Written by: Lai Shun Mei, Family Dynamics Counselor and Global Career Developer
When a child is born, people like to discuss his appearance, using his resemblance to his parents as a topic of conversation, and talk about which attractive features he has inherited from them. As he grows older and his temperament begins to show, they also like to explore whose personality he resembles.
It is generally easier to get along with someone who has a similar temperament because similar personalities and preferences make it easier to connect. If a child has a temperament similar to their parents, it seems to make parenting easier. However, it often seems like God enjoys playing jokes on us by giving us “mismatched” children: an outgoing and lively mother ends up with a quiet and introverted daughter; a hot-tempered father faces a sensitive and sentimental son; a mother who doesn’t understand fun encounters a hedonistic son.
Parents who seek help often share the common issue of having difficulty getting along with their “mismatched” child. They cannot accept the child’s nature, do not understand the child’s behavior, and do not know how to properly guide their child.
The outgoing and lively mother “complained” to me: “My daughter dawdles, is hesitant, and doesn’t dare to make friends outside.” She couldn’t understand: “What’s so difficult about brushing teeth? What’s so scary about attending English class? What’s there to be shy about when meeting other kids?” Why is her daughter nothing like her but instead resembles her indecisive, introverted, timid, and unambitious father? As she spoke, she indirectly revealed to me that her problem was not accepting her spouse and projecting her dissatisfaction with her spouse onto their daughter. Therefore, the issue was not with her daughter but with their marital relationship.
Additionally, Hong Kong frequently launches
new stamps and themed first-day covers, which parents can acquire at reasonable
prices to greatly expand the variety of stamps, designs, and sizes for their
children. If parents travel or go on business trips abroad, they can also
collect local stamps, especially the cheapest ones, like the one-penny stamps
in the UK. Parents can also ask their relatives, friends, and colleagues to
bring back stamps from their travels or business trips, which can greatly
diversify the stamp collection for the children through different acquisition
channels.
Why not try this meaningful reward system
and parent-child activity with your family?