Playful Parenting: An Exciting New Approach to Raising Children That Will Help You Nurture Close Connections, Solve Behavior Problems, and Encourage Confidence
Playful Parenting: An Exciting New Approach to Raising Children That Will Help You Nurture Close Connections, Solve Behavior Problems, and Encourage Confidence book cover

Playful Parenting: An Exciting New Approach to Raising Children That Will Help You Nurture Close Connections, Solve Behavior Problems, and Encourage Confidence

Paperback – April 30, 2002

Price
$16.95
Format
Paperback
Pages
320
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345442864
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.65 x 8.25 inches
Weight
8.8 ounces

Description

“A welcome reminder that the serious business of parenthood also can be fun.” — Seattle Post-Intelligencer “A magical and inspiring read.” –MICHAEL THOMPSON, Ph.D., Coauthor of Best Friends, Worst Enemies “Reading this book, you’ll discover that you can be closer to your children and can enjoy them more. . . . You’ll learn what a difference play can make in your relationships and the kind of people your children will become. And, most important, you’ll have fun.” — Chicago Parent We all know we are supposed to turn off the TV and spend more time together. But then what? PLAYFUL PARENTING is a guide to having more fun with young people of all ages as they tackle new accomplishments, recover from being hurt, or are simply bursting with youthful exuberance. Through the practice of Playful Parentingx97joining children in their world, focusing on connection and confidence, giggling and roughhousing, reversing the roles and following your childx92s leadx97you will learn how to deal effectively with sibling rivalry and other tricky problems, and how to rethink your ideas about discipline and punishment. Finally, in order to be fountains of hopefulness and enthusiasm for children, we must find ways to replenish ourselves. PLAYFUL PARENTING offers practical help in becoming the best parents, and the most playful parents, we can be. Parents can learn to balance the serious business of heartfelt connections with the silliness of wild play. PLAYFUL PARENTING can help solve a variety of family difficulties, but it is also for families where everything is going fine. It helps every child have more fun, and itx92s great for grown-ups. After all, we need to play, too. Lawrence J. Cohen, Ph. D., is a clinical psychologist specializing in children's play, play therapy, and parenting. He is the coauthor, with Michael Thompson and Catherine O'Neill Grace, of Best Friends, Worst Enemies, a book about children's friendships and peer relations. He is also a columnist for The Boston Globe. Dr. Cohen leads Playful Parenting workshops for parents, teachers, and child-care professionals. He lives in Brookline, Massachusetts, with his wife, Anne, and their daughter, Emma. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 1THE VALUE OF BEING A PLAYFUL PARENTPlay is the essence of life.Think about the loving gaze of an infant, the no-holds-barred embrace of a toddler, the intimacy of a shared bedtime story, or a silent hand-in-hand walk. These moments of heartfelt connection with our children are part of the great payoff for the hard work of parenting. Yet this connection all too often eludes us. We find ourselves locked in battle instead of joined in partnership. We all know the rest: the inconsolable baby, the toddler in the throes of a tantrum, the third-grader in a huff over bedtimes, the twelve-year-old sulking in her room.Children’s natural exuberance and exploration often gives way to what I call “fighting and biting.” Or they hide themselves behind a Gameboy or a locked door. Meanwhile, our profound feeling of parental love is replaced by resentment and aggravation, even rage. We nag or punish, or we say, “Fine, stay in your room.” We yell when we reach the end of our rope, or just out of habit. All because we feel helpless, rejected, and cut off. We want to reconnect, as much as our children do, but we don’t know how. We still love them, but we barely remember those melting eye gazes of babyhood. If we do remember, it is a bittersweet memory, as if that closeness were lost forever.Play—together with what I call Playful Parenting—can be the long-sought bridge back to that deep emotional bond between parent and child. Play, with all its exuberance and delighted togetherness, can ease the stress of parenting. Playful Parenting is a way to enter a child’s world, on the child’s terms, in order