Salee Reese

dad and daughter

“I want her to know she can come to me.”

Ben was referring to his twelve-year-old daughter, Madison. He sought my advice because 1) he’s concerned about her grades and 2) he realizes his approach is alienating her.

When Ben talks to Madison about her grades, he doesn’t talk. He yells and puts her down.

“Suppose your boss wanted you to do better at something, ” I asked, “would he get very far by getting upset and criticizing you?”

Ben sighed and said: “I get what you’re saying. I think I take after my dad. He was never physically abusive but he would be up my a** with his tone.”

A closed heart . . . an angry, critical approach only creates resistance and defensiveness.

What’s more, it creates separation and bad feelings—our relationships suffer.

I suggested he try approaching his daughter differently: “I’m noticing that your grades are slipping. What’s going on, hon? How can I help?'” The attitude of kindness that accompanies those words will give Ben his best shot at making something positive happen.

An open heart spawns trust and a close bond. Parent and child become partners instead of adversaries. It says: “Hey, I like you, and we’re together in this.”

Another client, Kim, was equally frustrated with her teenage daughter, Nicole’s, tepid response to a family outing. Kim was pushing, and Nicole was tuning her out. To break this deadlock, each would need to go beneath the surface and see the other’s true feelings—the pain. Such is the pathway to compassion—the only avenue for resolving differences. Interestingly, Kim’s true feelings centered around grief. Click here to read about our session.

By far, the single most important task of any parent is to build a strong bond with their child. Without that foundation, parents are handicapped in their ability to guide and discipline effectively. They may get obedience—which is usually no more than a mere superficial display—but they won’t get the respect and cooperation necessary for influencing a child’s life for the better.

 

Names are changed to honor client confidentiality

7 Responses

  1. Because my children are so young, I don’t have much to say, but looking back when I was a child I just wanted to be heard and understood. This might be easier said than done. Kids are people too and everyone responds better when respected.

  2. Parenting is, by far, the most challenging, rewarding, heartbreaking and amazing experience ever! I think most of the time we try so hard it comes off as too much. And seeing that we are not perfect, we need to be open to change. Aggressive love isn’t seen by our kids as accepting love.

  3. I ponder how another parenting choice could be more effective. Children are just adults in training and will follow our example later in life. It seems critical to set a good example.

  4. My best friend told me about how she had told off to someone, when that person (who has no kids) commented to her about her kids. My friend said to her, “YOU try and take care of 2 small persons!” I thought that was so funny. Sometimes I forget kids are full persons too, so that was a great reminder.