
* That those who behave unjustly
with them are worthless and deserve to be punished.
* That conditions
being unfavourable to them amounts to a great calamity.
* That adverse
circumstances in the outside world can make them anxious, angry and depressed.
* That if they continually worry about an event, they will somehow acquire
the power to control that event — whether that event happens or not!
* That it is easier and desirable to avoid facing adverse circumstances in
their life.
They also strongly believe that it is absolutely
necessary that their environmental conditions are totally organised and
dependable. It is worth noting that many grown-ups also subscribe to such
beliefs, although children hold on to them more tenaciously.
A
Child’s Independence Protected
The Living School was careful about
not giving its students any rigidly controlled education; the school’s
policy being that every child should endeavour to develop his potentiality in
such a way that
9-+6he would finally be able to take independent decisions
with respect totwo fundamental issues:
* If you can neither change
the conditions around in the near future, nor escape from them, then it is
better to adjust with them. For example, if your relatives’ behaviour is
troublesome, it is better to accept that reality and to try to cope with it as
calmly as possible, without unduly upsetting yourself.
* To try and
eradicate from your mind as completely as possible the attitude that ‘I
must get approval and appreciation from others; or else I am worthless’.
Only when you do this, will you be able to think that you don’t always
have to strictly comply with all the social customs and traditions that surround
you.
Every child was free therefore, to decide for himself under
what conditions and to what extent he should adjust with the external world and
when and to what extent he should rebel against it.
Help Your Child
Get Emotionally Healthy
Start using these
guidelines today:
* Stop demanding that your child must succeed and
healthily wish that she does.
* Reiterate that it is only bad and not awful
when your child is not accepted by others. Teach her that she does not notably
need others’ love for happy living, though she may prefer to have
it.
* Don’t overprotect your child; she must be allowed to learn from
the hard knocks of life.
* Love your child for who she is, not for what
she does. Don’t equate her worth with success.
* Do not
‘horrorise’ failure. View it as only a setback to the child’s
development. Be equipoised to both success and failures; take both with
equanimity and poise.
* Do not praise or blame the child; rather praise or
blame her behaviour and actions.
* Praise, reward and encourage the
child’s healthy behaviour.
* Penalise unwanted behaviour, logically
and consistently.
* Teach the child that hard work and effort are required
to obtain the good things in life.
* Teach the child that the world does
not function according to the ‘deserving principle’; that unfairness
and injustice exists.
GOT COMMENTS OR
QUESTIONS? E-MAIL US AT femina@timesgroup.com WITH ‘parenting —
emotionally yours’ IN THE SUBJECT LINE