
Reams of books and yards of articles notwithstanding, bringing up children
remains a completely hit-and-miss affair. You just have to invent a new rule as
you are faced with each new situation. The ironing-the-nappies stage is the
sleepless zone, the
'Dennis the Menace'
stage the age of exhaustion, but nothing you've gone through prepares you
for the cyclonic area called the terrible teens. Still, having survived my two
teenagers, and now into an amazingly satisfying relationship with them - yes,
you too, can reach this El Dorado - here's my addition to the wisdom in the
reams of books and yards of articles...
Forget
The Stages
Some
of them last 15 years or more. What are you going to do?
The
length of this adversarial relationship is in inverse proportion to how
mollycoddled and spoilt your children are. Children encouraged to be independent
and responsible get out of this zone much faster.
Forget
Quality Time
I
once tried spending it with my kids - they soothed me down, and told me they'd
pay total attention when 'F.R.I.E.N.D.S' was over.
Forget
'Let's Have A Talk'
One
of the teens will suddenly remember she has urgent homework to do or her teacher
will kill her. (The number of times her teacher has been ready to kill her used
to be really worrying.) The other will look as though he is facing interrogation
by the Gestapo. Get with the groove - use the telephone if you want to know
what's on their mind. Call them, even if you are in the next room and you will
get full disclosure, thoughts in detail, philosophy and ambitions. When you want
to speak to them face to face, they'll be on the phone with someone else.
Forget
Over Supervision
Just
get a system going to get them committed and focussed. They'll take care of the
rest themselves. Help them, but don't do it for them. Don't read the
'Encyclopaedia Britannica' for them; they can access it or whatever source they
want on the Internet. Your response should invariably be: 'Let's look it up'.
Their work will take a little while longer finishing, but you will have kids who
are curious and well informed and hooked on 'looking up' and doing it
themselves.
Forget
Trying To Mould Them
They
are not jellies; just a temporarily smaller version of a larger person you will
know someday, hopefully. Encourage self-reliance, the primary edict being that
they don't come to the adult for every little thing. They then become adept at
getting ready on their own, at making toast, getting their cornflakes,
occasionally having extremely unsuitable food and emerging unscathed on the
other side. They will also manage to spend some time on their own without
falling to pieces.
Keep
In Mind That They're Going To Blame You Anyway
Don't
be afraid that they'll blame you for being bad parents; they are going to blame
you for being any kind of parent. This is all part of their individualisation in
which one adult ego is trampled in to the dust so that one teenage ego may
emerge.
Being
A 'Mommy' Is Not Your Job
Being
a writer or a manager or a programmer or a homemaker is. Being a mummy is being
in what the Americans call a relationship -a lifetime roller coaster, one with
enough ups and downs to put any self-respecting ocean tide to shame. Welcome to
the ride, folks.
Try
Not To Talk Down To Them
This
is a corollary to the 'let's have a talk' rule. Like it or not, they are
miniature adults on their way to growing up, and developing a healthy and
effective communication style is vital. Let them express their opinions freely.
You don't have to agree, and being honest about your feelings is better than
pretending an attitude you are uncomfortable with. Kids see through lies very
fast.You are a parent, not an accomplice and so need to behave accordingly. Lay
out the behaviourial parameters within which you would like them to operate, and
then enforce them by continual reiteration - done preferably in a good-humoured
way, rather than with raised decibels. Children look forward to leadership from
parents; if you are hesitant or timid or reluctant, they'll feel you have failed
them.
Neither
are they out to get you, going by their behaviour. Don't bear grudges. Continue
to object to what you don't like, and be your loving self on everything else.
Letting anger colour all your interactions will be self-defeating. They'll just
shut you out completely.
Answer
Questions About Sex...
Promptly,
and in words that suit your child's age. Don't be evasive, funny, or furious.
You will probably feel embarrassed; keep that under wraps.
Love
Them...
Without
coddling them, shielding them from the consequences of their actions, finding
excuses for repeated bad behaviour, or indulging in gender inequality. The
injustice of the last rankles for life. Be consistent - don't issue horrific
threats one minute and 10 minutes later, overload them with attention and
promised treats. You would have got the picture by now. You can give them ice
cream three times in a week, but they'll claim they had it last in the year dot.
You can hug them in the morning and they'll tell you in the evening that it
happened once, last year. They'll yell at you, hug you, tell you they love you,
tell you that you don't understand them, but finally in the end, they will grow
out of all this.
One
day, you will have an adult on your hands and the beginnings of a different
relationship, but that's another story.