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Myth #1 - a child can be spoiled with love, or parents can give them too much love. If what we do for and with our children has to do with meeting their needs, then we cannot give too much of that. Unconditional love and strong emotional connections are definitely needs, says Warburton. Myth #2 - a child can be too attached. I have often heard this one especially when someone is talking about a child who appears to be clingy and whiny, seeming to find it difficult to let their parent go - whether it’s at school, daycare or a friend’s house. It is impossible to be too attached. Can a tree be too attached to its roots? The stronger the attachment the more resilient the tree is! ....
The first thing Terry Warburton, the Clinical Director of Recovery of Hope Counselling in Winnipeg says teens need is to be invited and affirmed for who they are becoming. They are not younger versions of adults but are still in the process of maturing and becoming. In fact, it is the developmental task of teens to become their own person. When they do this, they examine and evaluate everything around them so they can become themselves, not a carbon copy of someone else. One of the best ways we can support that process for them to take a deep and sincere interest in their thoughts, feelings and opinions, and draw them out with open-ended questions, even if we don’t agree with them, says Warburton. ....