A Powerful Way to Make Sure Your Child Feels Loved – Yes Time™

A stunning 80% of adults feel like their parents didn’t really love them as a kid (1). Of course, we all love our children beyond words. Sometimes that love gets buried under feelings of overwhelm, exhaustion, loneliness, and worry. Yet deep down we want nothing more than our child to feel cherished and good no matter what their struggles are in life. So it’s not lack of love that stops our children feeling appreciated. It’s that we parents have to work hard with little support creating many barriers that can stop our love landing in our children’s hearts.

Attachment theory shows us that “delight” is the critical quality parents need to have. More than anything our children need us to feel joy when we are with them, it makes them feel deeply appreciated and accepted just as they are.

But parent’s lives are full. It can be hard to find pleasure raising children given the many pressures in our lives. On top of the vitally important work we do caring for our kids, we have to juggle earning a living, putting meals on the table, washing clothes etc. It can be tricky to remember to stop and simply delight in our kids.

So here’s a practice you can adopt that helps you shine your love in a way that makes it land right in your child’s heart.  It’s unbelievably powerful. Busy parents can fit it into their lives. And if you do this regularly you’ll see big shifts in your relationship with your child. They’ll become more cooperative, more affectionate, and more relaxed.  And you’ll likely feel closer to them, more aware of their inner world and more delighted by who they are.

It’s called Yes Time.

Here’s what you do:

1.       Let your child know ahead of time when you’re going to have Yes Time e.g. after lunch, or on Saturday. This gives them a chance to figure out how they’ll use your attention.

2.       Let your child know that in Yes Time you’re going to do whatever they want. You’re handing the reigns of the relationship over to your child. So much of their day is spent doing what other people want them to do. So reversing the roles brings relief to a child and opens up possibilities for them to show you things they don’t normally have space to reveal.

3.       You decide how long it’s going to be e.g. “After lunch, we’ll have 20 minutes of Yes Time

4.       Set a timer. It might seem a bit odd at first but it’s interesting to notice how much better it goes with a timer. Part of the power of Yes Time comes from your child being in charge. If you say it’s over, you’re keeping some of the power around the time. The timer keeps the child in the upper hand and you keep playing until it goes off.

5.       Do whatever your child wants to do. Really, anything. The only exceptions being that it’s important to gently set limits if they want to do something that would hurt someone or something. Try being enthusiastic about what they choose to do, even if it makes you groan inwardly.

6.       Shine all your love and warmth at your child. Delight in them no matter what they show you. This is the magic ingredient. Shining your utmost love at your child whilst they lead the play, makes a child feel fully accepted and appreciated for who they are. When you approach Yes Time with an air of interest and expectation they’ll show you new things with the safety of knowing that you’ll be pleased with them, no matter what.

7.       Follow the laughter. If anything makes your kid laugh, keep doing it. Laughter is such a powerful tonic it helps shed light fears and embarrassment and makes us feel close: it’s “…the shortest distance between two friends”(2). You get to slipstream in on all those good feelings: you become hardwired into their brain alongside the feelings of laughter and the love you’re offering up.

Here’s how doing regular Yes Time went for Justine, a mum in Melbourne:

Whenever my 7 year old daughter would ask me to play, I would always be busy. “just a minute, I’m putting a load of washing on, I’ll be there soon” while in my mind I was thinking ‘anything but play’ I once even told a friend ‘I’d rather clean the toilet than play’.

When I first tried Yes Time with her, I could manage 5 minutes at the most and it was hard. I’d have to really focus on being present, secretly watch the minutes tick by and couldn’t wait till it ended. I felt like a really poor mother -why couldn’t I just enjoy playing?

I kept at it and spent over a week trying Yes Time each day for 5-10 minutes. It became a little easier with each day, though not all the time - if I was tired it was hard. I noticed something interesting after a week - my daughter was now happier to do all sorts of things that were once a challenge for her such getting out of the house for school on Monday, brushing her teeth, being flexible when plans changed, and having a shower. She even put her dirty laundry in the basket!

