Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Why giving my daughter permission to fail helped her succeed
Why giving my daughter permission to fail helped her succeed Why giving my daughter permission to fail helped her succeed Welcome to Great Moments in Parenting, a series in which fathers explain a parenting hurdle they faced and the unique way they overcame it. Here, Adam a dad from Atlanta, Georgia, explains the excellent a-ha moment he had with his daughter when they were playing basketball.My daughter was probably about eight years old. She was trying to play basketball on the court. She had typically had a lot of problems getting the ball in the basket. Her upper body strength may not have been what it needed to be. She was too short, really, and she couldnât get that ball up there. Either she couldnât go high enough or it went wide.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!Iâm certified in the Feldenkrais method of exercise therapy and itâs given me a lot of insight into how to redirect peopleâs learning processes. Iâm sure it informed my choice in how I approached the problem. I di dnât want to tell her âdonât give upâ or âpush harderâ or âkeep trying.â So I changed the goal for her.She was about to give up and I said, âDo one more thing for me before you quit. I want you to take 20 shots at that basket, but I want you to miss. I donât want you to make any of the baskets.â But I said, âYou canât just miss. You have to just barely miss. And if you get it in, you lose.â I donât know why, but she went ahead and did it. After only a couple of shots, that ball started going in.She was surprised. I think it helped her. She did go on to play basketball with other kids in a league, and she did just fine, and that was great. But I knew why it worked - and I donât think she did, although maybe she knows why now. Sheâs almost 20 now. But it worked because first of all, we took the shame out of the whole activity. She was supposed to fail. So if she failed to fail, she would succeed. Basically, she was either going to succeed or she wa s going to succeed.Sometimes when we try to achieve a goal, thereâs a whole lot of baggage attached to that, and I just took the baggage away so all she had to focus on was the task. If my daughter had to shoot a goal, and she failed, it would change what kind of person she is to her, it said something about who she was as a person, and if she was successful. I knew she was susceptible to that kind of thought process because Iâm susceptible to that kind of thought process. By telling her she had to just barely miss the goal, thatâs such a strange thing to do that she couldnât attach it to any emotional resonance in herself. It was just weird.Like, why would you try to just barely miss? So she was completely focused on the actual activity. And because she wasnât a fantastic basketball player, she couldnât just barely miss. Instead, she got it in, because you have to be really good to just barely miss the goal, but if youâre not that good, youâre going to get it in.Th e Feldenkrais Method examines a personâs ability to understand their own capacity by taking away everything except for the idea of functional movement. The method has people engage in some kind of movement task - like reaching, twisting, or turning, and adding some kind of examination to that which is curious, patient and tends to have no goals attached to it. If that activity is done curiously, it takes away all the stress. Itâs such a strange movement, just like the basketball goal thing, that you get really interested in exactly what it is youâre doing. When you start paying attention to what youâre doing as opposed to who you should be, amazing things can happen. When you come out of that exploration, you find that your body image has changed, you feel different, you walk different, and you can do different things.It changed everything. It changed the way she looked at the goal and the way she thought about using her arms and her body and it worked. I was really pleased that it worked. It didnât necessarily have to, but Iâm really happy that it did.Basketball has never been a huge part of her life or anything like that, but she was on the court and she was frustrated that she couldnât get the ball in. So it was a great moment for her. I just had an insight and I was able to sufficiently create a lesson that I didnât have any attachment to, whether she got that in the goal or not.This article first appeared on Fatherly. You might also enjoy⦠New neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happy Strangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds 10 lessons from Benjamin Franklinâs daily schedule that will double your productivity The worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs 10 habits of mentally strong people
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