Parents of teens and tweens should take it easy.
Posted by PatrickTalley

So i have been watching a friend of mine struggle with their teen coming into their own and all which that means.

The struggle has begun and it is interesting to watch.

Interesting as it causes me to reflect back to when I went through that with my guys and the places where i did it well and the places where I stumbled. Continue reading »

 

Parenting—Is It All Just A Big Rounding Error

I look around and I see the “helicopter parents” hovering over their children as if they are going to clean up “little Johnnie’s” spilled milk before it even hits the ground.

I know a mom who still cuts up and feeds with a fork; her five year old child.
I know parents who won’t let their 13 year old kids go over to friends’ homes for sleep-overs.
I know 23 year old (hell, I know 50 year old) “boys” still living with their parents.
I know a 25 year old college graduate “woman’ still living with mom and dad to “save money”.

I read an article in the Wall Street Journal about parents actually going on interviews WITH their recent college graduate children. Continue reading »

 
The other day, I wrote about parental projection and the negative impact on kids.  I told a story about a little league dad laying his projection garbage on my kid and promised to tell a story about a similar occurrence with my daughter.

 
Here is that story– My daughter’s freshman year in high school found her in the homecoming court. I guess some things haven’t changed all that much since I was in high school in Texas.  But it’s my assumption, at least in Texas, the pageantry associated with homecoming and prom has grown as if it were on steroids. 

As part of being in the homecoming court, my daughter and I were to walk arm-in-arm to mid-field at half time of the big homecoming football game.  They would announce our names and all the accomplishments that made her “homecoming court material”. 
 

We both got dressed up, as we needed to fit in with the rest of the pageant participants, and out we walked.  As we walked along the out-of-bounds line and got to the 50 yard line to make that turn onto midfield, a lady said to my daughter, ”Smile honey, this is the biggest day of your life!”
  

My daughter put on a Hollywood smile for the lady and speaking through her clenched teeth said to me, “Oh God, Dad, I hope this isn’t the biggest day of my life!  I hope my life holds far more than this.”
 

I laughed, and I told her perhaps it was the biggest day of that lady’s life.  But I was for sure betting that she would have many more outstanding and far more memorable days than this. 

People will push their stuff onto your kids at every turn, and your job as a parent is to keep those kids on their true path and not the one that you or someone else wants to project onto them.  Let them live their lives. 

My daughter had all new projection visited on her recently when she graduated from high school.  We had a chance to talk about how significant and insignificant high school graduation really is.  We talked about it merely being a passage – not unlike many other coming or historic passages in her life.  This was simply another change of shoes. 

I did tell her, however, that one great aspect about this passage was that she now had an opportunity to completely reinvent herself if she so chose.  I told her that she was going off to college and only about 10 out of 40,000 people would have any notion of who she was.  She now could become whoever she wanted to be.  Heck, I told her, she could even put on a British accent if she so choose.  Nobody would know any better of it.
 

The real point to this is that she could finally be exactly who she wanted to be, free from the constraints and projections of her mom and dad and teachers and grandparents and others.  She could put away any and all masks she may have been wearing in the past and open up that wonderful life she chooses.  She could step into her dance shoes and dance—-Dance in her true shoes.
                             

…happy parenting…