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John Rosemond - Parenting Expert |
John Rosemond is America's most widely-read parenting authority! He is a best-selling author, columnist, speaker, and family psychologist. Index | Archives | About John Rosemond | Books | Submit A Question |
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Living with Children John Rosemond Copyright 2008, John K. Rosemond Q: My husband read our 7-year-old daughter's composition book that she had been using as a diary and became upset at some of the things she had written: loving a boy, wishing her sister had died (she was a very ill preemie), hating life without her cousin around, and several curse words written in isolation. My response was that her private thoughts at this age don't really mean anything and that she was just exploring her feelings, but he thinks I should confront her and talk about these issues. What is the right thing to do here? A: To begin with, parents should not read a child’s private
diary unless a sudden change in the child’s behavior strongly
suggests that something is seriously amiss, the child isn’t
communicating, and the diary may hold a clue as to the nature of the
problem. Otherwise, a child’s diary should be the one place
where she can just “let it rip” without fear of censure.
The same rule of thumb applies to a child’s room. |
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