Jul 22, 2009


Effective Parenting- how to get there from here

(Vignettes from the Trenches)


By guest blogger Linda Falcão


ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Linda Falcão is a mother, attorney, and teen educator, founder of the youth volunteer organization AMERICA SERVES, www.americaserves.net. The AMERICA SERVES Student Journal was honored by the US Department of Education in 2008 as a guide to teen service learning. She has degrees from the University of Pennsylvania in English and from the Wharton School in Economics, and attended Harvard Law School. She currently practices law and mediates in the field of employment discrimination, and is an appointee to Pennsylvania’s Advisory Committee to the Commission on Alternative Dispute Resolution. Of everything in her life, she is most proud of her marriage and her children.



Kemuel kindly asked me to guest blog about improving one’s parenting style (and presumably that’s why you’re reading this- if you’re happy with your relationship and with the results you’re getting, just page on to something else, I won’t be offended!) My own personal tips for giving your child the parenting they deserve-



1) Understand your own parenting philosophy.


Parenting is a performance art, and you’ll do it better if you understand your “motivation.” What’s important to you as a parent?


*To be the “anti-parent” of however you were raised?


* To instill a particular set of values (respect, tolerance, self-sufficiency, world domination?)


*To produce a huge number of children to please your mom, who had ten kids of her own and is hocking you for more grandchildren? (ok, so I digress!!:) Seriously, until you know where you’re going, you can’t steer the boat.


WHAT IS YOUR OWN NUMBER ONE GOAL IN PARENTING?


2) Understand the central task of parenting- to first convince your child that they’re the center of your universe, and then disabuse them of that notion.


I read some wonderful research years ago (which I would credit if I could remember the author), that said parenting is so tough because you have to first create the idea in your child’s head that “Mommy and I are one” (sorry, child-rearing guys!), to give your child a sense of safety, and then, as the child matures, you create the idea in their heads that they are separate entities that must go out and create their own lives in the world and be masters of their own destinies.



Kemuel and I each had to be both a mom and dad to our kids, because of the sad state of our alleged co-parents (can you say “restraining order,” anyone??), so we know first-hand that these are totally different mind-states to create in your kids head- fortunately, this is a really age-related task, so you have years to move from “Mommy and I are one” to “I must kill my father to take my own place in the world” (with apologies to Oedipus!) It’s a blend, and like mixing coffees or cocktails, sometimes you need more of one, and sometimes you need more of the other.



WHAT DOES YOUR CHILD NEED NOW? A) A GREATER SENSE OF CONNECTION, OR B) MORE ENCOURAGEMENT FOR INDEPENDENCE?


3) Find your kid’s lever, and use it.


In giving them more of a sense of connection (getting them to come to the table for family dinner) or more encouragement for independence (doing their own homework), what lever will you use?


By their lever I mean whatever moves them- it could be time with their friends, their electronics, karate lessons, dance class, use of the car, etc.


When we wanted our kids to do their college applications without our hocking them (we both went to college alreadyJ), we told them, we weren’t going to see them on the computer until one was done; then, when that was in the mail, they got the computer again for a few days; then we told them, we weren’t going to see them on the computer again until the next one was done, etc. etc.


WHAT’S YOUR KID’S LEVER?


PS, if you use the lever and nothing happens, you’ve picked the wrong lever. Keep trying!!



4) Be counter-cultural (and by this I don’t mean, grow your own weed)


I mean acknowledge and account for a culture that hates good parenting. Yes, I said “hates”, because a well-parented child is not a mega-consuming fool, and there are many companies in the US economy who love it that your own hard-earned money is being spent with the judgment of a ten-year old- because they’ve gotten you to agree that your ten-year old should spend it.


Whenever money is spent by someone who didn’t earn it, more money is going to be spent. Companies love that. Companies do not want your kid to be well-raised.


As a footnote to the above (don’t hate me, Fortune 500!!), I will also acknowledge that it’s not just a conspiracy from mega-corp that makes good parenting hard- good parenting IS hard, innately- it requires such a confluence of skills, experiences, and support. But you know that already, so get a pair and, like Nike says, “Just do it!” (See, even 40-year olds can be shaped by massive ad campaigns . . . )

(And if you think I’m 40 . . . J)



QUESTION WHAT THE CULTURE TELLS YOU ABOUT PARENTING, AND CONSUMING.


5) Don’t grocery-shop on an empty stomach and don’t try to parent when you’re having a fight with your spouse.


Let me explain what I mean here. Your children have an innate, God-given total selfishness, a “me-first” drive, that would keep them alive if their plane crashed on a desert island (I saw that on Lost, so I think maybe it could happen). It’s good, and it’s natural, and you need to account for it in your parenting.


