I had dinner with a good friend last night (in between rehearsals for the Des Moines Symphony's New Year's Eve concert). She and I parent similarly, so it's always nice to compare notes. She mentioned that people sometimes ask her, "What's your one best piece of parenting advice?" It's hard to sum up your parenting style in a sentence or two!
That got me thinking - how would I answer that question? We subscribe to the principles of attachment parenting, about which many whole books have been written. How would I sum it up in one piece of advice? Really came to me pretty quickly, because I think about parenting a lot. I consider myself to be a professional mom. Parenting is a job to study for, and to keep learning new things to keep your skills sharp, just like any other profession. So here it is - the guideline I use in my own daily parenting:
Treat your kids with respect.
Of course that's not simple or easy. First, you have to have lots of practice treating other people - friends, family members, colleagues, the mail carrier, etc. - with respect. Because treating kids respectfully when their needs and emotions get ahead of their ability to express themselves, gets tricky.
Treating kids with respect isn't the same as giving them whatever they want. It means their wants and needs get consideration, and if they can't be met, that's explained respectfully, along with alternatives, or an explanation of what else would need to happen before that need can be met. When they do something unacceptable (i.e. hit a sibling), I still try to treat them with respect, saying firmly that we don't treat each other that way in this family, suggest other ways to deal with their frustration, then ask if they need to do something else to calm down or if they'd like to try again.
Instead of only commenting on the behavior I don't want, I always try to emphasize the actions we DO want. As in, "It's ok to be frustrated, but we don't hurt each other in this family. You need to express your feelings in words, and if that doesn't help, you can ask a grown-up for help."
It seems crazy how our society's idea of "correct parenting" currently seems to involve spending the first five years of a child's life teaching them they can't have what they want, aren't allowed to express strong emotions, and can't do what they want. Then we spend a ton of resources in elementary and middle school on self-esteem programs - trying to teach kids to express what they're thinking, ask for what they want, and that they deserve to be treated with respect. Crazy. Please tell me I'm not the only one who sees a disconnect here! How about just showing them respect from the very beginning??
The discussion could go on and on! Comments? Questions? What would your "one piece of best" parenting advice be?
Thursday, December 31, 2009
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