Parenting

In disagreeing, radio show caller proves a point

I was honored to be a guest on my good friend Dennis Prager's syndicated radio program recently. As anyone who is familiar with my point of view on parenting matters will appreciate, much of the conversation centered on the need for children to obey.

Children should obey, I maintain, because -- and solid research confirms common sense on this point -- obedient children are happy children. The reader does not know a disobedient child who is truly happy. A child's happiness reflects an optimistic view of life, an optimistic view of his or her ability to endure and even (perhaps) overcome obstacles, and for those reasons, an overall sense of well-being. In other words, while certain benefit accrues to parents as the result of having an obedient child, the most significant benefit is to the child.

Unbeknownst to them, today's parents are their children's worst enemies when it comes to obedience. They are generally uncomfortable with the idea that just as it is their job to provide unconditional love, it is also their job to provide unequivocal authority. That is why they yell. They want their children to do what they tell them to do, but they assume a pleading posture when they talk to their kids and beat around the bush when it comes to conveying decisions and instructions. So, their kids don't obey. So, they end up yelling.

Making matters worse, most of the parents I talk to around the country tell me they want their kids to cooperate. No, you don't, I tell them. Cooperation is possible between mutually respecting peers. You are not your child's peer. You are the superior in the relationship and you need to embrace that fact for your child's sake.

Authority is conveyed naturally by parents who accept that responsibility. That mindset enables relaxed but straightforward and unequivocal communication. These parents say what they mean and mean what they say. No means no. Their children obey simply because obedience is a child's natural response to the proper conveyance of authority. Thus, these parents do not have to rely on consequences much, if at all.

Toward the end of the show, a fellow named Marvin -- he identified himself as an educator -- called in to say that he disagreed with everything I was saying. Adults should collaborate with children, not coerce them, he said. I had never used the word coercion, by the way, but Marvin heard what his ideological filters allowed him to hear.

"Instead of saying 'no' to a child," Marvin said, "you should say 'not yet.'"

Why? Because that is more pleasing to the child's ears. And adults must, above all else, be pleasing to children. I'm being sarcastic. To be fair, collaborative discipline is the method du jour in American education. It goes hand-in-hand with parents wanting children to cooperate. Collaboration and cooperation presume that children are rational, which they are not. They are, instead, self-centered (it is possible, therefore, for a chronological adult to be a phenomenological child). Without realizing it, Marvin gave Dennis' audience a glimpse into why the adult-child relationship is so often upside-down in today's schools (including many colleges) and homes.

Marvin is an example of why America desperately needs a retro-revolution in parenting.

John Rosemond is a family psychologist and the author of several books on rearing children. Write to him at The Leadership Parenting Institute, 1391-A E. Garrison Blvd., Gastonia, N.C. 28054; or see his website at

rosemond.com

Family on 06/28/2017

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