The Responsible Parent
My friend Kelly has challenged her readers to participate in defining their view of responsibility for her Pass The Torch Tuesday project and as responsibility is huge with me I knew I couldn’t pass this up. So I’ve chosen to define what a responsible parent is to me.
I don’t have a perfect little definition paragraph for an answer. I only have my reasons for knowing it’s important, my personal experiences with it and my goals and direction as a parent.
Given that I believe that we live in a society that is largely lacking responsibility, I think the root of the problem is found at home in the way children are taught or not taught to be responsible. This means the parent must be responsible too for you cannot give that which you don’t have.
Some would say that my judgment of society is harsh. If you wonder why I think our society is largely irresponsible I ask you to look around and see how many people spend valuable time, resources and energy playing the blame game, excusing themselves or their actions, caring only about themselves or any combination of all these attitudes. We have become masters at believing there is always an escape, at believing that only ourselves matter. Just look at one simple example of the controversial topic of abortion. Look at the energy and resources spent arguing this consequence. It isn’t even viewed as a consequence of a previous action or decision, it’s disguised as an issue of choice.
I was taught that you can choose your decisions but not the consequences. That for every action and decision there was a corresponding consequence. This is at the top of my list of important elements in teaching my children what responsibility means. The world will not teach it. In fact it seems to me that society today cultivates an attitude of acquiring skills to aid them in attempted side-stepping of the consequences of their actions. Some even believe they’ve succeeded. I believe with every fiber of my being that no matter how long you may delay a consequence it cannot be erased and often the harder one works to eliminate it the longer the trail of additional offenses and consequences will follow.
Further, I was taught the the right for me to swing my fist ends where your nose begins. This is another critical principal to me as a parent to teach my kids. This means you have to think about someone other than yourself, you have to learn how to respect yourself and others in every sense.
The hardest part of all this as a parent is not just the burden of teaching your children correct principles and moral values, but more importantly how to let your children have the experience of making their own decisions to learn the consequences for themselves. Because at the end of the day, the true teacher is experience. The close shadow to this teacher is that of example and truly the lessons taught are often the ones we don’t even realize we’re teaching. Do as I say and not as I do never works. No, this as in all things has to start from within.
I don’t have a Harry Potter wand or a crystal ball to help navigate these troubled waters. But clinging to the principles that are most important to me will help me charter the course. I know that patterns of behaviors don’t correct themselves, that what you feed is what grows. I know that I want my kids to understand the most basic and fundamental principles of responsibility that I was given as a youth. So for now I can only charge ahead to the best of my ability to teach them personal accountability and basic respect. And a little positive motivation from time to time can help a great deal, now where’d I put that chocolate?
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Well-said, Holly! You are so right — our own values and actions will have the greatest impact on our children’s values and actions. Thanks for joining us this week!
Thanks for the challenge! I wanted to write so much more but summer hours mean keeping it brief!
Comment by Kelly @ Pass the Torch — June 3, 2008 @ 2:58 pm
I see the problem when parents come over with their kids. Our kids are far from perfect, but they at least know not to hit other kids. So it pisses me off when other kids hit my kids and the parents don’t tell them to stop. What am I suppose to do, tell my kids to go ahead and hit the other kids back? What is wrong with these people?
That’s the worst!
Comment by Daddy Forever — June 3, 2008 @ 11:43 pm
Well said, Holly!! I just posted a couple days ago about following through on a consequence for Aidan, and I totally got reamed for it from a few choice people. I ended up posting another entry defending myself, but why should I feel like I have to do that? He made the choice! Oh well, funny that you should post this when I have been stewing about it for a few days now. Thanks for a good read!
Thanks for the visit! Follow through is the hardest part of teaching for me as a mom, I do it, but it’s hard!
Comment by Shanna — June 4, 2008 @ 9:49 am
Man, how I wish people could grasp this concept. Do you know where I think it stems from??? Not wanting the children to suffer, for anything! When childrens sporting events want to give everyone a trophy, for just being there, when parents yank kids out of public schools cause the child whinned about not being treated fair, when a child makes a poor choice and is told to sit and think about it. Heaven forbid Jr. should have to suffer through anything. I’m all for the punishment should fit the crime, in fact, if it doesn’t then why not committ it again? The perfect example of this is does everybody drive the speed limit without fail? No, because it’s not that much of a hit to the pocket book as long as it was for a good reason. Or because it can’t be monitored every time it happens? Maybe a little of both. It doesn’t have to be an eye for and eye, things have to be considered, what is truly missed is a parent getting down to the childs level and asking them how this choice has made them feel, and if they don’t like it, they need to change how they do things. If a child never gets a change to analize what happens (with a parent, not sitting in a corner by himself) when he choses certain things, then they have no point of reference to not do it again and again. Just something to hummmmm over.
See I write epistles no matter where I am. Sorry :0
But you’re in such good company my dear.
Comment by Susette — June 4, 2008 @ 6:36 pm
Amen. As a college professor I experience the fall out from parents not teaching their children to take responsibility and own the consequences. Well said post!!!
Thanks!
Comment by Danielle Says Hello — June 8, 2008 @ 5:48 pm