Teaching Children to Become Strong Enough
When you read articles like this one, what you learn about the toxic PARENTING is alarming. Many people are not aware of the serious ramifications of toxic parenting practices, especially considering that the rate of childhood cancer is rising steadily. In some families, the use of pesticides and herbicides may be widespread, even after the dangers have been discussed and understood. This problem can be avoided if parents learn the facts.

Toxic parenting behaviors can sneak up on you, no matter how good you are as a parent. You may not be aware of all the environmental factors that contribute to your child’s health problems. However, every parent needs to think about the possible negative consequences of their actions and be actively involved in making sure their children are as healthy as possible. Here is how to spot your toxic parenting behaviors, and end the cycle of toxic parenting before it is too late.
Everyone reacts differently to various situations and they cause different kinds of effects. While one toxic parenting pattern may cause noticeable behaviour changes in one child, the same behavioural changes may not affect another child. Therefore, it is impossible to state that one particular toxic behavior is typical or expected. However, parents who consistently fail to provide healthy nutrition and secure home environments may inadvertently be teaching their children to become physically and mentally ill.
Some symptoms of toxic parenting include: a constant worry and fear about health and safety, poor self-image, a negative view of family members and teachers, and decreased sense of physical and mental wellbeing. As a result, children tend to feel neglected, are overly sensitive to criticism, and experience a loss of self-esteem. A positive child rearing is essential for healthy and happy children, but if parents fail to set clear, reasonable expectations and rules, this will only exacerbate the emotional problems they are facing.
Parents who fail to set clear, reasonable boundaries and guidelines may also be encouraging their children to stray away from healthy relationships and develop unhealthy relationship patterns with their peers and adults. If a parent allows their child to act out, the parent is also encouraging the child to act outside the home and out of control. This is a serious problem and one that can have long-lasting, irreversible consequences. When parents are constantly enabling their child to get into trouble, they are not only setting the foundation for severe emotional and behavioural problems, they may also be setting their child up for emotional and developmental disorders as they grow older. This is why it is critical to speak with a professional when you suspect that your child may be using drugs or alcohol, and the best way to determine if your child is suffering from toxic parenting is to speak to a qualified and experienced professional.
When interviewing parents about their experiences, they are often surprised by how much of a toxic parenting trait they actually have. Surprisingly, many parents say that they did not know what they were doing when they allowed their child to act out, because they did not recognize it as being toxic. Unfortunately, while Dr. Greenberg does his research and his homework, most people do not.
One of the things that he discovers in his research is that people tend to see the parent as being “bad” and the child as being “good”. The toxic parenting example is considered to be something very negative and something very wrong. But Dr. Greenberg discovers that it’s not necessarily so. Parental discipline can be highly positive in some cases.
Another of the ways that Dr. Greenberg helps parents identify the toxic parenting trait is through his practice of “re-training”. Basically, he teaches his clients how to think and act in new ways in order to become more like their own “good” parent. In this way, rather than making their children do things that they don’t want to do, they teach them how to be in control and assertively powerful. By allowing their children to make these choices, parents become much stronger in their role as Parent. Finally, they find that their children become much happier in school and with their peers.
