Tag Archives: positive role models

Two parents and a child sitting on his favourite parents lap

Is My Child Playing FAVOURITES With Me?

What to do when your Child has a FAVOURITE parent? When my son was about eight years old, he went through a phase of preferring to sit next to me and spend most of his time closer to me. I was clearly his favourite parent. It drove my wife crazy. If I’m honest, I kind of secretly liked it, even though it only lasted a few short weeks. We couldn’t see any reason behind it. As the stay home dad, I already spent a lot of time with him, taking him to school and back. We also used to regularly play video games together. However, up until these few short weeks and mostly since, my son generally prefers being with his mum. 
 



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Parents can ask themselves Is My child playing FAVOURITES With Me? You may not think so but
 
children (like parents) do secretly (or not) have favourites. This is natural but what to do when your your child has a favourite and its not you?  That can be hard for anyone.

What are the reasons behind your children having a favourite, how do you deal with how it makes you feel as a parent, and when should you be worried?




 

Why Children May Favour One Parent

 




There are a few reasons why a child might act like they have a favourite. It could be a combination of these, and they can all fluctuate with time.

 

 




Developmental Stages

 




When a child is very young, they typically spend most of their time with the mother. This is because they will be nursed by them and because of the much longer maternity leave  compared to the one or two weeks that a dad will get in the UK.




A 2022 study found that infants aged 10-19 months exhibited longer duration’s of proximity-seeking and bodily contact with mothers compared to fathers, suggesting a stronger early attachment to mothers.




 

Of course, very early on, a child has a much higher familiarity with a mother because of being in the womb and is often comforted by the sound of her heartbeat. As a dad you only get to bond after the birth.

 

As a child progresses through the stages of being a toddler to school age and onto teenager, they might have favourites due to the development stage. A boy might prefer male company as an active, boisterous eight-year-old. Or a girl might prefer her mum during puberty when they feel they have more in common with the parent of the same gender.




 

Shared Interests




 

Not every parent enjoys kicking a football, computer games, cartoons, or Lego.
Just like in friendships, having a shared passion makes a relationship more fun and more intense. If you and your child love doing something together, it can only improve your bond.




For me, I had a few things I would do together with my son. We loved a Nerf fight, a computer game or a bike ride. This was my golden time and I will always look back fondly on the shared fun.




 

Just like adults, though, their interests change, and they also grow out of things.

Before long, he was more interested in dinosaurs, and that – was my wife’s thing.

It also never works to get them to enjoy what you like, as my son still hates Star Trek.




Try to join in with their hobbies as much as you can manage, and be glad for your partner’s golden times, as it will probably be your turn soon.




 

Differences in Parenting Roles




 

If you parent with your significant other a bit like good cop and bad cop, your child may naturally lean towards preferring the good cop. Of course your child needs discipline, but they will always prefer a hug and smile to being told off. Parents will have a particular style of raising children, but you can try to be consistent with each other.




I was the stricter parent to be honest, but I did learn to balance this, and we became more consistent overall. This can improve behaviour too as both your approaches are agreed.




 

Availability




 

A working parent that is away for long parts of the day will spend a lot less quality time with a stay at home parent, or even when one works part of the time.

This can also be true if the parents have separated and live in different places.

Younger children could end up with a favourite just because they are more familiar with them.




 

Temporary Circumstances




 

Parenting can be difficult, and it doesn’t protect you from the other challenges of life.
Things can happen that make it harder for you as a parent, as it doesn’t protect you from the roller-coaster of life.

You may be struggling a bit as a parent and not as emotionally present, especially if maybe you are suffering with post-natal mental health issues.

If your career becomes stressful, you develop a health problem or there are financial issues, you may find it hard to focus on being the parent you want to be.

Your child may pick up on any tension and be more comfortable around your partner or other caregivers.




 

Don’t be too hard on yourself. We are all human with frailties and emotions. Take time out and concentrate on yourself and adapting to the challenges life brings and then you’ll have more time and space in your life for your children.




 

Circumstances beyond your control.




 

Life continues and things happen outside your control, illness, work pressures, financial concerns and marriage breakdowns.  These things are largely outside your control but their burden can affect your relationship with your child.

 

It’s important to be able to place outside pressures into a separate compartment to the ‘relationship with son’ compartment of your brain, but we all know this isn’t always possible.  Try to recognise when your behaviour changes and consider explaining it to your children.  Sometimes explanation can help, and your child isn’t pushed away through fear or seeking security and regulation of behaviour.

