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No such thing as a problem-free child
It is not the responsibility of parents to make sure
that a child enters adulthood problem-free. That is an impossible dream,
yet it seems many parents believe that is their job.
This was brought to mind by a conversation I recently
had with the mother of a 15-year-old girl. The child was moody,
negative, pessimistic, and seemed to believe she could not do anything
right. Nevertheless, she made reasonably good grades, had a reasonable
number of steady friends, and was thought reasonably well of by other
adults. I pointed out that the girl seemed to be doing OK.
That fell on deaf ears. Mom wanted me to give her some
formula for changing the girl's attitude. It's worth mentioning that the
attitude in question was not some adolescent hormone thing; rather, it
seemed to the mother that her daughter had been this way since she was
very young. "Is this a discipline issue?" Mom asked.
I replied that she was describing a personality, not a
behavior problem, and personalities do not respond to traditional
discipline. "On the other hand," I said, "if your daughter's negativity
produces anti-social behaviors -- offensive manners, for example -- you
can discipline those, but attempts on your part to change her
personality are doomed. In fact, such attempts are very likely to make
matters worse."
Mom admitted that both she and her husband talked to
-- lectured, most likely -- their daughter on a fairly regular basis
about her attitude. I pointed out that one cannot talk a child out of
one personality and into another.
Could their parents have talked them out of their
personality defects? No. Has any parent ever succeeded at this? No. Does
everyone attain adulthood with defects? Yes. Whose responsibility is it
to deal with these defects? Why, it is the child's -- now an adult --
responsibility.
Reality is the Great Therapist, but even reality is
not omnipotent. Some adult children come to grips with their defects and
resolve to correct them; others deny they have any defects and spend
their less-than-happy lives blaming others for every problem they pull
down upon themselves. As the late, great George Harrison put it, "And
that's the way things go."
Many of today's parents think they have failed if
their children have problems. They think this because they believe in
psychological determinism -- that parenting produces the child. This is
absurd. Parenting is an influence. It is not the only influence. The
other influences include peers, genes, diet, teachers, siblings, and
accidents -- things over which no one had any control.
The greatest influence of all is the child's own free
will, the decisions he makes, many of which have nothing to do with
anything his parents, teachers or peers have done, and nothing to do
with anything he has inherited or eaten either. This is why everyone
knows of a child who grew up in a "good" home who went astray and seems
hopelessly lost to this day, much to his or her parents' dismay. It is
also why everyone knows of a child who grew up under disadvantageous
circumstances -- abusive, alcoholic parents, for example -- who has made
a spectacular life for him- or herself as an adult. That's the way
things go.
Accepting there are things about your child that you
cannot change will make for a parenthood that is significantly less
stressful, ridden with guilt, and frustrating -- a much happier
parenthood, in other words. It's as simple as accepting that you are not
a Supreme Being.
John Rosemond
12 June 2007
http://www.charlotte.com/162/story/156621.html
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