The importance of helping your child develop a positive body image

In today's world, our children can face many challenges when it comes to body image. It's important to help them develop a positive view of themselves. Gail Smith explains why this is so crucial and offers tips on how you can support your child in this process.

As parents we can be very helpful in our children’s formation years, encouraging them to love themselves and to appreciate how they look and feel about themselves. There are many challenges in today’s world with body image and our children can be exposed to some very unhealthy misconceptions. In their vulnerable years, they can be easily influenced and our role as parents is to offer a nurturing, gentle introduction to developing in themselves, a positive body image, where self-love takes a focus.

Consider the following suggestions:

  • Model positive body image and self-confidence in your own attitudes and

    behaviours. Avoid making negative comments about your own body. Talk about

    how you work on building a healthy body. Show them that you are very

    comfortable in your skin.

  • Teach your child to use positive self-talk and affirmations to promote self-

    acceptance and confidence. Encourage them to focus on their strengths, rather

    than comparing themselves to others. Talk openly about feeling good about

    yourself is so important.

  • Shift the focus from appearance to health by emphasizing the importance of

    nourishing their bodies with nutritious foods, getting regular exercise, and

    getting enough rest. Encourage them to listen to their body's cues and prioritise

    self-care. Present images of healthy looking people and keep away from the body

    beautiful image.

  • Talk to your child about the unrealistic beauty standards portrayed in media and

    how they can distort perceptions of body image. Help them develop critical

    thinking skills to question media messages. Beauty comes in many forms is an

    important message.

  • Celebrate diversity and teach your child to appreciate the beauty of different body types, ethnicity, and cultures. Talk about differences and how healthy it is that we have variations in our body shapes and attitudes to others.

  • Encourage your child to engage in activities that make them feel good about

    themselves and their bodies, such as sports, dance, art, or hobbies. Focus on the

    joy of movement and the sense of accomplishment rather than appearance or

    performance. Keep an eye on how they dress and affirm responsible dress ware.

  • Create a supportive and inclusive environment at home where your child feels

    accepted and valued for who they are. Encourage open communication and

    provide reassurance and encouragement when they express insecurities. Make

    your home a comfortable inclusive space for everyone in all shapes and sizes.

  • Emphasise the importance of inner qualities such as kindness, compassion,

    intelligence, and creativity over external appearance. Help your child develop a

    strong sense of self-worth based on their character and values rather than

    superficial attributes. It is not what we look like it is alley about what is inside.

  • Limit exposure to media that promotes unrealistic beauty standards or negative

    body image messages. Encourage your child to follow positive role models and

    influences who promote self-love, body positivism, and exclusivity. Leave

    healthy journals and magazines around the house promoting good health and

    hygiene.

  • If you notice signs of body image issues or low self-esteem in your child, seek

    professional help from a therapist or counsellor who specialises in body image

    and self-esteem issues. Monitor your child’s changing attitudes to themselves

    especially when they enter teenage years.

Take care to have no negative talk about body images that you see on television, social media etc. Be a safe house where you understand that people are basically different and that’s OK!

Dear Body,
You were never a problem. There is nothing wrong with your size.... You’re good enough already.
— livesimplynatural
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Are you ready for your child becoming a teenager?

Raising a teenager can be difficult. Read some parenting tips on how to strengthen your relationship with your teenager.

Maybe you have already seen some signs in your 10, 11 or 12 year old. Signs of adolescents can gradually creep into your child’s changing behaviour slowly, or with an almighty thud! Either way its best to know and understand the signs so that you, now the proud parent of a teenager, can adjust. Believe me, adjusting is necessary for your continued growth as a parent.

 As your child becomes a teenager, parents will be challenged and of course there will be some moments of grief, realising that you have lost the child that seemed so vulnerable and needy. In fact you may struggle to recognise what they have become and especially if their attitude turns brittle and defensive. Fear not they all come out the other end as caring, young adults, just like the butterfly from the cocoon. However, you play a part in this transformation. So your adjustment and change in living and empathetically working with your emerging teenager is so necessary.

Think back to when you became a teenager. Did you have challenges with your parents? How were they handled? What would have helped you through that time? Do you have fond memories of those adults that listened and understood you?

Consider:

  • Becoming a teenager means that they will be more sensitive about what you say to them and how you speak to them. They are gradually discovering who they are and need your understanding in cutting them some slack when they say and do things that seem unacceptable to you. They are also very conscious about their looks, their weight and how their peers see them. They will be in and out of feeling good about themselves. Your gentle encouragement here and acceptance of their change is really needed. I would say tolerance is especially needed.

  • They are at an age where they want to be making their own decisions. Guide them in this. Be a negotiator with gradual authority going over to them. Include them in family plans. Invite their opinion and listen to suggestions they make. They need to feel credible and valued. Affirm their thoughts and sometimes consider giving way to some things that are important to you. There will be mistakes, but this is a time of learning and discovery.

  • Now that they are a teenager they will want and need their own space. They need to feel freer and less exposed to all the family, especially younger siblings. If it is possible to find some more space for them this would be helpful. Now is a time to recognise that they are individuals who want some privacy.

  • When having family discussions, try to be more inclusive of their opinions. Let them see that you appreciate their opinions and their ideas are considered when planning. This may mean having conversations that are considered a bit more for an adult without younger siblings present. The more your adolescent feels that you are making allowances for their maturation, the happier will be your relationship.

  • Give them space and don’t be surprised if you notice changes in how they think, what they believe in and who they now want to befriend. It is a time for sorting out and taking on new values etc. Be a listener and gently affirm their actions of course within reason. Never compromise your values, but you are showing that you are a reasonable person that is happy to accept change within reason.

  • Understand that differences will be evident and they will naturally want to reject some of your much loved values and beliefs. Be patient and whilst you still need to maintain your own credibility, show tolerance for the differences they are now presenting.

Finally there is an expression:

‘The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.’

In my experience the foundations you have set will be deeply entrenched overtime in your child. They may go through a period of rejection as they challenge what has been given to them. When they take on adulthood you may find your values repeated in their life. Maybe with a few modern twists thrown in.

‘Let go of preconceived notions and prejudices. Expect surprises; expect miracles.’                 

                                Michael Joseph                                                    

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