China Cat Sunflower
Nimrod
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I've put a great deal of thought into every aspect of what I do as a parent. There's nothing accidental about any of it. I wanted children, and I waited until I felt that I had the resources, time, energy, and intellectual and emotional maturity to raise them properly. I carefully nurtured them and thoughtfully constructed the program that gave them their routine, boundaries, stability, and security. I listen to them, I carefully observe their thought processes, and I constantly look for ways to enrich their lives and help them develop into confident, smart,empathetic young people. I offer them the same respect and empathy that I expect them to show me and everyone else in their lives. They are not just objects to to be shuttled about and controlled. They're not pets. They don't exist for the amusement of adults. They have minds of their own and they deserve straight answers to their questions. They deserve a sense of control and sovereignty over their own lives and bodies. This is where self respect comes from. From self respect comes kindness, generosity, and respect for others. From a sense of self ownership comes responsibility, maturity, critical thinking, and the ability to make smart decisions. These are core values.
I hear a lot of crap child psychology from people who don't know what they're talking about. Parenting books are full of it too. Kids need to learn how to successfully cope with institutionalization. They need to learn how to get along and accomplish what's expected of them. This most often carries over into their working lives as adults. The family is an institution as well, and kids need to learn what's expected of them, and how to carry out their duties and responsibilities within the family structure. But..., and this is a big bertha sized butt (lol!), to develop critical thinking skills kids must be encouraged to develop their natural instinct to question absolutely everything. This is highly inconvenient for everyone in a power position. While it is most often inappropriate and self-detrimental to openly question the power structure while one is in a position of subservience, it is nonetheless vital to the development of critical thinking skills to hone the ability to discern what is crap and what isn't. This should start in childhood as a natural extension of curiosity, and the only place that can happen is in the home. It's certainly not going to happen at school where there is zero interest in the value of questioning authority. That's why I'm in favor of informational transparency within the family setting. It's not as though we should be encouraging disobedience. You still have to do what you're told. But there should always be an effort to explain WHY, even if the why is an admission that it's just to kowtow to the whims of the power structure. That's honest, and honesty is everything. If we don't give them an honest answer they will know, and they will find other sources for their answers.
I think that it is absolutely vital, as a parent, to be in control of the information your child is getting. This can only be accomplished through absolute trust, and that trust has to be earned on a daily basis. To a child, TV culture is absolutely insidious, overwhelming, and alluring. It has automatic and unquestioned credibility. To successfully compete with that you have to have nurtured those critical thinking and questioning skills, and you have to have garnered absolute trust that you, not TV, not the internet, are the most reliable source of information. In order to reach that level of credibility with your child you have to have encouraged them to question not only culture, not only the institutional power structures, but your authority as well. You have to be able to withstand that test. That's the giant, paradoxical rub of the whole thing. So, "it's none of your business", or "because I said so" not only isn't good enough, but it's self-defeating to parental authority because it undermines credibility, and we can't afford to give up even a whiff of that.
Chris
I hear a lot of crap child psychology from people who don't know what they're talking about. Parenting books are full of it too. Kids need to learn how to successfully cope with institutionalization. They need to learn how to get along and accomplish what's expected of them. This most often carries over into their working lives as adults. The family is an institution as well, and kids need to learn what's expected of them, and how to carry out their duties and responsibilities within the family structure. But..., and this is a big bertha sized butt (lol!), to develop critical thinking skills kids must be encouraged to develop their natural instinct to question absolutely everything. This is highly inconvenient for everyone in a power position. While it is most often inappropriate and self-detrimental to openly question the power structure while one is in a position of subservience, it is nonetheless vital to the development of critical thinking skills to hone the ability to discern what is crap and what isn't. This should start in childhood as a natural extension of curiosity, and the only place that can happen is in the home. It's certainly not going to happen at school where there is zero interest in the value of questioning authority. That's why I'm in favor of informational transparency within the family setting. It's not as though we should be encouraging disobedience. You still have to do what you're told. But there should always be an effort to explain WHY, even if the why is an admission that it's just to kowtow to the whims of the power structure. That's honest, and honesty is everything. If we don't give them an honest answer they will know, and they will find other sources for their answers.
I think that it is absolutely vital, as a parent, to be in control of the information your child is getting. This can only be accomplished through absolute trust, and that trust has to be earned on a daily basis. To a child, TV culture is absolutely insidious, overwhelming, and alluring. It has automatic and unquestioned credibility. To successfully compete with that you have to have nurtured those critical thinking and questioning skills, and you have to have garnered absolute trust that you, not TV, not the internet, are the most reliable source of information. In order to reach that level of credibility with your child you have to have encouraged them to question not only culture, not only the institutional power structures, but your authority as well. You have to be able to withstand that test. That's the giant, paradoxical rub of the whole thing. So, "it's none of your business", or "because I said so" not only isn't good enough, but it's self-defeating to parental authority because it undermines credibility, and we can't afford to give up even a whiff of that.
Chris