OT what is it??

OT what is it??
Kids learning through doing!!

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Finding the best way to be the best parent …is it possible?


First off let’s start by saying that there is no such thing as the best method, the best protocol, the best book to read on how to be the best parent.  Whether or not your child has special needs or not, there just simply isn’t a method that is the one to use.

Every snowflake is different and so is every child.  Every family is different too. So those “experts” who espouse to know just how YOU should be doing something as important as raising your child are way off the mark!!

Now that is not to say that there are not real theories and ideas out there about how to handle specific situations—the oppositional child, the one who refuses to eat, the overly shy child, etc.  Yes, there are suggestions out there on how to handle these situations, but remember that is what they are suggestions, not dogma.  (And I say this as an author of book about special needs children!)

All too often I have seen well meaning parents read a book, go to a lecture or seminar and come back and “swallow the system whole”.  They structure their lives around doing the “recipe” totally unaware that there is no tried and true path for raising children.


However there are a few things that can help:
  1. Start with common sense
  2. What you do has to fit in with your family and ALL the family members
  3. Mom and Dad MUST be on the same page and be a team together
  4. Do not try to be your child’s friend—you are the parent
  5. Parent is both a noun and a verb
  6. Your real job is to become obsolete—not needed—eventually
  7. Children only really need three things:
    1. Love
    2. Structure/security
    3. Boundaries

There are a lot of “cookbooks” out there.  The advice overflow can be confusing and overwhelming. Starting the with gold standard of Dr. Spock, all of them promise that if you follow their method you will have the happiest, most well behaved, adjusted children ever.

If it were only that easy, first there would be only ONE book everyone used, and second it would imply that we are all the same.  But, alas we are not all the same and the plethora of books substantiates that.

What does happen when parents “marry” a system is that is stymies the parents’ creativity.  If “Jimmy” is acting out and he is not stopped because the “book” says to let him “figure it out” that may work at home, but at school when the teacher says “stop” she means  “stop and now”.  Not used to that “Jimmy” can be unjustly labeled a “trouble-maker” when in truth he is only doing what is acceptable at home.

If you “Google” parenting you come up with 1,000+ entries and if you try “best parenting” you get even more!

When my daughter, now 36, was graduating high school she wrote a song who’s opening lines were….”Kids don’t come with instruction books and they don’t come with guarantees, I’d like to thank you Mom and Dad for taking care of me…”

I saw a greeting card recently that listed the “Top 10 Reasons” someone was the ‘best parent and #1 was “ You Love Me”.  Forget about being embarrassing, you will be; being “hated”, absolutely but only temporarily; not being “cool”, hardly ever and the list goes on.

Don’t be afraid to parent your child.  Your child wants you to be the parent. They have peers at school. They need you to be the steady force that guides them—reliable, constant and loving.

Saying no is part of the program—boundaries are everywhere and they might as well learn that starting at home.  We live with red lights, schedules to meet, and behavioral constraints.  Children need to learn that boundaries can also be guiding and protective.

Letting a child learn from “natural consequences” may be OK some of the time, but left solely to a world of “consequences” without limitations other than those self-imposed can lead to chaos and confusion.

Because something “worked” at your friend’s home with “Jill” does not mean it will work with your “John”.  Because something looks good in a book, does not mean it will work in your home.  Because the video at the seminar was motivating, does not mean that you can reproduce that within your family.

Use COMMON SENSE, and just provide love, security, structure, boundaries and patience—for both you and your child. 

3 comments:

  1. I recently came across the, "Shut Up About Your Perfect Kid" book and facebook page. They are promoters of imperfect parenting, and that it is OK to be imperfect and just trying your best. I think that you are right that everyone else seems to have an idea about what would be the best thing for you to do as a parent, but it is the parent who ultimately is the expert on their own child. The professionals can provide some great tools to use though!

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  2. Susan,

    Sorry to leave an unrelated comment, but I couldn't find any other way to contact you on the blog, and I wanted to ask about a guest post. Please drop me an e-mail!

    Thanks, and happy Friday!

    Lindsey

    ReplyDelete
  3. I would welcome a guest post but I would have to review it first. susanoroloff@chidlrens-services.com thanks

    ReplyDelete