to foster closeness, confidence, and connection. When all is well in their world, play is an expansive vista where children are joyful, engaged, cooperative, and creative. Play is also the way that children make the world their own, exploring, making sense of all their new experiences, and recovering from life’s upsets. But play is not always easy for adults, because we have forgotten so much. Indeed, children and adults often seem to reside in radically different worlds, even within the same household. We find each other’s favorite activities boring or strange: How can she spend all afternoon dressing up Barbies? How can they sit around all evening just talking?Parenting and playfulness can seem like contradictions, but sometimes we just need a little push to find one another and have fun together. I was at an outdoor concert, dancing off on the side with my nine-year-old daughter, when a mother and son came over to the dance area. She started dancing a little, but he just stood with his arms folded, a little too shy to dance now that he was there. He was about six or seven. His mother said, starting to get angry, “You dragged me up here, and now you’re not going to dance?” He folded his arms tighter and literally dug his heels in. I thought, We can all see where this is going. I said, “Oh no, he’s doing a new dance,” and I folded my arms just like his and gave him a big smile. He smiled back and moved his hands to a different position, which I copied. His mom caught on right away and started copying him, too. We all laughed. He started moving his shoulders up and down to the music, and his mother said, “You’re dancing!” Then he started to dance, and he had a great time. We all did (including my daughter, who waited patiently while I did “the Playful Parenting thing,” and then wanted my complete attention again). A little playfulness turned the tide.This small episode demonstrates that Playful Parenting can happen anywhere and anytime, not just during designated playtimes. Playful Parenting begins with play, but it includes much more—from comforting a crying baby to hanging out at the mall; from waging pillow fights to taking the training wheels off the bicycle; from negotiating rules to dealing with the emotional fallout of a playground injury; from getting ready for school to listening to a child’s fears and dreams before bed. Sadly, these simple interactions can seem out of reach sometimes, or full of complications and hard feelings.The fact is, we adults don’t have much room in our lives for fun and games. Our days are filled with stress, obligations, and hard work. We may be stiff, tired, and easily bored when we try to get on the floor and play with children—especially when it means switching gears from a stressful day of work or household chores. We might be willing to do what they want—like the mom at the outdoor concert, above—but then we get annoyed when they don’t play the way we expect or when they demand too much from us.Others of us may be unable to put aside our competitiveness or our need to be in control. We get bored, cranky, and frustrated; we’re sore losers; we worry about teaching how to throw the ball correctly when our child just wants to play catch. We complain about children’s short attention spans, but how long can we sit and play marbles or Barbies or Monopoly or fantasy games before we get bored and distracted, or pulled away by the feeling that getting work done or cooking dinner is more important?When my daughter was in preschool, she made up a great game that helped me be playful instead of shouting at her to hurry up and get ready. One morning she came downstairs, hid behind the doorway, and whispered to me, “Pretend that I’m still upstairs and that we’re really gonna be late and you’re really mad.” So I shouted upstairs, “We’re late, and I am really mad!” and I started storming around and stamping my foot. Meanwhile, she was behind the door giggling, her hand over her mouth. I said, “You better get down here, or I’m leaving without you. I’m going to go by myself to Big Oak Preschool!” She started laughing out loud, so I pretended I couldn’t hear her. While letting her sneak out ahead of me, I made a big show of leaving the house without her, supposedly not noticing she was there. She got in the car and I pretended I was talking to myself out loud, saying, “I am so mad. The teachers are going to say, ‘Where is Emma?’ And I’m going to say, ‘She wasn’t ready, so I just left with- out her.’ ” She was giggling and giggling and trying not to let on that she was really there. She was making getting ready for preschool fun for me! Pretending to be mad helped me not to be really mad, and playing instead of shouting helped her get ready faster!—WHY CHILDREN PLAY—Some children are leaders and some are followers; some prefer fantasy dress up while others are drawn to ball games. But virtually every child has an instinct for play that buds immediately after birth and is in full bloom by the age of two or three. Play is possible anywhere and anytime, a parallel universe of fantasy and imagination that children enter at will. For adults, play means leisure, but for children, play is more like their job. Unlike many of us adults, they usually love their work and seldom want a day off. Play is also children’s main way of communicating, of experimenting, and of learning.A child who won’t or can’t play is instantly recognizable as being in significant emotional distress, like an adult who can’t work or won’t talk. Severely abused and neglected children often have to be taught how to play before they can benefit from play therapy. Why do we consider child labor such an abomination? Because it means children grow up without having a childhood, without play. It’s even worse when their labor is exploited so that adults can have more leisure, as depicted in this nineteenth-century poem by Sarah Norcliffe Cleghorn:The Golf Links Lie So Near the MillThe golf links lie so near the millThat almost every dayThe laboring children can look outAnd watch the men at play.Many experts describe play as a place—a place of magic and imagination, a place where a child can be fully one’s self. As psychologist Virginia Axline wrote about children in preschool: “They can build themselves a mountain and climb safely to the top and cry out for all the world to hear, ‘I can build me a mountain, or I can flatten it out. In here, I am big!’ ”2 I had a great reminder of the basic nature of play at my daughter’s third birthday party. I had organized all kinds of games to play in the park across the street from our house, and, of course, being a psychologist, I explained all of these complicated games to the children, who stood around looking at me as if I were from outer space. I wasn’t sure what to do. The children were too revved up to go back inside, but they weren’t going for my games. My wife interrupted and said, “Okay, everybody, run to the other side of the park and back!” They all ran happily across the park, shrieking and laughing, then ran back and flopped on the ground, giggling and panting for breath. They looked at me, and one boy asked, “That was fun, can we do that again?” I got the point.Nevertheless, I can’t quite stop talking about the serious side of play. Play is fun, but it is also meaningful and complex. The more intelligent the animal, the more it plays. Unlike slugs or trees, every human learns new things about the world, and themselves, through discovery and practice. Some of this learning just happens automatically, by virtue of being alive, but much of it happens through play. Human childhood has gotten longer and longer, which means an increasing amount of time available for play. Play is important, not just because children do so much of it, but because there are layers and layers of meaning to even the most casual play.Take an apparently simple game like catch—a child and a parent tossing a baseball back and forth. Much like observing pond water under a microscope, close observation of a game of catch reveals a great deal going on right under our noses. The child is developing hand-eye coordination and gross motor skills; the pair are enjoying their special time together; the child practices a new skill until it is mastered, and then joyfully shows it off; the rhythm of the ball flying back and forth is a bridge, reestablishing a deep connection between adult and child; and comments like “good try” and “nice catch” build confidence and trust.But this straightforward game can also contain strong undercurrents of feeling. A father I was seeing in therapy described a game of catch during which his son threw him one zinger after another. He could see how angry and frustrated his son was by how hard he was throwing the ball. Together we figured out that perhaps his son was really asking him, “Can you catch what I throw at you? Are my feelings too much for you? Am I safe from my own impulses, my own anger?” Another father’s son loved to play catch, but whenever he missed the ball, the boy would dissolve into tears and tantrums and say, “I told you