When I was in college, I came down firmly on the side of nurture in the nurture vs. nature debate. Tabula rasa and all that. It was so obvious . . . good parenting produced good children. Simply hold firm to a schedule and baby will adapt. Oh
yes, I knew all about raising children. Until I actually gave birth to one!
I took one look in his eyes and knew that this was no blank slate. He came already programmed! Within hours everything I thought I knew had been thrown out the window. Nurse every three hours? Ha! Apparently he had not read the same books I had. He thought he might take a ten minute break after nursing constantly FOR three hours. Sleep several hours at a stretch? I was lucky to get him to sleep more than 45 minutes at a time for at least the first two years.
What an awakening. Brutally humbling, as I recall. Especially since most of the babies I had cared for in my home day care business had been easy-going types who just laid down and took a nap at the same time every day. I did such a good job taking care of other people’s kids. I thought I was pretty competent. I had even accepted some credit for their good behavior. (yes, it is embarrassing to admit!)
Now I was faced with this kid who would only sleep in my arms and wanted to nurse all the time. Although the inclination was to blame myself somehow, it was hard to do since he was too young for me to have done much damage yet. Maybe I screwed him up in utero?
Thankfully my mom introduced me to her sanity saving motto for parenting:
No credit. No blame.
What your kids do is not yours to take responsibility for. It is theirs. Take no credit for their ‘successes’, and no blame for their ‘failures’. (Quotes added because often, in hindsight, failures become successes and vice versa. Seems easier just not to label them from the start. But that’s a topic for another article!)
Our kids come to us with their own agenda for their life. This does not always correspond to the one you would have selected for them. And it does not always coordinate nicely with the agenda you have for your own life. As you can imagine, this can get to be a real pain sometimes!
But each of our agendas is equally valid. The dance of parenting (actually, of any relationship, I think) is to find a rhythm that honors both life paths. This can take some creative footwork! And we can only begin in earnest when we take a step back and see the other as our partner in the dance, not an enemy who must be converted to our life path at any cost.
So, can you make space for the single file path taken by your introverted child even as you travel the superhighway of the extrovert?
Can you allow time for your slow-to-warm up child to adjust even though you are an eager risk-taker?
Can you accept that your sensitive child is not just trying to irritate you when she tells you that she hates the smell of your peppermint gum?
These quirky idiosyncracies truly do make life interesting once we give up on trying to get rid of them. There is no one right way to be. One path is not superior to all the others. Many spokes lead to the center of the wheel. The temperament of your child is not a reflection of your skill as a parent. Nothing good can come from comparing you or your child to anyone else.
Respect your child’s path as your walk your own. Take good care of yourself and ask for help when you need it. Enjoy the places where your journey overlaps with that of your child and you walk together for a while.
As my favorite philosopher, Winnie-the-Pooh, says:
Rivers knows this: There is no hurry, we shall all get there someday.
Copyright 2001 Karen Alonge
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Karen Alonge is a parenting consultant who has been successfully assisting families with all types of challenges for over 20 years. Consultations may take place in your home as well as by phone, email, and IM. Clients often notice significantly positive changes in their daily experience after only one session. Learn more at www.karenalonge.com