 




Overcompensating to correct 




 

The classic Sunday parent who spoils the child rotten, only for the other parent to look after them and say no during the week. Overcompensating is a false economy.  If your behaviour has been poor you need to build their trust again, not rush down to the sweet shop for treats. Bringing up children isn’t a competition between parents. 




 

 




 

Emotional Impact on Parents




 

The “Unfavoured” Parent




 

When you love your child just as much as your partner, when you work hard to provide for them and to raise them, it can be tough to feel like you come second.
Are you doing something wrong? Why are you being rejected?

It’s hard not to feel frustrated and on the periphery of everything. Maybe you show the frustration visibly, or maybe you withdraw somehow.




 

The “Favoured” Parent




 

At first, you enjoy the attention and get an ego boost from feeling special, Maybe you even encourage it, deliberately or not.




But then you feel guilty about how your partner feels, and you miss your partner being included. Also, because you are the favourite, you get less and less time to yourself. The burden is on you and although sometimes you enjoy it — you are exhausted. The pressure is on you to try to fix the dynamic, but who wants to reject their own child’s attention?




 

Impact on Family Dynamics




 

Apart from the dynamic between parents and children, favouritism can bring challenges between the parents. The unfavoured parent may be withdrawn, resentful, and jealous. Combine this with the fact that one parent will need to give more than their share of their time will make them feel guilty and exhausted. The unfavoured parent might also feel the other parent encourages or relishes the attention. These unbalances in the family dynamic, especially if they aren’t discussed, will introduce a lot of tension. 




 

Strategies to Manage Being Favourite




 

Open Communication Between Parents




 

As the saying goes, teamwork makes the dream work. If your child playing favourites is causing problems in your family, then the best way to solve it is communicating.

Let your partner know how it is making you feel instead of feeling more and more excluded. Together you can then work on strategies to overcome it and spot issues. You might be surprised how your partner feels about it.

 




Quality Time with Both Parents




 

Try to find activities that everybody enjoys so that nobody feels excluded.

For me, this was playing board games that everyone liked, and computer games that were more communal. My wife cannot cycle and never really enjoyed Nerf gun fights, but there are things we all enjoyed. 




 

Balance Roles and Responsibilities




 

Mix things up, so your child sees you differently. Change who reads the bedtime story or a school run. If you change the roles you undertake, your child will change how they see you. One parent should never be the fun parent, parenting is hard, and sometimes it’s not about being your child’s best friend, it is about being their parent and doing what’s best for them.  Don’t shy away from the hard jobs or setting boundaries for fear of upsetting your child. Share the nice parts as well as the mundane. . 




 

Acknowledge the Child’s Feelings




 

What to do when your child has a favourite? Rather than fighting it, or feeling increasingly frustrated, accept the child is human and at that moment they just prefer the other parents’ attention.  This doesn’t make you any less of a parent or mean your child loves you any less.  Concentrate more on doing something enjoyable together.  This isn’t about blaming your child, it’s great they have a good connection with the other parent, and sometimes you have to accept the relationship. Your child playing favourites may be natural, daddy’s girls and mummies boys do exist, and it’s not necessarily a bad thing so don’t fight it. .




 

Work on any background issues such as stress or parenting style.




 

If there are background problems that you can work on, consider working on them to improve the favouritism. Of course not all these issues are easy to fix but if you can lower your stress levels or little changes in your parenting style can make huge differences.

I found at times I could be a little too strict, and this is something I worked on. If you’re the ‘telling off’ parent, as many dads are, try to share the burden and explain this is a joint decision.  Keep everything together, good and bad. Your child choosing a favourite may be as simple as your good cop bad cop routine. Your child recognises the other parent as the good cop. Your child’s ‘favourite’ may be them simply going to the good cop. There is no favourite parent




 

When to be worried




 

You know your children best and what they need, but an over-reliance on one parent may become an issue that needs to be discussed and understood. Stay calm and be gentle. Your child shouldn’t feel blamed or misunderstood. Your child playing favourites may be a result of underlying reasons.




Sometimes you have to accept it and accommodate it, but that may not always be possible. If you really are concerned, then seek some advice, but please don’t alienate or shame your child. It may be difficult to know what to do when your child has a favourite and maybe doing nothing is the right thing.  Wait and see might be the best advice. 





 

Conclusion 




 

Parenting is hard and parents, despite everything they say, have favourites, so it’s no great surprise children feel the same.  It is entirely normal for a child to have a favourite to some degree. Sometimes in fact it could also be even a grandparent or aunt. Grandparents can be a great influence and teachers. You may wish to limit or explain the favouritism, grandparents spoiling children isn’t headline news is it, but we’ll all do it when we were grandparents.  




