Honesty Can Stop the Daycare Dropoff Tears
Honesty can be tough, but it’s worth it! The daycare dropoff tears are tough to manage.
We recently had a client contact us with a serious problem. She said, “My son won’t let me leave preschool. He can’t stop crying. It’s like he thinks I’ll never come back for him.”
She revealed that, since he would have a fit if he knew she was leaving, she frequently snuck out the back door. He was busy playing with and didn’t realize that she had left until later. “It’s way easier to leave if he doesn’t know I’m going.” she explained.
This parent’s behaviour is telling the child: “I may leave you at any moment. You will never know when I am leaving.” As a direct result, he is terrified to let her out of his sight. At least when he can see her he knows that she is there. He can’t trust her.
Honesty doesn’t feel like the easy way out here. Sometimes our kids don’t like the truth. However, if honesty is an important family value to you, it is critical that you model it so that your kids learn it. Kids learn what they live. If you say that honesty is important, and then sneak out the door at the daycare dropoff or make up lies about why you won’t be attending a party or pretend that your child is younger to save yourself an admission fee, you are teaching your children that honesty is not important.
After some coaching, our client really changed her ways. It wasn’t easy at the start, but has become so much easier over time. She made a plan to never sneak out on her son again. We taught her strategies to teach him to use his courage and get through saying goodbye. She and her son planned a script, called their ‘Goodbye Plan.’ She would say, “I’m heading out, I know you can use your courage and have fun with your friends. Let’s do our goodbye hug.” He would then say, “I’ll miss you mom and I can do it.” Then they would hug and count to five and then give each other a high five. They used the Goodbye Plan regularly and he became more confident that he could trust her.
The great news is that modelling honesty with young children sets up a pattern for honest communication in the future.
I would give my child a kiss in her hand for when she felt she needed it and she could put it on her cheek. Told another parent with departure issues and she tried it with her son. She called to say that he wouldn’t then use the hand with the kiss because he was afraid of ‘dropping’ it. So I suggested she tell him to put it in his pocket. It worked like a charm.