The number-one deterrent to effective parenting we see is parents who lack support from their spouse - because, when you parent effectively, and set limits, your child will punish you emotionally. He/she will act out, withdraw their love, slam the door, give you sullen looks, cry, etc.


This is just their natural sense of entitlement, the one that would keep them alive on that desert island, coming out- thank God for it. But you can’t let it knock you off track, and you need someone to be there to hide out with when the kids are filling the house with their negativity. (Even if you ask them to go to their rooms- which we do in our house- our standard line is, “Crying is fine, but it brings the rest of us down, so you can go to your room until you feel cheerful again”- you’re still feeling sad and mean because you caused them pain.)


The biggest deterrent to effective parenting is lacking a good, strong marriage, where you know your spouse is your best friend and partner in crime. It makes you WAY too vulnerable to doing what you know you shouldn’t, so your kids don’t withdraw their love. (Parents need love too!!)


So keep your partnership as strong as you can, make it a priority, and if it’s a bad one that impacts your ability to parent, consider ending it (yeah, I said it- we raised our three children after divorces, and it was a blessing. The most important thing is that you are not being drained by your partner on a daily basis).



So if you’re fortunate enough to have someone good to raise your child with, thank your lucky stars, and get up and go to them now, and say, “Thank you for choosing to be with me today.” Kemuel and I say that to each other almost every day. Because it is a choice- we can both support ourselves alone, financially and emotionally, so being together is a choice we make every day. And when you have someone you can laugh and cry with when your kid is responding in their natural, God-given way to your parenting, you’re 90% of the way to being the best parent possible.


WHO SUPPORTS YOU IN BEING A STRONGER PARENT?


Appreciate the people in your lives who support good parenting, and thank them! As Jackie Kennedy once said, “If you don’t get raising your children right, nothing else really matters.”


7 comments:

  1. All great advice, well written too. Thanks for guest-blogging!

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  2. Check out your parenting style w/a psychology-based test on www.Parenting.com/Mom/signalPatterns.jsp

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  3. This was a terrific post -- wise and entertaining. Although it's a tad late for the mother of two twenty-somethings, it's encouraging to know that I did a couple of things -- not all by any stretch -- right.

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  4. Trina, thanks for your response. I think the parenting never ends- but now we're handing out wisdom and encouragement instead of lunches and band-aids. :) The love is the same-

    Thanks, Linda

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  5. This is some great advice! Your kids are lucky to have you both. :)

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  6. Even though I'm not a parent, I appreciate the information in tip #4. I hadn't really thought about the pressure that parents must feel when their kids want to buy something. Being a cheapskate, I don't know what I would do in that situation!

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  7. Actually, this is Linda posting-

    Kristen, you're very kind to say our kids are lucky- they think so (and they're able to create their own lives, which is the acid test), but among our peers we're called mean, too strict, etc. (all while our peers are moaning about their kids who won't leave home, who have no direction, who expect their parents to wait on them hand and foot, etc., etc., . . .:) Sigh.

    Nicole, thanks for your comment (and we love your recipe for vinegar cleaner, we are trying it out!!), affluenza is a real problem. That's where tip number 1 comes in- what are your values as a parent, and WHY are you doing the hard stuff to teach them your values? You can always explain to your kids how you have to take time away from them to earn money for your basic living expenses (reality training right from the git-go!!), and the more simple you keep things materially in your life, the more time you have to spend with them. In a pinch, you can always go to the classic line, "Because I said so, that's why." . . . (FYI, see Kemuel's post about paying the electric bills- I used to joke with him that if one of our 16-year olds suddenly wanted to pay the PECO bill, we should be EXTREMELY concerned!!:) A favorite in our home with kids wanting something we didn't think was a valuable purchase was to tell them they could save up and buy something with their own money- I will never forget the day that our youngest took her piggy bank to the Clover (the forerunner to Kohl's, any parent's best store for budget shopping!!), and counted out the 450-odd pennies it took to buy a set of fruit-shaped plastic ice cubes (the reusable ones with the coolant inside, you freeze them and they keep your drink cold). The cashier and the 15 people in line behind us were super-patient while she counted out and arranged her money into dollar piles. They got it- and so did our daughter. (She's currently the junior fellow for Trade, Equity and Development at the Carnegie Foundation in DC, and is moving to Berkeley for a year to do economic development for a non-profit there- a lot of her work is about getting money to places in the world where it can do the most good!)

    Thanks for writing, I really appreciate hearing from both of you!

    best,
    Linda

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