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The Mommy Detective - cracking the code on your family's drama.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

A fair life will produce an inferior child

I was talking with a parent last week who was concerned about how unfair life is to children.  I agreed that there are vermin in our society that will do anything to destroy or steal our children's youth. 

When the conversation drifted into how unfair the grading system was or how unfair sports and contests were......I had to be honest.

"Oh...I see....so you want your child to be inferior."  (by inferior I mean unable to handle the knocks and bruises of life)

"What?  No I don't.  I want them to be the best they can be.  I don't want an inferior child.  Why would you say that?"

My Answer:

Children learn a lot of things while they are growing.  They learn how to walk, how to talk, what happens when they pinch another child, how to read as well as a host of valuable information about their world. 

Everything in their little lives becomes a lesson.  All their successes are lessons and probably more important - all their failures are lessons.  Show me a child that has never failed at anything and I'll guarantee that they are headed for horrible times as an adult.  Why? 

1.  If they have never failed, but they see the results of failure in other lives, they will probably become "fearful" of failure.  They will form the opinion that surviving failure is awful.  No one gets through this life scot free - and that includes failing.  Everyone at some point in their life will face failure.  Blessed is the adult that had to face failure as a child and therefore learned from his parent's tender understanding that you CAN survive failure.

2.  If they have never watched their friends win while they come in second or lower in their achievements, they will view every minute detail as a failure.  In other words unless they can be the ultimate winner, they will view their own accomplishments as failure.  What an awful way to live.  Think of all the fun times you might miss if you always had to be top dog.  Think of all the friends you will miss when they get tired of always being around a "top dog" philosophy. 

Think of all the money your adult child will spend on counseling when he has no friends, a fear of failure and an unhealthy desire to always be on top...."it's lonely at the top - and the pressure to stay there is enormous since everyone else will be clawing to remove you from your throne." 

Think of all the time "winning only" adults spend trying to be top dog rather than having a good life. 

3.  Childhood is a practice run for adulthood.  If you keep your child from experiencing disappointment or failure, they will be the first to sign up for psychological care when they face adulthood.  Adults are constantly hurt.  The job doesn't pan out.  The boss is mean.  The pay isn't what it should be.  The baby cries too much.  The wife demands too much.  The husband was mugged.  The family lost their savings to a crooked accountant. 

Life isn't easy and it demands an adult that can weather the storms without coming apart.  Life demands a strong adult that won't whine or blame their problems on other people. 

A mediocre adult is usually one that has been pushed as a child to always be a winner or a child that's been sheltered from experiencing the pain that others have to endure. 

Of course we have a duty as parents to be sure that our child can handle what he faces.  No child should be bullied or physically hurt.  But...every child should have a loving arm around his shoulder and a good parent to lead him/her through acceptance of loss.  The most disabled adults I've ever known are people who simply can't handle pain, failure or loss. 

And the beautiful side of learning to deal with failure - ta da......a child that wants to keep trying.  The result is a child that pushes himself to try harder. (The key here is that the child keeps pushing - not the parent.) The result is a Beautiful adult that is centered and strong when everyone else is losing their cool.  Teaching your child to face failure and pain will ultimately lead him full circle to being a mature, well balanced lifetime achiever.  He won't accept mediocrity but he will forgive himself when things don't work out right. 

Wow!  Sounds like an exceptional adult to me!

So where do children learn how to be strong adults?

When they are the bottom player on a losing team - Don't give them a trophy.  Instead encourage them to try again next year.  Point out their strengths and places where they do excell.  Expect them to accept their failures and enjoy their strengths.  Be their guide through those failures and show them how to survive with grace.

When they fail math class, don't fuss at the teacher.  Ask your child to evaluate his study skills.  Get your child a tutor.  Be your child's tutor.  Ask and encourage them to try harder.  Don't demand a grade they didn't get.

         *Debbie's pet peeve - pass fail grades.  How awful!  This will train our children to accept mediocrity.  Always hold the carrot out a little further than your child can reach.  Always appreciate the valedictorian because they can be a role model for all the children to try harder.  Besides, why pull the valedictorian down just because your child won't study harder?

Always be your child's cheerleader for things he does right.  Even the little stuff.  Cheer him/her on with "good job" even if it's just making the bed correctly.

Never allow your child to take credit for something he/she didn't do.  And that also applies to you the parent.  Help your child with their homework - but don't do it for them.  Not only does that teach them to be lazy, it also teaches them to lie.  (I know one child that lost his first very important job - why?  Dad had done more of his homework for college.  When he received a terrific job after graduation his all A's did not reflect his true abilities and it took only three months for an employer to fire him.)

Finally.....give your child wings.  Encourage, encourage, encourage!  Expect them to try new things.  If they fail - teach them to laugh, accept it and try something else.  Let them know that real success is not in the final prize, real success is in the journey.