to throw it lower—you never listen to me!” In this case, the child seemed to be using the game as a way to release a pile of hurt feelings that had nothing to do with baseball.Not every game of catch, or every playtime with a child, contains all of these multiple levels of meaning. But all play is more profoundly meaningful than we usually think. First, play is a way to try on adult roles and skills, just as lion cubs do when they wrestle with one another. Human children roughhouse, and they play house. As children discover the world, and discover what they are able to do in the world, they develop confidence and mastery.Play is also a way to be close and, even more important, a way to reconnect after closeness has been severed. Chimpanzees like to tickle one another’s palms, especially after they have had a fight. Thus, the second purpose of play serves our incredible—almost bottomless—need for attachment and affection and closeness.The third purpose of play for children, and perhaps the one that is most uniquely human, is to recover from emotional distress. Imagine children who have had a hard day at school. They come home and one way or another show you that they’re hurting. They talk about it, or they are irritable and obnoxious. They lock themselves in their room, or they insist on extra attention. But most often, they spontaneously use play to feel better. Perhaps they play school, only this time they are the teacher. Maybe they play a video game and blow up alien enemies for a while. Or they call a friend and talk about it, which is what older children and adults often do instead of play. By pretending, or by retelling the story, the scene can be re-created. This time, the child is in charge. Through playing it out, emotional healing takes place. Escaping into a book or playing a hard game of tennis can also be helpful after a bad day.One child I knew, who had lots of reading difficulties, would always come home from school and do something she was really good at, which was drawing. Before dinner she would show her parents what she had drawn. In one sweet moment, she was reconnecting with them, restoring her sense of competence, and recovering from the frustration and humiliation of feeling like a failure at school.Before going into greater detail about these deep meanings of play, let me repeat that play is fun. Spending time with children is supposed to be joyful. My daughter’s preschool teacher told me that preschoolers laugh an average of three hundred times a day. What would happen if we all did that? Let’s have more fun: sing goofy songs, fall over, exaggerate, have pillow fights, tell jokes. If you are frustrated because you have to remind your child for the twelfth time to pack her lunch or take out the garbage, next time try singing the request in a fake-opera voice instead of using the usual nagging tones. At the very least it will get her attention.As we shall see, however, Playful Parenting is more than just play. We can interact playfully, or on a deep emotional level, no matter what we are doing: working on chores, playing sports, completing homework, hanging out, watching television, cuddling, even imposing discipline. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Have you ever stepped back to watch what really goes on when your children play? As psychologist Lawrence J. Cohen points out, play is children’s way of exploring the world, communicating deep feelings, getting close to those they care about, working through stressful situations, and simply blowing off steam. That’s why “playful parenting” is so important and so successful in building strong, close bonds between parents and children. Through play we join our kids in
  • their
  • world–and help them to• Express and understand complex emotions• Break through shyness, anger, and fear• Empower themselves and respect diversity• Play their way through sibling rivalry • Cooperate without power strugglesFrom eliciting a giggle during baby’s first game of peekaboo to cracking jokes with a teenager while hanging out at the mall,
  • Playful Parenting
  • is a complete guide to using play to raise confident children. Written with love and humor, brimming with good advice and revealing anecdotes, and grounded in the latest research, this book
  • will make you laugh even as it makes you wise in the ways of being an effective, enthusiastic parent.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(279)
★★★★
25%
(116)
★★★
15%
(70)
★★
7%
(33)
-7%
(-33)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

