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225 - Single Parenting Success Tips!

Bobblehead Dad Parenting

Release Date: 05/21/2014

225 - Single Parenting Success Tips! show art 225 - Single Parenting Success Tips!

Bobblehead Dad Parenting

Take a close look at your child’s class picture. If there’s 25 cute, smiling faces in that group,  about seven of those kids are being raised by single parents. Maybe more depending on where you live. ...

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224 - The Importance of Laughing with Kids show art 224 - The Importance of Laughing with Kids

Bobblehead Dad Parenting

Today’s show is sure to do two things: Make you laugh. And make you think about laughing! ...

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223 - What To Do When Your Kids Fight! show art 223 - What To Do When Your Kids Fight!

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Here’s a show for all us parents who go bonkers with kids who fight, bicker, argue, and cause constant chaos within our family unit. ...

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222 - Are You Raising Free-Range Kids? show art 222 - Are You Raising Free-Range Kids?

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This show will make you think about how you parent. ...

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221 - Awesome Science Experiments Make Awesome Memories! show art 221 - Awesome Science Experiments Make Awesome Memories!

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 wants you to have some fun with your kids. ...

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220 - Teaching Kids About Money show art 220 - Teaching Kids About Money

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219 - Author Whit Honea Talks About Empathy. And Much More! show art 219 - Author Whit Honea Talks About Empathy. And Much More!

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Author  has something to share with you. He wants you to stop and think about the way you communicate with your kids. The way you teach them about the world and each other. Bottom line, he wants to remind you about the importance of raising kids who understand human connection -  and empathy.  ...

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218 - Bullying: What Parents Need to Know show art 218 - Bullying: What Parents Need to Know

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Did you know that 160,000 kids skip school every day for fear of being a victim of bullying? Did you know that bullying has three players? And did you know that your child will likely play one of those three roles sometime in the course of their youth? ...

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217 - Understanding Your Kid's Stress - And Helping them Navigate Through It Successfully show art 217 - Understanding Your Kid's Stress - And Helping them Navigate Through It Successfully

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216 - Dads & Daughters: A Chat with Jeff Bogle show art 216 - Dads & Daughters: A Chat with Jeff Bogle

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Take a close look at your child’s class picture. If there’s 25 cute, smiling faces in that group, statistically about seven of those kids are being raised by single parents. Maybe more depending on where you live.

Of the 30-40 million homes in the United States with children under the age of 18, about 30% of them are led by single parents. Mostly moms. But the population of single dads raising kids alone is rising.

That makes for a lot of kids being raised by single parents.

And according to the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia, those children born or raised outside of marriage are more likely to suffer from a range of emotional and social problems – including drug use, depression, attempted suicide and dropping out of high school – compared to children in intact, married families.

“We still find that happy marriage has some benefits,” says UVa psychology professor Robert Emery in a recent article in The Daily Progress. “But the ‘happy’ part is important. Children raised in relatively happy, well-functioning single-parent families will do better than children with unhappily married parents.”

As a single parent raising three kids myself, that’s good to hear.

So how do us single parents make sure we’re running a “relatively happy, well-functioning” family?

Dr. Wendy Rice of Rice Psychology Group in the Tampa Bay area offered these five tips:  

1. Be aware that you are under a lot of stress and be careful to support yourself. Think of the analogy of putting on an oxygen mask on an airplane. You have to put on your own before you can help someone else, even your child. Taking care of yourself will help you to be a better single parent. Every method we use to combat our stress is technically a coping mechanism; however, some are adaptive or good while others are maladaptive or bad. Stress prevention strategies include having a regular daily routine for predictability, finding ways in your day to get up and move and be active, and simplifying necessary activities such as making lunches the night before a busy school morning.

2. Say what you mean and mean what you say. When you’re a single parent, if you don’t follow through on your word, your child will quickly learn to push for you to give in. And you can’t afford that when you don’t have someone to partner with you on a regular basis on parenting responsibilities. Set clear rules and expectations and be careful to enforce them.

3. Teach your children independence and responsibility. Your child should understand that your family is a team by designating age-appropriate responsibilities such as cleaning up their toys, pick out their own clothes, and clean their room.

4. Seek help! Maintain a social support network so that you have a few caring adults in you and your child’s life that you can call on when you need help with childcare or unexpected situations. Offer to trade with neighbors or your child’s friend’s parents for babysitting and childcare.

5. Share information with teachers and caregivers. You need these people to be familiar with your family situation so that they can be ready to handle it in a sensitive manner. Make sure your children’s teachers and coaches know important facts, particularly if a parent has passed.

This show is packed with valuable information. I hope you'll stick around!

References from this Podcast:

Dr. Rice's website