Posts Tagged ‘Family Members’
How to Train Your Children with Their Social Skills and Help Them Make Friends
There are children that are aloof and have difficulty making friends. Their self- esteem is low and they usually find it hard to deal with different personalities around them. In schools, academics are the main concern for students and not their social skills. Thus, parents must help their children to build up their social skills that would help them gain friends that are significant to their sense of belonging, as well as their self -esteem.
One way to build up your child’s social skills is encouraging them to join in extra-curricular activities. Allow them to participate in school, family, or community activities. This would help them discover their inner strength, potential talents and likes. This is also a way for them to meet new people and gain friends.
Support from family members would help them a lot to continue and pursue what they want to do. Even hesitant or shy children can learn to overcome it. You can build them up even beyond the school. They can interact with other people such as in church, or even in your own community.Support from family members would help them a lot to continue and pursue what they want to do. Even hesitant or shy children can learn to overcome it. You can build them up even beyond the school. They can interact with other people such as in church, or even in your own community.
To some children, making friends may not be easy for them, but it can be surely learned and developed step by step. There are children with disabilities that may feel intimidated from other normal children, and may somehow feel uncomfortable making friends. You can help your child work on their social skills by planning to start in small goals. A smile is a great start in making friends. Have an open communication about what happened on the activities he or she got engaged. This may encourage them to be more active in the activities they are involved in.
Children love to play. You can build up their social skills through playing with them. You can act out as a newly met friend. Teach them a friendly greeting or how to ask if a friend wants to play with him or her.
A good character is best learned at home. Kind words must be instilled to your child’s vocabulary especially when asking questions or talking to other people. Give them also tips on how to choose right friends to develop a good relationship as well as right character.
Usually, friends of the same level of age can provide significant social and emotional support to your child. Give your child time to explore new friends in the neighborhood. Let them play after they have done their homework. You may also know their friends by serving some snacks for them. Your children will build camaraderie with their friends with you supervising them as well.
You can also introduce them to sports or activities like dancing, singing, etc within home premises. This way, they will be introduced with these activities and they will carry it out as soon as they are exposed to school, church or community. They will not feel left behind from their friends or classmates and their confidence will boost up. They will enjoy their interaction with others knowing that they know what they are about to do.
Do You Know What Your Dog Is Trying To Tell You?
We all know that dogs cannot speak or even think like a human but they are very capable of getting through to you what they wish you to know.
Everyone knows what your dog means when you are enjoying a meal and he sits there staring at you with a sad, neglected look, drooling all over the carpet… “Please, I haven’t eaten anything for a week at least.” We avoid this by feeding our dog first and then refusing his pleas. He will try this sometimes with strangers but I just have to say “No begging.” He will then take a big gulp, hang his head in shame and wander off somewhere to lie down.
We have a Rottweiler called Killer. The reason for this name is that we live in a house in Indonesia that is somewhat remote and the neighbours, knowing the dog’s name, are somewhat loathe to bother us.
Killer is coming up to about two years now. He of course has learned the usual doggy instruction names like no, sit, stay, speak, out, fetch, down, roll over, heel etc, as well as the ones he likes like walk, food, chicken (his favourite), kitty, play, ball, bone, stick. He also knows all the names of the family members and a few friends. Apart from names, he has learned that when we get dressed, we are going out so he waits in anticipation to see whether he is coming with us or he hears the dreaded word “stay.” He is also rather good at understanding things. He somehow manages to put two unrelated words together. For instance, he knows the name of my wife, “Yuyun” and also the word “walk.” When he asks me to take him out for a walk and I am busy, I can say “Yuyun walk.” He will then leave me and go and look for her and lead her to the door.
It is a struggle training him as Yuyun still thinks that he is that little bundle of fur she arrived home with a couple of years ago and she continues to spoil him to death. I try to explain to her that dogs are pack animals and need to have a leader and that, if he keeps getting his own way, he will think that HE is the leader but all this falls on deaf ears.
5 am every morning on the nose, Killer give ME the nose, instructing me to stagger out of bed and let him out. I must explain that here in Indonesia which is a Moslem country the people here are generally scared of any dog and totally petrified of a large one like ours. Thus I am unable to just open the door and let him run around but rather have to accompany him. So, I get taken for an early morning walk while my beloved wife whose “baby” this is, continues sleeping.
