7 Tips To Making Your Home A Haven

7 Tips To Making Your Home A Haven

happy family

Home, which once served as our refuge, is no longer a sanctuary for most of us. We return home to a deluge of mail, bills, telephone messages, and chores. Cell phones and email connect us constantly with the outside world, at the same time interrupting our contact with our families. In some homes, the TV is on constantly, blaring news of upsetting events and life-and-death dramas.

 

To flourish, we all need a safe place — both physically and emotionally — to come home to. If children are to turn their full attention to the many demands of growing up, they need a secure, solid home where they feel protected. They need to feel we can keep them safe: from the neighbourhood bully, from kidnappers, from terrorists.

 

And no matter how independent they are as they pursue their interests outside the home, kids need to know they can count on the presence of their parents when they get home. Your children would rather be with you than do anything else in the world for a very long time. Even after they start having sleepovers and sports games, when they come home they want two things: a safe place where they can be fully themselves, and to connect with the rest of the family in a deep, comfortable, and fun way. If your kid seems to live only for screen time, she’s signaling a deeper hunger that needs filling.

 

Giving your children a sanctuary is an enormous gift. It allows them to go out and do battle in the world, and return home to recharge. It also gives your family culture the cozy nest it needs to thrive. Finally, research shows that adults who consciously create homes where they find nurturance and beauty report better moods and less stressful lives.

 

 

#1. Slow down.

Young couple are arguing on a bed in an apartment

 

We all love excitement, but stress kills. Literally. Stress erodes our patience, our ability to give our best to our kids, and our health. Stress makes us fat, frantic and more likely to become furious. If we’re honest with ourselves, we can usually see how we make our lives more stressful than they need to be, simply by being unwilling to make the choice to slow down. If you want your kids to behave better, start by slowing down and not rushing so much.

 

 

#2. Your children’s home is their sanctuary.

That means all household members treat each other respectfully, and no violence, physical or verbal, is tolerated, including between children.

 

 

#3. Try not to over-structure time at home.

Parents worrying about teenage son

 

Home needs to be low-pressure time, not performance time. Of course, all children need to be contributing members of the household. But they also need plenty of time to chill out. Try not to swamp them with too many obligations on top of homework, basic chores, music practice, religious studies, etc. Teenagers, especially, are usually under tremendous stress.

 

 

#4. Accept your children’s “Baby Self.”

You know the Baby Self.  It’s that part of your child that emerges in the form of regression when your child has been coping with lots of “grown-up” demands. All day they work hard to hold it together at preschool. When you show up, you evoke the baby self simply by being their parent. They fall apart. They whine, or at least act a bit childish.

 

Should you reprimand them, demand appropriate behaviour? Usually it works better if you don’t. All kids need a chance to be their baby self, and the younger they are, the more time the baby self needs to be “out”. If you let your child be “little” when they need to be (cozy times, bedtime, when they are tired) you reduce the chance they’ll disintegrate at inappropriate times (dinner with Grandma, in line at the supermarket.)

 

The advice is to allow young children to indulge their “Baby Selves” at home when possible. You can expect tantrums or tears or whining after a long day at preschool, or after that first sleepover, or after the school play she worked so hard on, or simply on Friday afternoon after a pressured week. All children have to work hard to perform a high percentage of the time, from sitting still at school to negotiating with friends to picking off that runner at first base. They all need a chance to let the “Baby Self” emerge without being ridiculed.

 

And while it sometimes seems as if they’ll be babies forever, their Baby Selves will disappear sooner than you can imagine, along with your car keys.

 

 

#5. Provide enough structure so that children’s routines run predictably.

Children's nurse and kindergarten child

 

Kids need to know what to expect. Imagine yourself sitting working on a project when your spouse unexpectedly tells you it’s time for a visit to the in-laws. Children often feel like they have little control over their lives; exacerbating that by springing schedule changes on them invariably creates resistance. Structure also keeps things more organized, eliminating the stress of constant last-minute searches for things.

 

 

#6. Limit Technology.

Set a good example by turning off your computer and cell phone to spend the evening with your family. Make it a family rule that Saturdays are technology-free. Worried about how you’ll cope? That’s a sure sign that your household needs to schedule in a regular tech-free day. Try it as an experiment. You might all feel awkward as you start bumping up against each other — “Hey, you live here?” – but the connectedness will blow you away, and you won’t go back.

 

 

#7. Be aware of the impact of sound.

Asian young woman sitting on sofa. Happy female listening music and sleeping in living room. She happy and relaxing at free time on weekend

 

There is an oncologist who plays peaceful music, or sounds of waterfalls, in every room of his house. He cites numerous studies proving that peaceful sounds offers nourishment to the immune system as well as the soul. Anything you can do to minimize noisy sounds like traffic and car honks will protect your family physically and emotionally.

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