Skip to Content

BFBN: Tips for managing different personalities in your home- Guest Post

It’s a Babywise Friendly Blog Network trade day!  I am over at Mama’s Organized Chaos discussing the schedule we have for Ben and the girls at two months.  I hope it helps people see that schedules are possible, even with a 2.5  year old and twins!

Today I am lucky to have Carrie from Wiley Adventures posting.  She is talking about managing different personalities in your home.  As we all know we have recently gone from one to three kids, so working around different personalities with kids is new to us.  We are still getting to know the girls.  But we know that despite the fact that they are twins, they are two unique people with their own little personalities.  As they grow I want to work with their unique selves and not try to lump them together just because they were born at the same time.  Carrie has some great insight on how to do this!

Kim

 Tips For Managing Different Personalities in Your Home

Text: Tips for Managing Your Kids Different Personalities Picture: Young boy smiling at camera with bowtie and plaid shirt



t would be so EASY and so CONVENIENT if all of our kids fit a mold wouldn’t it? Even more convenient would be if our kids fit our own mold, or had the same personality as we do. As a parent one of the most baffling things can be when your child’s personality is different from your own. Because this is so often not the case, it is important to parent towards DEVELOPMENT not towards CONVENIENCE.
A simple way to do that is to ask two questions when thinking about your kids personalities (or even when thinking about your own or your spouse’s personalities):
1. Is your child task oriented or relationship oriented?
Does your child push against bedtime because they cannot stand to see that project go unfinished or finish that book to see what happens? They are probably task oriented.
Does your child want to make every day a social gathering or event? They are probably relationship oriented.
Knowing what is behind their MOTIVATION can really help when you are interacting with them throughout the day. This can help you frame your expectations and even your language when you approach them in different circumstances.
For example, task oriented people tend to love charts and lists to check off. Make a bedtime chart and for every night they go to bed on time, give them a sticker or a check mark for a job completed. For the relationship oriented child, pair them with another sibling to help with chores or other tasks. Give them someone to talk to.
2. Is your child an introvert or an extrovert?
Do people energize or drain your child?
Recognizing what FUELS your child is vital to how you interact with them. If your child is an introvert and has been around people all day long, they are likely to be fussy and exhausted whereas a more extroverted child might be more energized and happy. And visa versa is true as well. If you have an extroverted child who hasn’t really been around people in a couple days, they might be more drained and might need some people time.
Thinking through these things are not so you can cater to your child necessarily, but being aware of how your kids function and work can really help you work WITH your child’s personality instead of AGAINST it.
Related Post:
Carrie blogs at www.wileyadventures.com. She is married to Kyle and has four kids: Laura Kate (7 years), Shepherd (5 years), Fischer (3 years), and Archer (15 months). 
 
 
Be sure to check out all the other ladies of the BFBN to see what they have to say today!

How useful was this post?

Click on a star to rate it!

Let us improve this post!

Tell us how we can improve this post?

Bounce Town
← Read Last Post
Normal weekend outing
Read Next Post →

* Checkbox GDPR is required

*

I agree

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.