Filling the Bucket

An acquaintance recently posted this picture on his Facebook page:



Nice imagery... But how do you fill that darn bucket?  Praise?  Rewards?  A bucket full of "good jobs", A+, and gold medals?  Honestly, I don't think it's the parents' responsibility to fill the bucket.  Only by letting the child fill it on his own will we ensure that it will never run dry.

The only way we can encourage the child to fill his own bucket is by giving him experiences in which he can find success.  The crawling baby will feel a sense of achievement when he can get out of bed on his own; the toddler will rejoice when he spreads jelly on a piece of bread all by himself; the pre-schooler will know he's capable when he figures out how to tie his own tennis shoes; the 9-year old will understand his worth when he carries groceries for an elderly woman; the adolescent will lift his chin when he can teach his dad how to fix an engine; the young adult will feel proud when his invention touches the lives of others.

Intertwined in all these experiences are two important concepts: trusting the child and giving him freedom with responsibility.  In each instance, the adult had to trust not only the child's ability, but also his capacity for problem-solving and assuming responsibility when things go wrong (and things often do when mastering a new skill).  How can the pre-schooler feel successful about tying his shoelaces if we only buy him shoes with velcro (and even worse, insist on helping him with his shoes)?  How can the 9-year old help an elderly person if we don't give him the skills and freedom to cross the street on his own?  Should we send the motorcycle to the mechanic or trust our adolescent when he says he can fix it?  Must we force the young adult to stick to the career path we think suits him best, or let him follow his heart and mind?

Praise makes the child dependent on you to fill his bucket; trust sets him free to fill it on his own.

So long as you are still worried about what others think of you, you are owned by them. Only when you require no approval from outside yourself can you own yourself. ~Neale Donald Walsch

 

4 comments

amyhmalik
 

Great post Pilar! I like this description of giving encouragement instead of praise. I also like the new colors :) I will link back to you on Positively Montessori, as this is one of my favorite Positive Discipline tools!
Read more
Read less
  Cancel
EV
 

Well said. Glad you're writing online again.
Read more
Read less
  Cancel
the full monte(ssori)
 

Thanks Amy! I appreciate the link!
Read more
Read less
  Cancel
the full monte(ssori)
 

Thanks EV, it's nice to have some time and mental bandwidth now that Zach sleeps well.
Read more
Read less
  Cancel

Leave a comment