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URL:https://www.learndesk.us/class/6557253714837504/lesson/6f69a7ccae9a96f54a05faf85373fa34?ref=outlook-calendar
SUMMARY:Day 13: Living Vicariously
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260505T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260505T200000
LOCATION:https://www.learndesk.us/class/6557253714837504/lesson/6f69a7ccae9a96f54a05faf85373fa34?ref=outlook-calendar
DESCRIPTION: 
Parents, it is essential that you embrace the fact that this is your child’s journey – not yours. Do not live vicariously through them. Put your focus on being a supportive and encouraging parent.
Similar to “Conditional Parenting”, this kind of action takes place when you see an outcome of a game mean more to a parent than it does to a player.
“When parents see their child as part of themselves, they may experience the child’s achievements as if they were their own,” says Brad Bushman, professor of communication and psychology at Ohio State University. “They may bask in the reflected glory of the child’s achievements. As such, the child’s achievements may become a surrogate for parents’ own unfulfilled ambitions. In this way, parents could lose some of the feelings of regret and disappointment that they could not achieve these ambitions themselves.”
Parents who live vicariously through their children tend to experience the following:

Take credit when things go well.
Solve every...

https://www.learndesk.us/class/6557253714837504/lesson/6f69a7ccae9a96f54a05faf85373fa34?ref=outlook-calendar
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