GET IN WHAT YOU CAN CAUSE WHEN THEY GET OLDER THEY WONT HAVE ANY REMORSE ON YOU ..........LOL
2006-08-24 10:53:48
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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LOL Children can't possibly get enough admiration or acception or 'koodoes' for doing well. Even if that means 'letting them win'. It does wonders for their self esteem. Once they are old enough to give you a little 'challenge', then I would say its about time to give them some competition... but til then... they are too young to take rejection or 'losing' very well... especially 'losing' or being 'rejected' from someone they think the ENTIRE world of... Being a daddy... or a mommy... you are their SUPER hero... their ideal everything... they put us (parents) on such a high pedistol that its a very tender relationship to think about nurishing and nurturing.
My son is 5. We play games all the time. There are times that I 'beat him' so that just like you were saying... he learns that life isn't ALL a box of chocolates... but if we are playing and I win... he will win 1-2 times... then I will win once... then I let him win at least 1-2 MORE times... and he STILL ends up feeling like the big guy... in the end. Make sense?
Good luck! :) Parenting is the hardest yet most rewarding job I've ever had.
2006-08-24 11:01:28
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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When they are really young, let them win. When they get into 12 13 14 yrs old...play hard against them. I play chess with my son...who is 15 now. When he was 6 or 7, he would win. Around 11 or 12 he wouldn't. Now, at 15....he whips my a-s-s. And he knows that when he wins...he really wins. I do the same with my daughters in things although in sports like tennis or swimming I am sensitive to the male/female strength differences. Kids need to learn to lose, and they also need to feel good about winning...they need to feel that when they get a win, it is deserved and worked for and not haphazard luck. I think it builds confidence and also humility. I know that when I get beaten by somone when running or swimming....I admire the skill and ability that person has. That person BEATS me...and is better. My kids are learning to recognize and admire the same in people...whether it is grades, music, sports, or chess. Provide postitive reinforcement, play hard, and depending upon their age, play to win.
2006-08-25 05:18:10
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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It's not a good idea to always let them win. Think about what will happen when they bring a friend over and the friend beats them. Show them that you are a good sportsman and allow them to be the same. Beat the pants off of them every now and then. It will teach them to try harder and a very important lesson in life ... how to lose. But, please do cut them some slack every now and then and let them win until they are able to do so on their own. You don't want to take away their selfworth.
2006-08-24 10:55:52
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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if ur kids are at a young age and still dont understand things as well as other kids i would keep letting them win but if their at that age when they know more about how to work a controller and a basketball on the court then i would make them a challenge....either way its good ur spending time with them
2006-08-24 10:56:34
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answer #5
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answered by whitetigereyes8485 2
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I would say alternate the winning and losing. Even though you can beat your kids at almost any game right now, try to act as though you can't everytime. But also win sometimes too.....creates a challenge for the child.
2006-08-24 10:54:05
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answer #6
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answered by Her Mama 2
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there's a line between self-discipline and abuse. at the same time as i became a baby at my aunt's domicile my cousin did something to me (won't be able to remember) yet I informed his father and his father beat him horribly. If I knew that could want to have exceeded off then i don't have informed him. My uncle burnt my different cousin's thigh fairly undesirable. it quite is baby abuse. Now, my mom, aunts, and grandparents disciplined/whooped my azz basically effective. I not often necessary self-discipline, yet I remember having to bypass and spoil a stick off a tree and the flavor of leather-depending. once, at the same time as i became a baby my step-father went too far and hit me in the face with a belt. My eye stayed slam close the entire summer time. i became youthful and did as my mom reported (did not say what easily exceeded off) yet I desire i might want to have positioned him in reformatory 10,000 situations over. there is punishment and then there is baby abuse. If I ever have children then i visit self-discipline them as I see fit, yet i visit actually no longer abuse them because i comprehend how that is. Azz beatings save youngsters in line. Now, there are some youngsters the position beating their azz would not do any sturdy anymore. I easily have slightly cousin who's like that. He has gotten right into a lot problem that once he's disciplined he's decrease back at it back.
2016-11-27 19:37:14
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answer #7
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answered by lefler 4
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Sure, but do not let your kids that you are losing to make them happy. There are other ways to play with your kids instead of video games. Going outside and playing with balls, playing tag, and trying to find things on the ground. You need to use some imagination with your kids.
2006-08-24 10:59:09
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answer #8
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answered by e4rul 2
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My kid takes out a notebook when we play games because he knows he's gonna get schooled. (sorry for that I know it was lame) I kick his tiny little butt at games because yeah he's only 7 but I don't go "Ha in your face sukka! What a loser!" I just say good game and he says good game and we leave it at that. When I make a good move he'll say "Oh man, that was a good one Momma" and I'll tell him the same. And one day when he beats me he'll know it was all him and be all the more proud. It's all about sportsmanship or whatever.
2006-08-24 11:02:52
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answer #9
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answered by Jenae, TV (tempter of the vile) 5
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Let 'em win sometimes. They appreciate it. The trick is to fool them into thinking that they are actually beating you on their own (a game within a game, so to speak).
2006-08-24 10:55:18
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answer #10
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answered by answermann 3
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Personally, I think you should OCCASIONALLY beat them at a game or two, just to teach them how to be a good loser. They're young though, and if you beat them all the time you will discourage them and they will resent it, and won't want to play.
I don't mean to sound nasty at all when I say this, but when you say 'take them to school' it sounds a little harsh...as though if YOU win, you will rub it in. That isn't going to teach them good sportsmanship. Just my assumption, but you may want to keep that in mind.
2006-08-24 10:55:13
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answer #11
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answered by Lisa E 6
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