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When we talk about parenting like you mean it, do we sometimes mean what we say and HOW we say it when we talk to our children? Do we frequently talk to our children in belittling or demeaning ways? Do we put behavior on auto pilot and assume that they know that we have the best of intentions when we talk to them? As a mother, I often feel like people who don’t really know me get the best version of me. My kids get the worst versions of me. Why do I treat my children worse than people I don’t really know? Do I put on a show for others? Am I really being authentic and genuine?
I read a story that caught my eye that illustrates the point that I am trying to make. I found this story in the book, “Between Parent and Child” by Dr. Haim G. Ginott. He shares the following:
“A college student, dressed in jeans, was crossing the street when a cab driver almost hit him. Infuriated, the cabbie started to berate him: "Why don't you watch where you're going, you bum! You wanna get killed? Maybe you need your mother to hold your hand!" The young man raised himself to his full height and calmly asked, "Is this the way you talk to a doctor?" The driver became contrite and apologized. (p. 193)
This story has caused me to pause and reflect on my own behavior towards my family. Would I talk this way to my doctor, a police officer or the lady checking out my groceries at the grocery store? Absolutely not. I probably would not have very many friends if that were the case. Unfortunately, this scenario plays out in our families at times. After reading this story, I feel like I sometimes am guilty of not treating my kids with respect and kindness. I in turn, expect and demand this type of behavior from my kids. If our kids get the worst of our behavior, they just can’t choose if they want to live with us or not. They are stuck. So, the question becomes, how do we treat our children with the same kindness we would show to a stranger?
Laurence Steinberg in his book, “The 10 Basic Principles of Good Parenting”, offers this advice when we feel tempted to act out in this way, “Most of the time, when parents are excessively harsh, it's because they've reacted quickly and in anger. When you are disciplining your child about something that's just happened, take a deep breath before you speak and choose your words deliberately. Be mindful about what you say and how you say it. One of the most important things you have going for you as a parent is that your child comes into the world with a natural desire to please you. When you use harsh discipline, whether it is verbal or physical, you gradually erode this inclination. You may get away with harsh verbal discipline when your child is little, but by the time he has turned eight or nine, you will have cashed in all of your emotional chips. You can't afford to do that. You've still got a lot of child rearing ahead of you.” (Steinberg, p.153)
Our time with our children is so fleeting and precious. May we not ruin it by consistently cashing in our “emotional chips” with outbursts and harsh discipline. We have the opportunity as parents to teach our children how to behave. I love the universal message of the Golden Rule, “Treat others the way you want to be treated.” Think about how this applies in our families. If we want our children to treat each other nicely, we should treat them nice ourselves. If we want our children to learn to be kind to their peers. We should show them that same kindness and show them how to be kind. If we want our children to not be physically abusive. They should not learn abusive behaviors from the way we discipline them. If we demand respect, we should show respect. The examples could go on and on. Lessons they learn from us as their parents, whether they are good or bad, will be hard to undo. I love the following scriptures that can help us in our parenting. In Proverbs 22:6 we read, “Train up a child in the way he should go; and when he is old, he will not depart from it.” In Ephesians chapter 6 verse 4 it says, “And, ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath: but bring them up in nurture and admonition of the Lord.” As parents, may we use the time we have been given with our children wisely! May we treat them with the love and respect that they deserve so that they will have the desire to emulate our example! May we parent like we mean it!
Works Cited:
Ginott, Haim G., 1965, Between parent and child, Three Rivers Press. Reformatted by BYU-Idaho for accessibility purposes, November, 11, 2020.
Steinberg, Laurence; 2004; The 10 Basic Principles of Good Parenting; Simon & Schuster Paperbacks. Reformatted by BYU-Idaho for accessibility purposes, February 20th, 2018.
