11 answers

Self Esteem and Confidence and My 5 Year Old and Her First Breakup with a Boy

I wrote that in jest partly=) Apparently a boy in my daughters class the first week of K asked her to marry him and she said "yes but ask again when I'm 7 or 70 you pick, I'm too little for that now." So apparently he was her "boyfriend" in their eyes and they WERE going to get married one day=) I find it cute, I didn't really say much, I did tell her she could have lots of boy -friends and girl--friends and that she should be friends with a lot of kids, but I didn't make an issue of the title because honestly theyre 5, theyre idea of being boyfriend and girlfriend is completely diferent than ours, Their interactions werent extreme or of concern. when I pciked her up they were mostly playing in seperate groups but would J. hug goodbye, and he would lecture M. on finding a babysitter so she could take the bus with him.
Apparently throughout the school year he made another "girlfriend" in another class so my daughter decided they were going to break up and had another girl tell him she wanted to break up- i'm laughing now at the silliness of this. I think its all funny and cute BUT the one thing I don't like is when I asked her why she decided that she told M. its proper to have only one girlfriend and the other girl deserved him because he was funny and so was she and she deserved him more and that she wasnt funny enough for him (all in her eyes he never told her this). BTW I'm biased but Emmy loves making jokes and being funny and in my opinion is funny in much wiser ways than this boy who makes funny noises and says mommy and huggy instead of mom and hug (yes thats the qualifications for being funny in K)... I think her current impersonations and at the age of 2 making a play about a superhero named diaperhead that had an awesome theme song is much funnier that adding a y to words=)--J. sayin' (if only our kids felt thy were as awesome and had as much potential as we see in them, life would be much eaiser)
anyway my querstion isn't about any of this silly K drama which she took in stride its about her self esteem. How do I help build her self esteem and self confidence. This seems to be a common issue with her, hating to be wrong so much she'd rather not try in front of people, or afraid of rejection so much she doesnt put herself out there. I know where she gets it (i would be the awesome bearer of those awesome traits=) ) Anyway has anyone else had sucess in buliding self esteem and confidence in a young girl? tips/tricks?

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

mrslavallie--we have conversations regularly about what is acceptable and isn't, not in a fear instilling way J. what is and isn't ok and she finds kissing gross between boys and girls=) I am naive in a lot of ways though so possibly you are right!
Theresa -I never thought about it like that, she did word it to seem that way, although still she isnt as concfident as I'd like her to be and I may J. be over correlating that fact with this event
Oneanddone-I agree, she's not upset at all, it was J. matter of fact with her and relaying a story

Featured Answers

To M. it sounds more like a personality issue rather than self-esteem. Some personalities are very focused on quality and doing things correctly while others are more up for the challenge of trying something new.

I really don't think it's an issue of self-esteem or confidence and trying to focus on those things won't do a ton of good. She hates to be wrong in front of people, which means that she probably normally feels she's right. (I also bear these awesome traits...)

I'd focus on the specific situations and her feelings about those situations. In a situation where she wants to try something new but is afraid of doing it "wrong," J. talk her through what she would do, what she thinks could go wrong, what she thinks will happen/people will say if she does it wrong, how she reacts when people around her do something "wrong."

Also, remind her that there are lots of ways to do something. J. because she doesn't do it the same way as someone else doesn't mean her way was "wrong." That's a big lesson that I'm still working on learning.

I think always trying to help her put herself in other's shoes (if she's afraid of being rejected, find out how she would feel about another little girl who "put herself out there" in the situation at hand) and helping her to think through her feelings and reactions will be immensly helpful as she grows up.

2 moms found this helpful

More Answers

Make sure that you are not more upset about this than she is. Sometimes kids, even at 5, are incredibly perceptive!

5 moms found this helpful

Well, when she says this other girl 'deserved' him more, is it possible what she meant was this other girl was a better match for him?

I'm not sure this is an issue of low self esteem, as it is evidence of incredibly mature awareness for her age.

