Thursday, December 5, 2024
The overview and near view!
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
Bird behaviour!
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
Looking in one direction!
I watched this pair of Bulbuls looking in one direction steadfastly during the time they were perched in the stem above.
It came to me as a message of what families need.
It is when both parents have similar orientation about the children they contribute to the formative experience of their children with mutual regard for each other.
In the story of Jacob and Esau, the twins born to Isaac and Rebekha, mentioned in the Old Testament of the Bible (Genesis 15:28), the orientation of the parents toward children was dissimilar. 'Now Isaac loved Esau because he had a taste for game and but Rebekha loved Jacob".
This became a dysfunctional parenting style that following few incidents of distress in the family, Jacob had to leave his home for fear of retaliatory behaviour from Esau. It was after twenty years they met with each other and had a conciliatory engagement(Gen. 33.1-17).
The parenting practices differ between father and mother in some homes, which is a matter of concern.
It is important that each child feels received and loved alike that no indication of preference is visible in the family dynamics. Each child is a favourite of both parents.
The equality of status of all children in a family is a message that is essential for the children to carry with them. It gives them a grounding in the family to feel anchored and grow up with a sense of belonging!
The access to the heritage of family ought to be equally shared with all children with no gender difference. The bridal price given and taken is a deviant practice from this essential foundation in family life.
The parenting attitude influences the thoughts of children. When each child was equal to parents the family life and the adulthood behaviour of children would become wholesome!
M.C.Mathew(text and photo)
Sunday, October 20, 2024
A toddler's orientation!
I noticed that Bulbuls acquire their perching position in different ways. The way they balance in different positions is a fascinating sight.
The last photo of a Bulbul engaged in bird calls, while perched at a tall tree caught my attention. It was tunefully singing!
I remember parents talking about the anxiety their three years old child creates in them, when they notice him climbing over furniture or windows at home. Some parents need to be willing to accept that as the adventure instinct of a toddler.
The Bulbul needed a tall tree and the open sky above it to sing!
How can parents create ambience for toddlers to feel encouraged to be creative!
A mother told me once that she would sit on the table with colour pencils and a drawing board on the table, drawing and colouring. She does this to get noticed by her toddler daughter who normally is all over in purposeless activities. When her daughter settled down at the table with her drawing book, the end product surprised the mother. Her daughter usually draws something that she observed while at play. The mother was surprised to notice that her daughter drew some flowers similar to what was at the edge of the garden they visited a week ago.
A mother created an opportunity for her daughter to draw in an enticing way.
To get toddlers to be observational and expressive would indeed be easier, if it is done naturally and not under pressure! That was what a mother did wisely and effectively!
As much as possible , it is wise to avoid a confrontational engagement with a toddler. A toddler is at an emotional level of responding and reacting favourably, when he or she is given time and attention in a non threatening way! They are uncomfortable when forced or ordered! They respond better to polite and playful approach as they are still in a super ego state, discovering their identity!
M.C.Mathew (text and photo)
Thursday, September 12, 2024
The communicating presence !
A senior citizen on his morning walk and a teenager on his morning cycle ride !
Two contrasting scenes in life!
The teenager shall become a senior citizen. The senior citizen above, might have been cycling in his teenage years!
The reversal of roles in life!
This thought gripped me on account of few events recently. What a child shall become is a vision which parents carry upon their heart and give themselves towards childhood formation.
A teenager is at the threshold of becoming independent of his or her parents. The parents have time till the teenage years to stay close to their children even to be their confidants. What a teenage child grows up to be later in life is to a large extent influenced by how much children stayed intimate emotionally in their relationship with parents.
It is for the parents to plan their involvement with their children from pre-school years to condition the growing process of their children. The cognitive, affective and moral formation of children takes place between toddler years and mid school years which is around ten years of age. If parenting involvement is consistent, cordial, and communicative, a child would normally find the parents as their role models. They become behaviourally and temperamentally formed by the parenting influence.
The 'parenting presence' is more than just a physical presence. It is the communicating presence that matters, for which time spent with children in an interactive way is the pathway!
M.C.Mathew(text and photo)
Sunday, September 1, 2024
The now and the later!
Friday, August 30, 2024
Parenting presence !

