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Your Child And
Mother's Day
Mother's day
is an important celebration for your child. The celebration
will become a family tradition and helps your child express
his or her love for mom.
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Why Mother's
Day is Important For Children
Mother’s Day is important for
children.
This Mother’s Day take note how your children celebrate the
occasion. They will probably celebrate it in much the same way year
after year. Do they do anything special for you? Do they do the same
things as they did last year? Maybe they give you breakfast in bed
and insist on unwrapping gifts before you eat? Maybe they wrap their
gifts in a certain way or hide them throughout the house, as occurs
in one family. Take note of the special activities that your loved
ones create and develop on Mother’s Day. We often take these for
granted but it is in the differences and uniqueness that the power
of rituals lie.
It is the rituals of events such as Mother’s Day that are
significant. Australian psychologist Andrew Fuller calls family
rituals “the coat hooks upon which we hang your family and childhood
memories”. Family rituals such as Mother’s Day are extraordinarily
protective for children as in times of change it is the rituals that
remain constant.
Rituals such as Mother’s Day are also anchors to childhood for
adolescents. Even teenagers tend to celebrate important days such as
Mothers Days and birthdays in the same ways that they did when they
were young. At a time when they are rapidly moving toward adulthood
the ritual of Mother’s Day helps them to revisit their childhoods at
least for a time. Also as everything in their world becomes
increasingly transient it is a reminder that some things don’t
change.
If you are a new mother then you will be shaping the way that
Mother’s Day will be celebrated. You will probably bring some
traditions from your family of origin, particularly if Mother’s Day
was a special event. If you got together as a family for lunch then
you will probably keep that tradition going in your new family and
integrate with visits to your family of origin.
Strong families value rituals such as Mother’s Day. They look for
every opportunity to gather and guard these rituals assiduously. It
is rituals that bring everyone together when life gets frantic and
other activities get tossed aside. When families begin to break down
it is rituals that are the first causalities of conflict.
| As families become
increasingly similar in this media age it is important to
maintain those distinctive traditions and rituals such as
the way you celebrate Mother’s Day that make each family
special and signify a child’s significance within his
primary social group – his family. |
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Michael Grose is one of Australia's
most popular parenting educators. The author is six books for
parents Michael is in heavy demand as a speaker, writer and
parenting educator. Visit
http://www.parentingideas.com.au and subscribe to Happy
Kids, his high quality fortnightly email newsletter or sign-up for
one of his free online courses.