The BEST Parenting Book Around

I whole heartedly recommend this book to ALL parents. Dr. Cohen's ideas completely changed the tone of our household. We were going through a very difficult phase with our 3 year old that was turning into a downward spiral of negativity. Nobody liked the way things were going. We'd read a mountain of "discipline" books, none of which was helpful in our situation. However, reading & following through on Dr. Cohen's book helped us completely turn our situation around - we now have a very HAPPY, joy-filled and fun home. Using the suggestions in this book I was better able to understand my daughter's behavior and I used many of his suggestions to connect with her. She has literally *blossomed* under this treatment - she's just a fantastic, happy little girl.
I am SO grateful to Dr. Cohen - he has helped me to become a much, much better parent and has given us a whole arsenal of wonderful parenting tools to help shape our children in very positive ways. If I could pick only one book on parenting and discipline, this would be it.
60 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

If you read one parenting book, make it this one!

I'll admit it, I am the type of obsessive mother who reads TONS of parenting books. But this is one of the best I've read and it is full of useful, practical and inspiring information. Cohen writes from experience as a parent, a therapist and someone who clearly adores children. His approaches to connecting with your children, disciple and problem behviors are thoughtful, fun, easy to implement, and above all compassionate. I also appreciated the tone he strikes. He is never melodramatic or suggests that you will cause your children permanent emotional harm if you make a mistake, and he acknowledges how hard it can be to parent in this involved way. I genuinely felt that his goal for his readers was the same goal we have for ourselves: to connect with our children so that our family time is enjoyable for all and to raise happy and confident kids.
9 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Turn that frown upside down

This is my go-to book for my twin 5 year old boys! I love how the Dr. Cohen explains that children learn through play. When they are young, children's brains haven't developed the ability to react intellectually in most situations, nor do they see the reasoning behind most consequences (when I was put in "time out" as a child the only thing I realized was that my parents were mean!". It's our responsibility as parents to help our children navigate through their emotions and learn to connect physically, socially and intellectually with the world in a positive way. Since children are still developing their intellectual reasoning, we must teach them in a way they can understand--through PLAY! Nearly any situation of emotional distress, tantrum, or outburst can be turned into a positive situation through play--where the child learns a limit and how to move past the emotions that are causing the unwanted reaction and WHAT they SHOULD be doing. Play breaks down barriers and builds relationships, even with the most stubborn or "grown up" children. My personal experience is that this book is a god send!
8 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Back into the GAME

I am 40 & have a son 6. I find that I love to watch him play, but I had trouble stopping my "things I had to get done" and getting "down & dirty" with him. We spent lots of time in "parallel play" --me doing my thing in the same room with him doing his because we both got a bit bored with each other's games. (For example, he loves creating magnetix structures & I love jigsaw puzzles.)

This book seeks to help you give YOURSELF permission to let your guard down & enjoy your children on their own level. It's very rewarding & we're having much more interesting games. Sometimes we make up the rules (something I didn't do much before because "it wasn't how you're supposed to do it"!) But what I learned was that if I'd play by his rules on occasion, he'd agree to play by mine (the "right ones"). Often, his rules are more fun! Who knew! Now we jump on the bed together sometimes & I've learned that my grandmother was wrong -- it IS fun to play in the mud and we're all washable!
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Connecting through Playful Parenting

In Playful Parenting, Larry Cohen says, "Unlike many personality changes we might like to make, better playing skills can be pretty easily learned." I can confirm that what he says is true. I wasn't a very playful parent, but since reading Playful Parenting and doing workshops with Larry, I'm becoming a very playful grandparent. To my delight, and the delight of my grandchildren and their friends, I'm become pretty good at connecting through play, roughhousing, and silliness.

As a parent, a grandparent, a parent educator, and the author of Connection Parenting, Playful Parenting is one of my top favorite parenting books. I recommend Playful Parenting in all my parenting talks and classes and the parents who read it always enthusiastically report wonderful changes in their relationships with their children.

Reading and practicing Playful Parenting taught me that being playful is one of the most powerful ways we can connect with children. The smiles, giggles, laughter, affection, and connection that bubble up when we are playful with children can change the moment, the day, even our whole relationship with a child. I consider Playful Parenting required reading for all adults who want to connect with the children in their life.

I thank you, Larry, both personally and professionally, for all that I have learned, and now teach, about connecting with children through being more playful.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

delightful

I love this book. My husband and I have had great fun finding playful ways to solve difficult situations with our 26 month old daughter. Life is so much easier and happier on everyone when we can make our daughter laugh and do what we would like her to do instead of all parties getting angry and frustrated. I would recommend this book to anyone (and have recommended it to everyone I know!)
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A great Book about Connecting with your kids through play

In this fast paced life we lead it is easy to become disconnected from our children in so many ways. I found this book extrememly helpful for connecting with my kids through play. Cohen used personal examples that were interesting as well as gave play by play instruction for those of us who have forgotten how to "get down on the floor" and enjoy the things our kids enjoy. I highly recommend it to anyone who wants to improve their relationships with their children.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A welcome alternative to behavioral control

I read through this book twice in order to use it for a parent seminar I did on play. My first time through the book, I really liked what Dr. Cohen was saying. Had I reviewed the book at that point, it probably would have gotten five stars. But when I went back through the book specifically thinking of how I was going to use it in the seminar, and actually using parts of it in the seminar, I found it a bit lacking. Dr. Cohen gives example after example of instances in which a playful approach have helped him in his parenting as well as his consulting work. But the book lacks a strong theoretical framework, so the result is a basically a collection of techniques that may or may not work for any given parent. While I appreciate the overall message, I think Dr. Cohen overlooks the importance of genuineness and authenticity.