I normally look at flowers to get the front view. Only in the recent years, I also take time to look behind the flowers.
It is when we look behind the flowers, we get to see how a flower is held firm by its stem.
A child is rooted in his or her family and is held by his her parents in an embrace of love.
This embrace of love is expressed in different ways on a day-today basis. Only when, from infancy a child can feel this proximity with parents physically and emotionally, there is a prospect of a child blossoming in the childhood years.
The parenting presence is an experience parents can offer to children from infancy for them to grow up with a sene of nearness to parents and belonging to the family.
It is necessary to avoid any form interruption to this process.
The reading times, play times, meal times, bed times, walks and outings, creative activities, sibling times, neighbourhood times and social times are the usual ways which parents can use to give this attachment process essential for the emotional security of children in the preschool years.
I remember a family with their two pre-school children tell me once, that 'their time is for their children'! I felt moved by that statement. To be able to consider that parent's time is for children is a true mark of parenting instinct and calling!
M.C.Mathew(text and photo)
Wednesday, August 28, 2024
Alterntives to screen time!
Tuesday, August 27, 2024
The searching look!
Monday, August 26, 2024
A small start!
A father told me that his son of three years urges him every morning to look for birds. This started since he used to point out to him birds in the garden even when he was one and half years of age. Now he has become familiar with about thirty different birds and has his own collection of pictures of birds which his father took for him. They are on display in the bulletin board in the dining hall. This boy has a story to talk about them. When they have visitors for a meal, he shares something related to birds during the conversation, pointing to the birds on the board.
When he gets time, he goes on his own to the book shelf and looks at the bird books. He carries a book of birds with him when he goes for a picnic or outing. His parents bought him a binocular for his third birthday.
When many parents try to wean their pre-school children from viewing the TV for cartoon and comics, here is a good illustration of a three year old child getting spontaneously occupied with birds and their habitat, and behaviour. His question to his parents is: when will birds come to nest in their garden!
There are different ways that parents can introduce pre-school children to the environment. This boy is also interested in watching seeds sprout in the soil. He is a companion to his mother while she does some kitchen gardening.
Getting a pre-school child interested in the happenings around the home is a good way of introducing activities that takes them in to different experiences and interests!
M.C.Mathew(text and photo)
Saturday, August 24, 2024
Promoting attentiveness !
Friday, August 23, 2024
A child's Corner!
Thursday, August 22, 2024
The skill of observation!
For a pre-school child, watching this rose flower can be fascinating because it has shades of pink, drops of water on the petals, it is drooping and appears dissimilar to other flower in the garden.
The sense of observation is an essential part of pre-school formation. Most children by about three years are ready to capture details of what they see or hear.
The 'why' questions emerge during the conversations. Sometimes the 'why' questions are without clear answers and appear complex to simplify to the level of understanding of the child.
A wise mother told me about her daughter who often watched her cook leading her to ask many 'why' questions. When the mother was asked, why their dog was brown in colour, she asked her daughter to point out to all the items in the kitchen with brown colour. That engaged her and made her move about to observe.
Some children are verbal with their usual style of asking, which can be turned into a new learning experience. Her mother asked her daughter to bring the colour pencil set and scribbling pad and draw lines to find the different shades of brown. Following this she was asked to look around in the bed room for objects with shades of brown colour.
What the mother sensed about her daughter was a significant observation. Her daughter would develop skills of observation, which was what was appropriate at her age rather than engage in repetitive why questions, at an age when her mind cannot comprehend the answers to all the 'why' questions.
The difference between observation and perception for a pre-school child is that observation involves association. To perceive that an ambulance is usually white in colour needs an understanding that the white colour has a symbolic meaning of 'peace'! But she can easily associate the white coloured ambulance with a cross, to be a vehicle meant to carry sick people to the hospital. It is that form of association, which is a prelude to developing perception or comprehension in the later years.
When the mother read to her daughter about elephants, what struck her daughter was about its trunk. Her next question was, 'why their dog does not have a trunk'? The mother took out the encyclopaedia and showed how each animal has some common parts like eyes, ears, legs, but different parts like trunk, long tail or short tail, large body or small body. That went on to showing her pictures of birds to emphasise that they have wings and only two legs whereas, an elephant or a dog have four legs.