J. my $.02!

:)

5 moms found this helpful

Self Esteem builders for girls are other activities that focus on strong, independent women/girls.
Scouting is great - reading about Ruth from the bible (I think the golden books have those) or other independent women - Annie Oakley, Clara Barton, Dolly Madison (not the bakery - LOL!) Amelia Earhart, etc - strong women known for their brains, femininity and acomplishments!
Best of luck!

4 moms found this helpful

I'm not sure how much help this is, more of a comment really. We tell the kids "you have to be able to laugh at yourself". That applies when doing something embarrassing in front of friends or your parents. Or when you're unsure of the next step you need to take. Let your baby know it's all in fun. Good Luck.

4 moms found this helpful

self esteem in anyone is earned. You can't give it to her. You can't praise her into it. Your high praise will actually have the opposite effect. SHe has to do things that she is proud of and be praised for the effort she puts into it. Praise hard work and it encourages hard work. SHe will know in her soul that is good because she does good things. Get her in karate, ballet, tumbling, volunteer work, art classes. Something that she can beam with pride about and brag to her friends that she is good at. Doing things you are proud of is the only way to have true esteem for yourself.

3 moms found this helpful

Your daughter sounds like mine (she is 5 too). I tell my daughter it is OK to get the wrong answer and/or do the wrong thing, that’s how we learn. As for the boyfriend I don't know about that. Maybe she sees that the other girl would be a better match for his personality or maybe she J. doesn't like him that much anymore.
My daughter has a hard time in school because she says she doesn't have a “best” friend. She was very close with one girl that moved away J. before Thanksgiving and has a hard time dealing with the feeling of loss. There are only six kids in the class, well seven now a boy J. started there after the holiday break. One of the other girls feels she needs to compare how they all look and dress. Yes at 5 she makes negative comments about my daughter wearing her hair up in a ponytail. Having met the mother I see where she gets it. I tell my daughter that it’s ok to be herself and that she is beautiful, she hears it all the time from strangers when we are out.

3 moms found this helpful

To M. it sounds more like a personality issue rather than self-esteem. Some personalities are very focused on quality and doing things correctly while others are more up for the challenge of trying something new.

I really don't think it's an issue of self-esteem or confidence and trying to focus on those things won't do a ton of good. She hates to be wrong in front of people, which means that she probably normally feels she's right. (I also bear these awesome traits...)

I'd focus on the specific situations and her feelings about those situations. In a situation where she wants to try something new but is afraid of doing it "wrong," J. talk her through what she would do, what she thinks could go wrong, what she thinks will happen/people will say if she does it wrong, how she reacts when people around her do something "wrong."

Also, remind her that there are lots of ways to do something. J. because she doesn't do it the same way as someone else doesn't mean her way was "wrong." That's a big lesson that I'm still working on learning.

I think always trying to help her put herself in other's shoes (if she's afraid of being rejected, find out how she would feel about another little girl who "put herself out there" in the situation at hand) and helping her to think through her feelings and reactions will be immensly helpful as she grows up.

2 moms found this helpful

My daughter is 3. I do know other parents who told their daughters they were not allowed to have boyfriend until they are 13, and can't date until 16. Every boy knew this of one of the girls. My son had a crush on her, but as soon as she had her birthday there were boys lined up to be her boyfriend. My son J. backed off because she knew boys were after her. The other girl he became super good friends with, she lives too far for them to even think of boyfriend and girlfriend.
My thoughts are possibly tell her to tell other boys she is not allowed by her parents to have a bf until she is 13. That way the burden is off of your little girl. :)

2 moms found this helpful

Required Fields

Our records show that we already have a Mamapedia or Mamasource account created for you under the email address you entered.

Please enter your Mamapedia or Mamasource password to continue signing in.

Required Fields

, you’re almost done...

Since this is the first time you are logging in to Mamapedia with Facebook Connect, please provide the following information so you can participate in the Mamapedia community.

As a member, you’ll receive optional email newsletters and community updates sent to you from Mamapedia, and your email address will never be shared with third parties.

By clicking "Continue to Mamapedia", I agree to the Mamapedia Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.