I wanted to share this article, as it touches on many of the topics we discussed. Enjoy!
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kari-kubiszyn-kampakis/10-common-mistakes-parents-today-make-me-included_b_4753451.html
10
Common Mistakes Parents Today Make (Me Included)
When I
became a mom, I got lots of advice on how to love my child. But not until a few
years ago did someone actually point out that loving a child means wanting
what's best for them long-term.
When my
four daughters were young, long-term didn't resonate with me. Back then
it was about survival, meeting daily needs and keeping my head above water.
Now that
my kids are maturing, however, the fog is lifting. I'm no longer a pledge of
parenting, but rather an indoctrinated member. The perk of this stage is that
my kids want to spend time with me. We have real conversations that reveal
their beautiful personalities. With everyone sleeping through the night, I'm
sleeping better, too. I can think coherently and be more intentional in how I
raise them.
These
days, I put more thought into long-term. I think about the kind of
adults I hope my children will be and work backward to ask, "What can I do
today to foster that?" Being mindful of their future has changed my
parenting paradigm, because what makes my children happy at age 10 or 15 is
somewhat different from what will make them happy at age 25, 30, 40 and beyond.
A while
back I came across some interesting articles and books that dig into what
psychologists today are seeing: a rising number of 20-somethings who are
depressed and don't know why. These young adults claim they had
magical childhoods. Their parents are their best friends. They never
experienced tragedy or anything more than normal disappointments. Yet for some
reason, they're unhappy.
One
reason given is that parents today are too quick to swoop in. We don't want our
children to fall, so instead of letting them experience adversity, we clear the
path. We remove obstacles to make their life easy. But adversity is a part
of life, and only by facing it can our children build life-coping skills
they'll need down the road. So while it seems like we're doing them a
favor, we're really stunting their growth. We're putting short-term payoffs
over long-term well-being.
One article
mentions incoming college freshmen known to deans as "teacups" for
their fragility in the face of minor problems. The question posed was this:
"Could it be that by protecting our kids from unhappiness as children,
we're depriving them of happiness as adults?"
Here's
psychiatrist Paul Bohn's response, as paraphrased in the piece:
[M]any parents will do anything to avoid having
their kids experience even mild discomfort, anxiety, or disappointment --
"anything less than pleasant," as he puts it -- with the result that
when, as adults, they experience the normal frustrations of life, they think
something must be terribly wrong.
Why am I
sharing this information? Because I think it's relevant in this age of helicopter
parenting. While I find it great that today's parents are more invested in
their children's lives than previous generations, our involvement can go
overboard. What we may justify as "good parenting" can hurt our
children later. Unless we're mindful of that, it's easy to handicap them by
making their lives too easy.
As my
favorite parenting philosophy goes: "Prepare your child for the road, not
the road for your child."
With
this said, I've outlined 10 common mistakes that parents today -- me included
-- often make. My intention isn't to point fingers, but to raise awareness.
What may be ingrained in our culture is not always in the best interest of our
kids.
Mistake
#10: Worshipping our children. Many of us live
in child-centered communities. We're raising our kids in child-centered homes.
Our children love this, of course, because our lives revolve around them. And
for the most part we don't mind either, because their happiness is our
happiness. It thrills us to do for them, buy for them, and shower them with
love and attention.
But I
think it's important to keep in mind that our children were made to be loved,
not worshipped. So when we treat them like the center of the universe, we
create a false idol, turning a good into an ultimate. Rather than kid-centered
homes, we should strive for God-centered homes. Our children will still be
loved, only in a better way, one that promotes selflessness over selfishness.
Mistake
#9: Believing our children are perfect. One thing I
often hear from professionals who work with children (counselors, teachers,
etc.) is that parents today don't want to hear anything negative about their
kids. When concerns are raised, even concerns voiced out of love, the knee-jerk
reaction is often to attack the messenger.
The
truth can hurt, but when we listen with an open heart and mind we stand to
benefit. We can intervene early before a situation gets out of hand. It's
easier to deal with a troubled child than repair a broken adult.
As a
Children's of Alabama psychiatrist recently told me when I interviewed her on
teenage depression, early intervention is key because it can change the
trajectory for the child's life. She said that's why she enjoys child and
adolescent psychiatry -- because kids are resilient, and it's a lot easier to
intervene effectively when they're young instead of years later, when the
problem has gone on so long it's become incorporated into part of their
identity.
Mistake
#8: Living vicariously through our children. We
parents take great pride in our children. When they succeed, it makes us
happier than if we'd done it ourselves.
But if
we're overly involved and invested in their lives, it gets hard to see where
they end and we begin. When our children become extensions of us, we may see
them as our second chance. Suddenly it's not about them, it's about us. This is
where their happiness starts getting confused with our happiness.
Mistake
#7: Wanting to be our child's BFF. When I asked a
priest to name the biggest mistake he sees in parenting, he thought for a moment
and then said, "Parents not being parents. Not stepping up to the plate to
do hard things."
Like
everyone, I want my children to love me. I want them to sing my praises and
appreciate me. But if I'm doing my job right, they'll get mad and not like me sometimes.