The sense of observation is an important pre-school skill, which parents can introduce to their pre-school child to find the similarities and dissimilarities of colour, shape, size or dimensions around them.
M.C.Mathew(text and photo)
Wednesday, August 21, 2024
Learning from parents !
Tuesday, August 20, 2024
The attachment process!
A pre-school child is a vivid illustration of this fullness of life! A family offers the ambience, a pre-school child needs to be formed to enter into the journey ahead through the schooling years.
The first child gets about two years exclusively with his or her parents before the next child arrives. Those two years fulfil some significant parenting roles.
One parenting role is to make a child feel in the first two years to grow in a sense of attachment.
The theory of attachment suggests that it can evolve into four different patterns: Secure, Avoidant, Resistant, Disorganised.
The attachment between the parents and the child in the first two years becomes secure, when the child receives undivided attention. An infant at four months, while crying is calling for attention. If the child has to cry for long, before being carried and comforted or his or her needs met, receives a message of emotional distance from the care givers.
It is when such a negative experiences occur incrementally a child avoids seeking for attention. He or she indulges in self pacifying by exploring body parts, holding on to objects that give some pleasure or behaving in a moody manner without wanting to relate or socialise. This avoidant behaviour is not healthy for subsequent psycho-social formation.
When a toddler has slipped into self absorbed ways, he or she becomes resistant to play, interact and stays detached. The feeding times turn out to be difficult and parents tune in the screen to occupy the child and the child is fed passively. Such children have difficulties to sleep or occupy oneself playing. The crying spells disturb the parents and parents can communicate angrily to the child.
When such a pattern emerges, the attachment behaviour gets disorganised. The normal attachment process has three phases: primary comfort level with parents or care givers which develop from about six months; by about a year, a child is ready to tolerate others although stranger anxiety persists for most of the second year; and a child is ready for social interaction and can stay away from the care givers for short period of time, when strangers can engage a child meaningfully. When a child is not able to go through this process developmentally, the attachment behaviour is disorganised.
A rose flower is an expression of a well tended rose plant.
The attachment process is what prepares an infant and toddler to grow into a stable attachment behaviour, which is akin to the good soil that nurtures a rose plant.
Giving primacy of parenting attention to an infant, till he or she becomes a pre-school child is an investment for his or her future.
The surrogate parenting is not an option, and it can be detrimental. The latest trend of occupying a child during infancy with screen time is a disservice to a child. He or she is emotionally pre-conditioned to be relational to parents or care givers, and not to the screen. The screen time interrupts the normal pathway of cognitive, behavioural, social and communication functions! The media exposure makes the attachment process disorganised!
An infant or toddler is an asset in the garden of life! Give him or her full attention to make his or her later years full of prospects!
M.C.Mathew(text and photo)
Monday, August 19, 2024
A father and Mother beside their pre-school child!
Friday, August 16, 2024
A nature walk!
Thursday, August 15, 2024
Pre-school readiness !
Looking forward!
The birds take this position on the feeding site in our garden, and wait for the bowl to be filled with feeds. That is how we know that they arrived for their feed.
The pre-school children look forward to the latter years in their life at school. By the time they are about three years, they have had an exposure to the circle of friends and play mates that they look forward to having more of that experience at pre-school.
That becomes a common instinct for children to want to go to pre-school from having been at home thus far.
They look forward to a fulfilling and cheerful experience.
Most children find transition to pre-school years easy to adapt to, as they find being with other children giving them a new experience.
This can happen, if from the age of two years, the home is a place where children can have a variety of indoor and outdoor experiences of play, exploration and experiences.
I remember a family telling me how much their son of three years looked forward to go to pre-school as it had a mini zoo with birds, rabbits, cats, dogs, aquarium and goats. The child was used to pets at home and associated school with pleasant thoughts.
The School-centirc view of a pre-school child can be made hospitable when the home based activities in the Child's Corner at home were regularly focussing on the triad of: seeing, feeling and experiencing. That is why activity based pre-schooling is more akin to the readiness level of a pre-school child for non-formal learning.
Children look towards pre-school experience. They are hungry for exploration and experience.
I wish that would get addressed first so that the transition to formal leaning of reading, writing, and information gathering would be comfortable for pre-school children!
M.C.Mathew(text and photo)