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HABITS
Habits, both are good and bad, are patterns of behaviour which
we actively learn. By influence and example, our parents affect the
habits we acquire in childhood.
Whether we like it or not, we are largely creatures of habit. In
many ways this is just as well, for habits are like small computer programmers
which take us through certain situations in life without our having
to think very much about what we are doing.
Unfortunately, although a habit is first acquired ‘because it
seemed a good idea at the time’ it sometimes turns out to be less
useful or desirable than it originally appeared. For this reason,
the teaching of good habits to children, and the elimination of bad
ones, is one of the most important skills for parents to learn.
WHAT ARE
HABITS ?
Habits are
learned patterns of behaviour which, as the result of constant
repetition, come to be carried out with little conscious thought.
They are not instincts, which are inborn largely: habits are
learned. Nor is a habit the same thing as a reflex, for a reflex is
an automatic response and a habit is not. Thumb-sucking is a habit:
a baby has an instinctive desire to suckle and will do so as a
reflex action if any object resembling a nipple is presented to the
mouth or the areas round it, but some children also get the
idea-that is, learn -that in spite of the fact that a thumb produces
no milk, sucking it can produce a feeling of security. These
children continue to suck their thumbs: they have acquired a
harmless habit.
LEARNING HABITS
Most habits
are learned as the result of something pleasant following from what
was originally largely random behaviour. For example, a very young
baby may one day wake and find his mother bending over him.
Startled, he waves his arms vigorously. If his mother immediately
smiles, coos at him and picks him up, he may remember her response
when next he wants her attention. If his arm waving succeeds in
bringing his mother to him, it will become a powerful habit.
Moreover, it doesn’t have to succeed every time: the gambler
doesn’t need to win always to go on playing!
Habits can also be learned as the result of unpleasant happenings,
although, strictly speaking, these are better at suppressing
behaviour than at creating a habit directly. For example, if two
children trip, fall and hurt themselves while running along a
particular stretch of uneven pavement, running along that stretch
will be surpressed, but the fall and the hurt will give rise to no
specific habit-for example, the habit of not running. Instead, the
first child may avoid the cracks between paving stones, the second
may simply burst into tears when being led in the direction of the
‘danger area’ of the pavement.
Yet another way in which a habit can be learned is by imitation, as
many parents find out if their child gets into bad company. In this
instance, the habit is learned because the imitator feels tougher,
more grown-up, more popular or whatever advantage the person copied
is reckoned to have. Children can unfortunately learn bad habits
from their parents by imitation. Many youngsters smoke and drink to
excess simply because their parents do so, too. ‘Do as I say, not
as I do’ may be the advice of a parent caught in this trap, but
example is often more powerful than instruction where habits are
concerned.
HABITS AND
PERSONALITY
Some
children learn habits, either good or bad, more easily than others,
partly because of differences in personality. Shy, reserved and
gentle children-form the most ingrained habits, although they learn
them only slowly. Unfortunately, because these children are so
reserved, it is not always realized that the habits they have
learned are not all good ones. Meanwhile, the sociable,
happy-go-lucky child may quickly pick up a habit, but may as quickly
drop it again when other influences come along.
Habits are learned more easily by the anxious child, too, because,
quite often, the carrying out of a habitual pattern of behaviour is
a means of reducing anxiety. The child who rocks backwards and
forward without pause when left alone, the man who needlessly
polishes his glasses when embarrassed, the women who bites her nails
when she is under pressure are all examples of people following this
process. However, research shows that both reservedness and the
tendency to show anxiety are inborn qualities, so while we may try
to control which habits our children acquire, there is little point
in making a fuss about the ease-or otherwise-with which a child
picks up habitual behaviour.
TEACHING AND
CHANGING HABITS
There are
three main rules for attempting to establish or change a habit. The
first is that it is far more effective (not just more humane) to
change a habit by rewarding the person for changing than by
punishing him or her. Praise and cuddling as a reward for
‘success’ will help a child to achieve toilet-training much
faster than punishment for failure.
The second rule is that the strongest reward wins. If, for example,
parents try to break a daughter’s habitual untidiness by praising
her when she looks neat, their efforts may fail if the reward of her
friends’ praise for the way she dresses means more to her.
The third rule is that some degree of strictness and consistency is
necessary for a habit to become established. This fact has spoiled
many a parent’s attempts to break a child of a habit that seems
undesirable. If parents try to teach a child not to waste food by
praising him when he eats all his meal at home, but let him leave
food on weekly visits to his grandparents, and later reward him with
sweets for being quite there, he will go on leaving food.
PREVENTING BAD
HABITS
Since
children acquire habits with ease, it is clear that the best way to
prevent bad habits it to teach good ones before the others are
acquired. It is far easier to establish a habit than to change one
that is already established. Consequently, how parents behave
towards their children is of more importance in forming habits than
any other influence.
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