| Marriage and Family Therapists of New York |
![]() | Make sure your younger children have rest | |
| times regularly during the day. Try not to have every minute of their day scheduled. Read them a book. Look through a magazine with them. Let them watch a movie. Let them be quiet. Let them get used to relaxing. |
![]() | Don’t give them allowances simply because they | |
| exist. Make their allowances contingent on chores getting done—taking out the garbage, loading the dishwasher, getting all homework done right after school, making their bed, bringing their wash downstairs, etc. Help them to realize that they have to work to achieve things. |
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| Group II ANGER MANAGEMENT Waiting List Forming Now......BEGINNING |
| What Are We Doing To Our Children? |
| Coming soon |
Online Certification in Management For Professionals Are you a busy Professional who is interested in learning more about Anger Management? MFT NY offers an Anger Management Training and Certification Program for Mental Health Professionals, School Personnel, and Law Enforcement Persons. This course is appropriate for marriage and family therapists, social workers, mental health counselors, psychologists, teachers, school administrators, as well as law enforcement personnel (probation officers, corrections, and parole persons). |
Couples Getaway Weekend Workshops Do you want to re-romanticize your relationship? We are in the initial stages of developing getaway weekends for couples who want to enhance their relationship. This will involve morning and afternoon sessions in a beautiful and romantic environment. Certificates of Completion are provided at the end of the program. Contact us to keep updated on these new developing services. |
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| 845-626-2257 |
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![]() | Don’t fix what isn’t broken. If tutors are | |
| scheduled to assist the child in reading faster and the child is doing fine in school, s/he will begin to feel like something is wrong with him or her. Some children feel like they are forever getting “fixed.” They have to wear glasses to correct stigmatisms; they wear braces to correct out-of-place teeth; they wear back braces so they stand up straight. When they are a little older, they get their noses fixed so they look better. Some are now going for liposuction to make them look slimmer or to remove imperfections. They go for all sorts of tests if they are not speaking properly and then when nothing is found, they go for speech therapy….just to be sure. All of these corrections (even if necessary) help them to feel that something is wrong with them. Something is broken and it needs to be fixed. Try to be reasonable about what is being fixed. |
![]() | Teach them to help you. Ask them to get you | |
| things. Expect them to assist you with house projects. Teach them to paint, to clean, to attend to you when you are sick, to pick groceries up from the store, to bring the clothes to the cleaners, etc. These behaviors help them to focus on others—to get outside themselves. The helping behaviors could begin when the children are young. Children like to help; it helps them to feel a part of the family. |
![]() | Let them find their own solutions. One of the | |
| most difficult things for a parent is watching their child struggling with a problem, a challenge. Many times the parent jumps right in and helps or solves the problem. Try not to do that. Let the child think about the challenge for a while. Help them to explore different options and solutions but let them struggle for a bit. This is how they learn how to cope with life’s issues. It also teaches them self-confidence. They learn that they will be able to solve issues that confront them and that they will be OK in today’s world. |
| What Are we Doing to Our Children ...Con't |