Dr. Cohen does provide a theoretical framework, if a rather thin one. He talks about the initial experience of bonding, the "eye love" between parent and child. This state of perfect connection is fairly common between infants and parents, but the more the child begins to explore on her own and to develop a will of his own, the more it breaks down and the more disconnection there is. Childhood is a constant push-pull between needing to explore and develop one's own identity and independence on one hand, vs. the need to return, reconnect and refuel on the other hand. Dr. Cohen describes this process using a cup metaphor - exploring, interacting with peers, dealing with conflict and frustration, etc. all drain the child's cup and he must return to a secure caregiver to refill his cup. Children are constantly seeking out connection, but our moods, stresses and distractions (and those of our children) result in misunderstandings and disconnections, which in turn create further frustrations and disconnections as children feel unheard, unseen and unloved. Play, according to Dr. Cohen, is the bridge back to connection.

Dr. Cohen talks about how play allows us as adults to enter into the child's world on her terms. Children are so used to having to do what they're told and being subject to a world over which they have little control. Play is the world in which they have complete control, and therefore is the world in which they express their thoughts, desires and needs, as well as work through problems and conflicts. Not allowing children to play would be like not allowing an adult to talk. Not joining children in their play is like not listening.

Dr. Cohen then talks about different issues that may come up in play, such as aggression, the once-again widening gap between boy and girl toys and roles, sibling rivalry and reasons why adults may have trouble engaging in play (stress, the "responsibility" of being an adult, our own backlog of childhood feelings, etc.) Over and over again Dr. Cohen stresses the need to make the effort to engage the child where he is at, and overcome our own resistance. Even if we are morally appalled by the way our children are playing, the only way we can change it is to join in and understand where they are starting from.

It's not that I disagree with anything Dr. Cohen says per se. If anything, I welcome an approach to parenting that recognizes behavior as communication rather than focusing on rewarding "good" behavior and punishing "bad" behavior. But much of Dr. Cohen's specific advice and examples felt rather more like techniques than broadly applicable interventions. Dr. Cohen's methods work very well for him because that's who he is. I too am a playful parent in general, but not in the same mold as Dr. Cohen. Other parents may be more or less playful or serious, physical or hands-off, emotional or analytical. All those different personality traits can work, so long as each parent stays true to his or her own self and doesn't try to be Dr. Cohen. For one example, many of the "games" Dr. Cohen plays with kids and the things he says sound good in print (e.g., "Okay, you can call me Poopyhead, but don't you dare call me Bobblety Boo"), but when I tried them out myself, they just came out awkward and lame - that's just not who I am. As another example, Dr. Cohen spends a whole chapter stressing the importance of "wrestling". While I do think physical contact is very helpful, maybe even crucial to parenting, I think each parent has his or her own comfort level and preferences for how that physicality should play out.

To be fair, I don't think Dr. Cohen would disagree with anything I'm saying either, but I think he needs to stress being oneself as a parent more. Perhaps using fewer examples and talking more in general principles would help. And despite my criticism, I do agree with nearly everything in this book and I welcome his contribution to parenting literature as a welcome respite to the volumes and volumes on how to "Train Up a Child", for instance. Well worth reading, just be sure to keep in mind who you are and your own relationship with your child.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

it's okay!

it's as a great read, but it didn't help me me much with my daughter. i felt it didn't touch on discipline.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Fun, uplifting, positive parenting book!

This is one of the few parenting books I've read that's completely uplifting! Really fun to read, and full of helpful examples. This is the only book I plan to read again when I need a parenting pick-me-up. :)
2 people found this helpful