 

What to do when your child is playing favourites? Try not or to take it personally. Easy to say, but difficult to do.  Be glad your child is happy and being looked after, or spoiled.  Children remember who brought them up, especially as they get older.   




 

Work as a team with your partner if possible, and try to find ways to connect with your child in a way everyone enjoys. Take time out. Do something fun.  Take an interest in their game or what they’re doing, even if it bores you to tears, and you have no interest in it.  Do it for your children.  Kids love it when you take an interest in what they are doing.




 

Appreciating what you like may not be what your child likes.  Adapt your behaviour and interests.   This is what to do when you have a child playing favourites and you want to connect more with your child. 




 

Both parents are valuable and  bring different irreplaceable things to the table in terms of parenting.




Being a family isn’t easy and things change. Children can play you off against each other but equally have favourites. Sometimes you’ve just got to accept it for now and know your place in the family structure.




 







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a dad and son walking while the dad explains why being a positive role model is a good trait in a father

How To Create Positive Role Models For Children

A positive role model Guides children to better life choices and decisions.

Children need a role model. Think of your life and the individual role models that have inspired you. You might quote sports players, musical artist or a TV personality who has impacted your life. Someone you’d admire and want to be.  Years ago role models were more mainstream, think Barbie and James Bond.  There was a common interest and while arguably these weren’t the best role models, they were role models.
 



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The Power of Social Media and the Internet

We know children no longer watch TV preferring social media videos and influence rs.
Children spend six hours or more a day on screens – BBC News
This is a world parents may not understand or be part of. Its a largely an unregulated world relying on the free speech argument. Online safety laws unsatisfactory, Technology Secretary Peter Kyle says – BBC News 

Children can now easily find role models online and here in lies the problem.  There is little or no regulation that prevents children forming unrealistic and damaging expectations due to the influence of role models.



If you think this is harmless browsing think again.
Kent headteachers back smartphone ban after Netflix’s Adolescence – BBC News

‘Boys formed Andrew Tate club in School’ – teacher

Our experience echo’s this where my 11 year old son starting quoting Andrew Tate to me. Talking about women in a derogatory way and using explicit terms. I was quite shocked but i shouldn’t have been surprised. This is the world they live in.
What did surprise me was that he didn’t take much notice of me. I was the positive role model and being ignored

When i tried to explain why Andrew Tate wasn’t a positive role model. What Andrew Tate represents and says aren’t good things, he looked at me and said i didn’t know what i was talking about.  This wasn’t going to be a quick conversation and it took plenty of explaining to challenge the stereotype he had formed.



How to create positive role models for children?

 

Be a positive role model.

Now more than ever parents need to be positive role models.  Check your behavior. Think about what you project to your children.  Re-enforce your own positive behaviour.



Talk to your children.

Understand what they are viewing. Whet they are interested in. Who their friends are.  Its not an inquisition, do it calmly and compassionately.



Discuss things.

If they mention a influence or belief you don’t agree with explore it with them.  Don’t just shut them down.  With my son it took a few conversations to put an alternative view across.  I didn’t just say Andrew Tate was wrong as that’s my view. Its about understanding his view and exploring it to educate him and then re enforcing the education.



Be vigilant

Its surprising how quickly views from.  From an early age.  In the BBC report the boys were under 10.  Social media and the internet mean your children are exposed to greater content at an earlier age. That positive role model may not be in your child’s life and you don’t realise it.



Check your internet setting.

If you don’t have child filters on, turn them on but don’t rely on them.  They didn’t stop my son learning about Andrew Tate.



Promote positive influences

Use positive role models. Explore and share positive role models.  Don’t force it maybe just put a picture up and let them explore.  Use local clubs. Sports clubs can have positive role models and have positive influences built in. Boxing clubs teach respect and self discipline. Football clubs promote team work.   Libraries usually have book and reading clubs.  We have a great local art centre that does loads of half terms clubs and events to promote creativity and self expression.





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👵 Parents on CosyChats have a wide experience and knowledge and can assist in many different areas. They can listen, hear you, share their experience and knowledge or just be a listening ear and shoulder to seek comfort from.


❤️‍🩹 We hope you enjoy and benefit from this service. If you require any further information please message us. Kind Regards CosyChats.com Free spaces are limited subject to approval.

We’re passionate about parenting and being the best parents we can for our children. People say children grow up so quickly, and its SO TRUE but also Years fly but days can drag. We know and understand parenting and want to share our experience and knowledge to help you.

SO WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR.

Find the right parent (CosyChatter) for you book a session and start the chat.

Contact US

If you need any help at all please email us at contact@cosychats.com or message us through our socials.

PARENTING IS HARD, IT'S OKAY TO ASK FOR HELP!

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