wish people would just relax. Parents need to lighten up,” my friend said to me on the phone the other day. I looked around my living room, suddenly overcome by an Orwellian sense of being watched.
I asked him what he meant and he launched into an excited tirade – which isn’t uncommon, he’s opinionated and gets easily worked up about such things. Fortunately, it makes for great conversation.
“We all need to chill out,” he said emphatically (there may have also been a few expletives sprinkled in there which I’ve edited for popular consumption). “Every little interaction and mistake a child makes is not a big deal. It’s more important to teach them to enjoy themselves in life, and love themselves, than it is to perfect themselves.”
I mean, what does he know anyway? He’s only got three kids – two of which he acknowledges have been identified as having “special needs.” Simple gross total, that’s one more kid than me, and on my crude parenting scale that means about five times the work over having just two.
Math has never been my strong suit, but you get the gist. He wins this round based on numbers alone.
His words really hit home for me. And once I accepted that he hadn’t secretly installed a nanny-cam in my house I took time to reflect on what he was saying.
It’s hard for any of us to look closely at the areas in which we are struggling or to examine hard truths.
Many parents, myself included, are often able to identify things we say or do as potentially damaging to our children – even in real time. It’s not because we don’t love them, it’s because we are without the resources or skills to make better choices when we are triggered by our child’s behaviour or emotions.
Possibly one of the key reasons we (over)react the way we do – by yelling, or berating or merely giving a deft look that indicates our disappointment – is because we are overcome with the notion that this moment in time will forever DEFINE the person our child will become.
That their thoughtlessness, carelessness, selfishness, unkindness, forgetfulness, laziness (insert any judgemental word you can muster here) will be the way they are perceived until the end of time rather than it just being a momentary error in judgment.
Sure, it may be a moment that they can learn something from if you approach it wisely and in a tempered manner, and then again, maybe not.
I recently had the very humbling experience recognizing this in myself (hence the brief suspicions of being monitored).
Brushing out my daughter’s hair I realized she hadn’t washed it as we had previously agreed she would.
It might have been the way I sighed, what I said or even my body language, but regardless of how, I quite clearly communicated that I wasn’t pleased and she had done something “wrong.” Watching her face crumple in the mirror, and then flush as she held back tears was enough to do me in right then and there.
Certainly not every moment our child says or does something we find displeasing needs to be a “teachable moment.” Sometimes the best thing is to just move on.
Maybe we all just need to “chill the @#$% out,” as my pal – more accurately – said. “Let’s all make mistakes and enjoy life anyway.”Pretty good advice all around, I’d say.