Description
Do you ever get angry with your child when he throws a tantrum or refuses to eat his broccoli? Do you dare to threaten him with punishment or send him to his room? Do you then feel like a very bad parent, in the judgment of a society that increasingly advocates benevolent education and condemns ordinary educational violence? Indeed, to claim the title of benevolent parent, the latter must always favor listening, dialogue and adaptation to the desires of his child. But is it really respecting him to send him the image of a perpetually guilty parent, incapable of setting limits and taking his place? This manual addresses in a humorous but serious way all the questions that animate parents today on the educational behavior to adopt. By reminding us that authority is good (when it is well expressed), both for parents and for the children themselves, the author helps us to feel less guilty and to find a true parental posture, while giving us tools to assert our authority in a legitimate and benevolent way (all the same)!