Seeking His Wisdom,

Debbie

Monday, June 28, 2010

Children are Imitators

Precious Pointer #2

Children are Imitators

Children live by the rule of Show don’t tell. Like little ducklings ready to follow mama duck anywhere, your children will imitate your actions.

Demands on your children won’t have the same impact unless supported by your actions.   If you don't want your child to scream and pitch a fit, don't let them see you screaming or out of control.  To prevent a sassy teen – teach your child how to handle conflict without anger.

Stay calm. Keep your voice low and show them that it’s possible to accomplish compromise without elevated tempers.  Show them the proper way to act in any circumstance.....they are watching!

Seeking His Wisdom,

Debbie

Sunday, June 27, 2010

#1 You Can Do It !

Precious Pointer # 1

You can do it!

Don’t believe the lie that you have no control over the outcome of your child. There is overwhelming evidence that you can parent your child successfully – no matter what challenges you face.

An Unruly child is not an inevitable consequence to reproduction. It is possible to live in harmony with your child.

Read books, attend seminars, talk with professionals and love that child with
all your heart.   God gave you all the tools you need to get the job done!

Seeking His Wisdom,

Debbie

Precious Pointers

The water for noodles boiled over and sent a gummy foam rushing to your floor.  Your two-year-old vomited on your new living room furniture.  Rushing your son to the bathroom, you bust through the door to find your four-year-old daughter covered in the expensive face cream you bought last week.  Your cell phone rang but slipped out of your hand when your son wiggled, screamed and knocked it into the toilet. 

You need a little love, a little encouragement and maybe a thought or two to help you when this happens again.  What you don't need is a long book to read, a discussion or debate on the joys of parenting or a blog entry that seems to go into infinity.

Precious pointers is a quick tid bit of information that may lift your spirit or give you insight into your child.  With no more than 120 words, it's a quick read that will help you raise those tiny look-a-likes that run around your home.

Check back often and see if there's a Precious Pointer that fits your need.

#1  You Can Do It

#2  Children are Imitators

#3  "No" is a great word

#4  Life must be fair

#5  Never punnish bystanders

#6  Don't treat your children like dogs

#7  Set the bar High

#8  Have Fun with your child

#9  Don't waffle

#10 Age appropriate Discipline

#11 Parenting is a process


Seeking His Wisdom,


Debbie

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Happy Father's Day!

Father's Day is an important day to celebrate.  My Dad is a wonderful man.  I often tell him that whatever I accomplish in life it will be because of something he taught me.  Of course, I feel by mother that way as well....but for different reasons. 


Pick ten of your favorite blogs or sites and read over the reasons they give for why they appreciate fathers.  You'll probably find things like dependability, strength, sportsmanship, love of nature.....All wonderful traits, but about the same for everyone.  Some people feel like Dad is just in the household for the fun element and to pay for everything.  "Dad's just wanna have fun..." or something like that.  But...if Dad's don't offer anything to their children in the way of guidance, what's the difference in them and an absent father?

My Dad is an unique man and has a full and varied resume.  A minister for over 60 years, he's also been a missionary pilot, subcontractor, missionary around the world, author, painter, musician and the list goes on and on.  In the above picture he was on a worldwide missionary trip and was standing by a mine field in North Korea.  No, he wasn't the kind of missionary that stays in swanky hotels in the protection of the city.  He road elephants through jungles and preached in some of the most remote places in the world.

People often ask me what made him a great Father.  I think a great father is someone that is "pleasingly" different from mom.  Not opposites or fueding wills, but enough so a child gets to see two sides to every situation. 

For example, Mom was all about feelings and emotions.  She could look at a person across a crowded restaurant, approach them by saying something like - "Are you okay?" and within a few minutes she knew their personal history, all they were going through and would often end her conversation with a prayer.  Wow!  She was the same with me.  She always seemed to pay enough attention to my body language that she knew what was going on in my life.  No way to hide anything from her. 

Dad could sort of do that....but not to the same extent or for the same reasons.  He was more concerned about the mind and the inner heart.  He would feel bad if I was sad, but instead of being emotional, he would find a helpful book or would delve into all the why's about the situation.  He's one of the reasons I can be a Mommy Detective.  He taught me to look at life and figure it out.

Between them I was given a great education about life.  I knew how important it was to show emotion, to love deeply, to care about others feelings and to wrap my arms around them in support.  I also knew how important it was to study hard, to search for answers and to ask those bold questions.  I knew how to dig for the deeper meanings and how to end all that learning with another hug for support. 

The best part was when their talents overlapped.  When Dad spent two hours crying with me and letting me know he was concerned about my problems or when Mom spent an hour searching the scriptures to find just the right one I needed for a lesson.  It gave me hope that I could take the good from each parent and make my life the best it could be.

Perhaps as we end this wonderful Father's day, douse the last embers of the campfire and close the bag of marshmellows with a rubber band - we should ponder this question....

As a Dad, what is my personal life teaching my child?  What will they remember about me that helps them become a better person? 

Thanks Dad for all you taught me.  I'm a better person because of you.

I love you,

Debbie