We need to raise children that are strong, resilient, and have good coping
skills—just in case Plan A doesn't work out. For these reasons, I enjoyed
Madeline Levine’s new book, Teach Your
Children Well: Parenting for Authentic Success, or Why Values and Coping Strategies
Matter More Than Grades, Trophies, or Fat Envelopes (Harper Collins, 2012).
In this succinct book, Levine digs deeper than the tiger parent vs. overprotective
parent debate, and helps us take a long-term perspective on parenting, and what
type of adults we are hoping to launch.
Helping our children find authentic success means assisting them in learning
to love learning, develop their own strengths and interests, find productive
and meaningful work to support themselves, become capable, resourceful, and
resilient, create loving relationships with family and friends, and contribute
to our world in some way. That’s more valuable than awards, trophies, honor
rolls, or admission to a prestigious college.
Levine reminds us that there is more than one definition to building a
successful life. Sometimes it takes us way into adulthood to figure that out. This
book gives us encouragement to define our own version of success, and parent
with that end in mind. I have wanted for my own children to grow into
responsible, kind, capable adults who contribute to the world in their
own unique way. I wanted them to be able to cope with not only successes, but
also with loss, disappointment, waiting, and developing enough inner resources
to create a Plan B,C or D as needed.
Levine has some interesting views on how an over-focus on self-esteem in
parenting has left some young adults unprepared for the rejection and
frustrations of real life. Authentic self-esteem really comes from feeling
capable, not from awards, recognition, or compliments (while those are nice to
receive). By being too child-centered, we can add to a narcissistic trait that
can develop in our children. It's important for our children to know what they
think/feel/want is important, but so are those of others. Ultimately, we are
reminded that as parents, teaching our children and teens life skills to
increase their independence and ability to function in the world, and how to
relate compassionately to others, are among the best gifts we can give them.
In Teach Your Children Well,
Levine does an excellent job of defining some of the developmental tasks
children need our help with in the elementary school years, the middle school
years, and the high school years.
Parenting isn't, as Levine writes, one job. It's really more like different
jobs at different developmental points, and we need to make intentional shifts
as parents in order to help our children and teens move along on their own path
to an authentically successful life of their own. We don't want to become so
child-centered, overprotective, over-scheduled, or allowing of dependency on us
that we fail to help our children prepare to launch. Taking a long-term
perspective helps. Our long-term goal in parenting should be to work ourselves
out of a job, and launch a well-balanced, strong young adult who can live, love,
work, play, and cope well. Teach Your
Children Well has some great ideas for the journey.
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