After sniffing around the neighbourhood for twenty minutes, marking his territory, I am allowed to return home but not to sleep. Oh no. It is now play time! There are various games that Killer enjoys. One is having me chase him around the house. When he wants to do this, he picks up some object say a bone or a rag and approaches me growling, defying me to take it away from him. When I make a move, he will back up waiting for me to make a grab for the object at which time he will take off running, glancing over his shoulder to make sure that I am following. We play this game until I am out of breath which, at 5.30 am, does not take too long.
Another game that he likes is for me to shut him in the bedroom while I take his ball and hide it somewhere in the house. Doesn’t matter where it is, he will eventually come up with it. He starts off by looking in all the obvious places and only when that doesn’t work he sticks his nose in the air and commences a serious search. In order to inform me that this is the game that he has selected, he will go to one of the difficult places that has been selected in the past, like a closed drawer, sniff at it, bark and then stare at me longingly. He will keep on repeating these actions until I give in and produce the ball.
Sometimes we take him out to the park which is just a few metres from the house. He likes for Yuyun to run to the other side of the field while I instruct him to sit and stay. He keeps his beady eye on the wife until she is almost out of site at which time I say “Get Yuyun!” Off he goes at full speed, completely freaking out any people who happen to be playing or walking in the park and who think that Killer is about to attack her and maul her to death.
Whenever Killer wants to go out he will bark and then run back and forth between the door and me. If it is an emergency he will whine. If he is hungry he will run over to his bowel, stare at it, then run over to the food bag and stare at that and then stare at me. If I ignore him he will bark to get my attention and go through the process again. The other day, Yuyun picked up one of his bones and placed it on top of the wall outside the house. A few hours later Killer trotted outside for something, looked up and spotted the bone. He came back into the house looking for me and instructed me to follow him by barking and backing up to the door. Once outside, he looked up at the bone and then at me. I didn’t even know that it was there so it took a few seconds to sink in what he was trying to tell me.
We live in a rather large house with about twelve rooms. Often I had to ask my wife something and not wanting to shout, ended up searching all the rooms inevitably finding her in the last one. Now I just call the dog and say “Find Yuyun.” After he takes off, I just wait for his bark and then know where the wife is. Dogs do have their uses.
If, when walking up to Killer, he rolls over onto his back, he is telling me to scratch his belly. Doesn’t matter what else is going on in the house, belly scratching supersedes all and killer remains in a euphoric state until I stop.
If I say something to him that he does not understand, he will cock his head to one side telling me. “I haven’t a clue what you are talking about.” Or, if it is something that he thinks sounds too good to be true, he will wait for confirmation before getting too excited.
Whenever I hug and kiss my wife, Killer will stare at us jealously. I know exactly what he is thinking. “Hey, that’s my mother you are messing with.”
So there you are. I am sure that we understand most of what our dog is trying to tell us and, with a little patience, you can get to understand yours also.
New Business Financing – Options and Obligations
Where will the business be located? How well will it do there? And, most importantly, how will you pay for the expenses of opening this new business? Financing a new business can be a major consideration and is often one of the biggest stumbling blocks that a potential business owner must overcome on their way to the grand opening.
Financing a New Business With Individual Funds
Self-funding a business opportunity is one of the fastest ways to get started. If you have the money to cover all of the expenses of starting and running the business, it eliminates the hassle of trying to find funding and also eliminates the need to have others involved in the process.
However, self-funding means that you and you alone are going to have to come up with all of the money that is involved with that business including any of the unforeseen or emergency expenses that tend to come up. If you are planning to self fund your business, make sure that doing so will not put too much of a burden on your family or other obligations.
It is also important that just because you are financing a new business with personal funds that you don’t try to cut corners in regards to safety and other issues which might keep your business from being able to open as scheduled or from being legal and safe.
Financing a New Business with Partners
Not everyone can afford to start a new business with money from their own pocket, even if it is great idea. For them, it might be possible to get a few friends together to cover the start up costs. But, sharing the cost of financing a new business with friends or family members means that you are going to be sharing profits, expenses and decisions for the business.
You also have to decide if these decisions will be made by equal votes or if there is a division of power that is equal to the amount that the person has invested into the business. If you have partners you may also have to decide whether your business should be a corporation or other type of entity for tax purposes.
Financing a New Business With Professional Financing Options
Getting your new business off the ground might not happen if you can’t get the financing. If you cannot get financing on your own or with friends and family, it might be possible to get financing from your local bank or from other options including business incubators and the Small Business Administration.