Loving Children Equally but Differently

Jenny Heart
Equally sure! Differently sure! Think about the series 7the Heaven. This family had many children. They were all loved the same, however differently. If you're a faithful fan of this popular serious, you have followed them on a never ending journey, a journey that kept their parents on their toes. These parents were far from perfect. Their children had issues with their other siblings just like any other family. The key that kept them always together was love. Their parents had to teach their children about fairness and understanding. They had to get inside each of their heads, and learn all about each of them as an individual, and learn to discipline equally, but differently. Love is always equal, however different.

Loving a child differently than another maybe as simple as understanding their differences. One child may have received a below average grade in a certain subject. This may have caused grounding from his parents. The other child may have received a below average grade also. One child may have had an illness, which lead him not to be able to study correctly. This is only one reason why a parent may discipline differently.

Parent's need to realize that all children are different. Children simply need love. They also need parents to be an example of love and fair play. If parents teach their children about compassion, their children will be understanding. They will learn to accept their brothers or sisters differences with an understanding heart.

A compassionate parent can't help but have compassionate children. Children learn how to be this way, by seeing, listening, and feeling strong emotions for one another. Children need to understand that sometimes one child need a different set of rules, due to specific care needs. It could be due:

*To illness

* Mental capabilities

* To size difference

*To age

* To strength differences

If two children have been ask to bring in logs for the fire. One child brought in an arm full of logs, one child only brought in a few. The parent needs to find out the reason. Could it be that the one who brought in only one log became ill, or was it due to laziness? Does one child have more strength? Is one much older than the other child? All options need to be carefully studied. If parents aren't fair, children, will become jealous and resentful.

Children are born curious. They can't help but be curious, if they feel they're treated unfairly. Give them reasons to trust your judgments. This will help children understand the difference between loving equally but differently. They will learn that love and fairness go hand in hand.

Jenny Heart owns all rights to the photo.

Published by Jenny Heart

I write on ehow, Triond, Bukisa, Xomba, and Infobarrel. When belonging to all these sites one can't help but learn many things. Sit a spell and learn something new. I might just be writing about you.  View profile

30 Comments

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  • Nancy P. Goodman, in Tennessee12/8/2010

    Hi Jenny! Charlotte K. sent me with her article on you! Congrats!

  • Jennifer Bove7/28/2010

    excellent, if only we cold get the children to understand this now...

  • Lynn Pritchett6/6/2010

    Fabulous! Write on :-)

  • Rachelle Dawson5/31/2010

    I wish parents wouldn't respond to "It's not fair" with "Well, life's not fair." Regardless of life, I think parents ought to try to be fair with their children. If parents are truly being unfair (such as punishing two children with below-average grades the same way, as your example went), parents need to correct themselves. If they are being fair but their children just don't understand, it's OK to try to explain. Saying life's not fair just makes kids think that it's OK to treat others unfairly.

  • Sandy James5/29/2010

    Excellent topic that not many of this think about. Great job!

  • Jennifer Wagner5/28/2010

    Well done, Jenny!

  • Jack Wellman5/28/2010

    PS, WOW....you and Betty are sisters. I did not know that. Godly sisters, that's for sure.

  • Jack Wellman5/28/2010

    Me too...just stopped by again on this wonderful article for a little PV love for my friend.

  • Karen Zakavec5/28/2010

    Stopping by with pv love, teammate.

  • george chavez5/25/2010

    Oh boy! You are so right. It can get complicated sometimes

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