It also built a real place of refuge for us both. We started laughing more during our play and it was flowing more easily. It influenced other aspects of our lives, bringing greater closeness and trust. We made close eye contact more often and smiled across the room.

Sometimes they’ll use YesTime simply to do things they love to do, maybe playing Barbie dolls, jumping on the trampoline, reading books together. Other times children will push you to do things you might not be comfortable with, but are actually okay to do. They get to show you all the things they’d love to do but can’t normally and have you delight in them whilst they do it! One of my most memorable times was when I was 7 months pregnant with and my 4 year old squirted a hose at me for 10 minutes! He laughed and laughed and laughed. And so did I (with a little bit of squealing thrown in). Other times children will use the power of your attention to try and tackle something they find difficult like doing back flips on the tramp or writing their name.

Children LOVE Yes Time. I recently asked some kids what they thought about it:

“It’s special and it’s only me and no-one else. I like it,” Arlo, 3 years old

“I like it. It feels nice,” Lucy, 4 years old

“I like Yes Time ‘cos I get one-on-one time with Mama and we don’t get to hang out together much just the two of us. I think other kids would like it,” Alfie, 8 years old

Leigh Jamison, a mum in Sweden has a gorgeous story about how important Yes Time is, no matter how humdrum it may seem from the outside:

This summer we had planned a visit to the equivalent of Disney Land in Sweden. The boys, 5 and 7, had never been there and had been looking forward to the visit for many months. The theme park was a long drive away and very pricey so we planned a full day there, getting there early and staying until they closed which was past the boys’ bedtime.

Knowing how cranky they got without a full night’s sleep, we prepared them to get in their pyjamas and go straight to bed as soon as we got home, which meant no Yes Time or toothbrushing. The boys looked at each other with startled eyes when I said this and asked to discuss it by themselves in another room.

They returned saying that they would rather leave the theme park a couple of hours early so that they could get home in time to have Yes Time! And they get Yes Time every day so it would have meant missing just one of 365 days in the year!”

As you try out Yes Time in your family, you might find:

It feels hard to actually do it. On the face of it YesTime is such a simple thing yet it can be surprisingly hard for parents to do. It’s not our fault. The lack of support we have as parents means it can be difficult to find the energy to do YesTime. And it’s unlikely you were given such attention when you were a kid. You might also find yourself getting distracted and wanting to tidy up, quickly look at your phone or daydream about something else. If you’re finding it hard to actually do Yes Time or get sidetracked easily, it’s a sign that you might need some support. Finding someone to listen to you whilst you explore the resistance you have can be very helpful.

You need to be clever introducing it to teenagers and some pre-teens. It’s likely to go down like a lead balloon suggesting to your teenager they could have Yes Time. You’ll have to be a little crafty. A mum on one of my Classes said to her 12 year old in whisper, “Hey, I reckon you and me could sneak off and have hour together when I finish work and no one would notice – I’ll do whatever you want – what do you reckon?” The “let’s be a bit naughty” tone totally appealed to her son and they plotted how they’d head to the beach for a quick surf together.

A child brings up past difficulties. Things that you thought had passed might resurface. Regular Yes Time helps a child feel very safe and they will use that to bring up issues that they haven’t fully processed. For example they may become clingier to you. This is actually progress: they trust you to be there for them, so they want to work through buried difficulties.

A child shows you some old hurts: they will start to feel safe enough to show you their upsets. It’s not uncommon for a child to get upset over something small during, at the end or soon after Yes Time. They are using the safety of your attention to offload some old hurts and just need you to be with them as their emotional storm passes. You’ll likely notice they feel lighter and more affectionate after they’ve cleared out a load hard feelings.

Giving your child Yes Time is a form of deep listening - your child’s play becomes their way of telling you about their life and perceptions. Ultimately it can transform your relationship with your child which is 90% of our parenting.

(1 ) From conversations with Melbourne therapist Joane Goulding in 2013 and 2015. This is based on her clinical experience over 40 years of practice where she estimates only 20% of adults grow up to feel their parents loved and accepted them for who they are. Also backed up by Brene Brown’s research cited in “Power of Vulnerability”.

(2) Victor Borge, Danish comedian, conductor and pianist.

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