Episodes
Sunday Nov 22, 2020
Parents You Have lost Control: Part 1
Sunday Nov 22, 2020
Sunday Nov 22, 2020
Parents You have Lost Control Part 1
My wife and I are in serious trouble! Today my five year old discovered the most well kept and important secret of the parenting world. I was hopeful that my boys would not discover this secret for several more years. Now that the middle child has figured it out however, it will not be long before the other three catch on.
He has discovered that when it really comes down to it, I cannot MAKE him do anything.
We stopped at a local restaurant to grab dinner following his soccer game. I was rushing home to pick up his older brother so that I could take him to his cub scout meeting. As we left the restaurant he stopped, just outside the door. I was walking ahead of him and looked back to see him propped up against the wall scraping his soccer cleats on the ground. I said, “come on buddy, let’s go” He said, “No” and just stood there. He looked at me with a knowing smirk; he saw that my hands were full, I was in a hurry, and that I had few parenting “tools” at my disposal.
Thankfully, I had gotten off work a little early today so I was in a pretty patient frame of mind. I remained calm and began racking my brain for the best way to handle this situation. We stood there looking at one another for nearly a minute. It began to feel like the stand off at the OK corral, whoever moved first, was doomed to lose. After searching for the most helpful tool in my bag for this situation, I came up empty. I was unable to think of a logical or enforceable statement to convince him that he should move on his own. So, I walked back to where he stood, took his arm and walked him to the car. Eventually he decided to walk on his own, and climbed into his seat.
As I reflect on this situation I am struck by the simple truth, I CANNOT MAKE HIM DO ANYTHING. At this point he is only five, I am bigger than he and I can take him by the arm and walk him to the car. In ten years if he decides to take a similar approach about going to school things will be different. I will not be able to physically move a fifteen year old as I did my five year old today.
This was a power struggle, he realized that I was in a hurry and short handed; he decided he was going to exercise his personal will. I am reminded of how important it is for parents to admit and be OK with the fact that we cannot MAKE our children do anything. All we can do is state what we are going to do. We cannot control our children, instead we must explain the expectations or limit and then manage our own responses accordingly. When the child does not meet the expectation the parent can let go of forcing him to “do” something and provide a logical consequence for the decision. If the child meets the expectation he learns a lesson about responsibility, if the child does not meet the expectation and experiences a consequence, he learns a lesson about responsibility. Either way the lesson is learned and the parent maintains sanity by understanding, “I don’t have to control my child, only my self.”
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