As a parent, you long to be respected by your kids. And you want to be proud of their respectful behaviour when you are out and about. Right?
I know I do.
How do we raise respectful kids, though?
Respect isn’t like some of the other things we teach our kids.
It’s not something we can tell our kids how to do. The only way to teach this virtue is to show.
When we parent respectfully, our kids will grow with a solid foundation of knowing what respect looks like, how important it is, and subsequently how to respect others (including us!).
As parents, we are the authority figure in the relationship. Our role involves providing, nurturing, training, and protecting our kids. It is a mammoth responsibility. Respecting our children doesn’t in any way mean handing over our position to our kids and giving them the lead in our home. In fact, that would be an unloving thing to do!
So, what does parenting your child respectfully mean? What does it look like?
Let’s jump in and consider the following areas where we parents get the opportunity to model respect for our children. And together, we’ll develop the healthy habit of respecting our kids on a daily basis in simple and practical ways so they learn to be respectful towards us.
“Mommy, is she going to be better at everything than me?”
Hearing another child or a sibling praised doesn’t have to devastate a child if she knows her parents are pleased and proud of her real accomplishments and abilities. As Dr. Lisa Firestone says in 

Spend time doing nothing with them. If all parent-child time is focused on things like homework, lessons, and practices, a child gets the idea that performance is the center of the relationship. Take time to go for a walk, play a game, make cookies, read a book, or plant a garden. (Do not criticize how the cookies are being made!) Set aside time to show your child that you value just being with him. Then, when he hears you mention how well Jordan is playing soccer defense, he has a safeguard from jealous feelings creeping in because you don’t only love being with him at soccer games—you love the whole package.
Dreading long trips with your toddler? This is a concern for most parents all around the world. Nobody wants the embarrassment of apologizing to the entire plane for the endless shrieks, or the headache of being trapped in a car with a screaming child – and of course, no parent wants to see their child in tears.
“Fold the socks!”
When was the last time you felt guilty and inadequate as a parent?