They'll roll their eyes, moan and groan, and wish they'd been born into another
family.
Seeking
to be our child's BFF can only lead to permissiveness and choices made out of
desperation because we fear losing their approval. That's not love on our end;
that's need.
Mistake
#6: Engaging in competitive parenting. Every parent
has a competitive streak. All it takes to stir this monster in us is another
parent giving his or her child a leg up at our child's expense.
I hear
these stories a lot at the junior high and high school levels, stories of
broken friendships and betrayals due to one family blindsiding another family.
In my opinion, the root is fear. We fear our children will get left behind. We
fear that if we don't jump into the craziness, and pull out every stop to help
them excel early, they'll be stuck in mediocrity the rest of their life.
I
believe children need to work hard and understand that dreams don't come on a
silver platter; they have to sweat and fight for them. But when we instill a
"win at all costs" attitude, permitting them to throw anyone under
the bus to get ahead, we lose sight of character.
Character
may not seem important in adolescence, but in adulthood it's everything.
Mistake
#5: Missing the wonder of childhood. The other day I
found a Strawberry Shortcake sticker on my kitchen sink. It reminded me how
blessed I am to share my home with little people.
One day
there won't be stickers on my sink. There won't be Barbies in my bathtub, baby dolls
on my bed or Mary Poppins in the DVD player. My windows will be clear of
sticky handprints, and my home will be quiet because my daughters will be
hanging out with friends instead of nesting at home with me.
Raising
small children can be hard, monotonous work. At times it's so physically and
emotionally exhausting we wish they were older to make our life easier. We're
also kind of curious who they'll grow up to be. What will be their passion?
Will their God-given gifts be clear? As parents we hope so, for knowing which
strengths to nurture enables us to point them in the right direction.
But as
we project into the future, wondering if our child's knack for art will make
them a Picasso, or if their melodic voice will create a Taylor Swift, we may
forget to soak up the splendor in front of us: toddlers in footed pajamas,
bedtime stories, tummy tickles and elated squeals. We may forget to let our
children be little and enjoy the one childhood they're given.
The
pressures on kids start way too early. If we really want our kids to have a leg
up, we need to protect them from these pressures. We need to let them have fun
and grow at their own pace so 1) they can explore their interests without fear
of failure and 2) they don't get burned out.
Childhood
is a time for free play and discovery. When we rush children through it, we rob
them of an innocent age they'll never pass through again.
Mistake
#4: Raising the child we want, not the child we have. As parents we harbor dreams for our children. They start when we
get pregnant, before the gender's even known. Secretly we hope they'll be like
us, only smarter and more talented. We want to be their mentors, putting our
life experiences to good use.
But the
irony of parenting is that children turn our molds upside down. They come out
wired in ways we never anticipated. Our job is to figure out their inherent,
God-ordained bent and train them in that direction. Forcing our dreams on them
won't work. Only when we see them for who they are can we impact their life
powerfully.
Mistake
#3: Forgetting our actions speak louder than words. Sometimes when my kids ask a question, they'll say,
"Please answer in one sentence." They know me well, for I'm always
trying to squeeze life lessons into teachable moments. I want to fill them with
wisdom, but what I forget is how my example overshadows my words.
How I
handle rejection and adversity... how I treat friends and strangers... whether
I nag or build up their father... they notice these things. And the way I
respond gives them permission to act the same.
If I
want my children to be wonderful, I need to aim for wonderful, too. I need to
be the person I hope they'll be.
Mistake
#2: Judging other parents -- and their kids. No
matter how much we disagree with someone's parenting style, it's not our place
to judge. Nobody in this world is "all good" or "all bad";
we're all a mix of both, a community of sinners struggling with different
demons.
Personally,
I tend to cut other parents more slack when I'm going through hard spells. When
my child is testing me, I'm compassionate to parents in the same boat. When my
life is overwhelming, I'm forgiving of others who slip up and let things fall
through the cracks.
We never
know what someone's going through or when we'll need mercy ourselves. And while
we can't control judgmental thoughts, we can cut them short by seeking to
understand the person instead of jumping to conclusions.
Mistake
#1: Underestimating CHARACTER. If there's one
thing I hope to get right in my children, it's their CORE. Character, moral
fiber, an inner compass... these things lay the foundation for a happy, healthy
future. They matter more than any report card or trophy ever will.
None of
us can force character on our kids, and at age 10 or 15 character won't mean
much. Children care about short-term gratification, but we, as parents, know
better. We know that what will matter at 25, 30 and 40 is not how far they
once threw the football, or whether they made cheerleader, but how they treat
others and what they think of themselves. If we want them to build
character, confidence, strength and resilience, we need to let them face
adversity and experience the pride that follows when they come out stronger on
the other side.
It's
hard to see our children fall, but sometimes we have to. Sometimes we have to
ask ourselves whether intervening is in their best interest. There are a
million ways to love a child, but in our quest to make them happy, let us stay mindful
that sometimes it takes short-term pain to earn long-term gain.
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