Even the nicest of words can be ruined if they're spoken in a condescending, treacly way. It's not bad for infants, and it's great for French poodles. It's that talking-to-a-French-poodle voice, and the thoughts that go with it, that should be avoided when parents are talking to their children.
Dan Vilter shared this story on the AlwaysLearning list in 2001:
At a park day, we were having a discussion about the usefulness of praise
and sincerity. The unschoolers in the group were trying to point out the
fallacy of over and insincere praise, and indirectly about treating your
children as people first. After much talk getting nowhere, one of the other
unschooling parents turned to me and in the French poodle voice started
thanking me for all the things I had done for the group that day. Something
like,"Oh Dan, thank you for bringing the stove for hot cocoa. You did such a
good job setting it up and heating the water! You're so strong carrying that
big jug of water all by yourself!" Everyone had a good laugh and the point
was succinctly made.
"Treating them as people first." That's it. See them as people, who hear you and are thinking, and treat that respectfully. In her book
Whole Child/Whole Parent, Polly Berrien Berends, uses the term "Seeing Beings."
SandraDodd.com/tone
photo by Denaire Nixon