Temperament and
Your Child's Personality
Personality is determined by the interaction of
temperament traits with the environment. Each
person (including your child) comes with a factory
installed wiring. How your child is wired can
determine whether they will be easy or difficult to
raise. How well their temperament fits with the
environment and how well they are received by the
people in the environment will determine how a child
sees himself and others.
What is temperament?
Temperament is a set of in-born traits that organize the
child's approach to the world. They are instrumental
in the
development of the child's distinct personality. These
traits also determine how the child goes about learning
about the world around him.
These traits appear to be relatively stable from birth.
They are enduring characteristics that are actually never
"good" or "bad." How they are received determines whether
they are perceived by the child as being a bad or good
thing. When parents understand the temperament of their
children, they can avoid blaming themselves for issues that
are normal for their child's temperament. Some children are
noisier than other. Some are more cuddly than others. Some
have more regular sleep patterns that others.
When parents understand how their
child responds to certain situations, they an learn to
anticipate issues that might present difficulties for their
child. They can prepare the child for the situation or in
other cases they may avoid a potentially difficult situation
all together.
Parents can tailor their parenting strategies to the
particular temperamental characteristics of the child. They
can also avoid thinking that a behavior that reflects a
temperament trait represents a pathological condition that
requires treatment.
Parents feel more effective as they more fully understand
and appreciate their child's unique personality.
When the demands and expectations of people and the
environment are compatible with the child's temperament
there is said to be a "goodness-of-fit." When
incompatibility exists, you have what is known as a
"personality conflict." Early on parents can work with the
child's temperamental traits rather than in opposition to
them. Later as the child matures the parents can help the
child to adapt to their world by accommodating to their
temperamental traits.
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