7 Children's Training Rules According to Italian Psychiatric

Giovanni Bollea, the graduate class of 1913, has been an important Italian psychiatrist: who has focused his professional advancement on child development, bringing a real revolution to the Italian pediatric neuropsytry: in fact, he has been the initiator of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy of the group at Roman university clinics. In [...]
Giovanni Bollea, the graduate class of 1913, has been an important Italian psychiatrist: who has focused his professional advancement on child development, bringing a real revolution to the Italian pediatric neuropsytry: in fact, he has been the initiator of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy of the group at Roman university clinics.
In his career course, he has compiled a list of 7 rules for raising educated and quiet children.
1. Try less. There's so many, there's no doubt. Consumerism cuts off desire and opens up boring gates. ”
2. What matters is intensity, not the length of the timeline you spend with your children.
The first 20 minutes of going home from work are essential.
They must be committed to conversation and caressing. And you shouldn't ask questions about tasks or results. ”
3. The most educational games are the ones that go through your mother's imagination and father's hands: it's enough two pieces of wood, but your parents just couldn't invent from”.
4. From three to five years old, it's good to start pushing your children to do housework, along with your parents. It is helpful that they can iron a garment or sew a shirt stamp”.
5. “Sport. First of all, it must be a desire. So much better if you practice it in a group, realizing that dawning means getting really sweaty even when you don't want to be champion...”
6. “Should encourage artistic culture to get used to beautiful”. Theatre, music, artistic drawings create a desire to improve. The income spent on culture is the most valuable. ”
7. And most, at the end of the day, think about their children, their shopping, their jobs at home, and very few of these jobs end up. Wouldn't it be best to let the kids out half an hour ago? More than courses, that's what children really need. “










