What do I mean by the title of this blog, that failure can
be a victory? Simply this: Children need to experience pain and discomfort in
order to properly negotiate life.
Often, parents try to minimize the amount of pain and frustration
in their children’s lives because it makes kids unhappy. But children who don’t
learn how to handle pain and disappointment are the ones who grow up to become
young adults who often fail to launch after college (or who drop out of college
without finishing their degree) because they don’t know how to handle failure.
I recently read How
Children Succeed by Paul Tough, who explored why some kids excel and others
don’t. Part of the reason boils down to character. Those children who overcome
obstacles are not always the ones who are the smartest, or even come from a
stable home. It’s the kids who develop character—those are the ones who succeed
at life.
In talking about his own parenting of a young son, Tough
said that “the long struggle we will face, as all parents do, between our urge
to provide everything for our child, to protect him from all harm, and our
knowledge that if we really want him to succeed, we need to first let him fail.
Or, more precisely, we need to help him learn to manage failure.”
How do we let our children fail? Here are few ways we can
take that step back and let the child sink or swim on his own.
- Stop helping with homework. Instead of hovering around your child while he does his homework, ignore him. If he asks for help, ask him to struggle on for a bit more on his own. Most of the time, the child just wants an easy way to solve a difficult problem. By letting your child own his homework, then you set him up for success or failure on his own, thus building self confidence as well as how to handle not doing well.
- Let her get the grades her work deserves. So many times, we want our children to succeed academically at all costs, even to the point of asking teachers what extra curricular work the child can do to improve the grade. We tell our children’s teachers that we expect them to get the grades they earn—and we’re prepared to enforce that even when they get to high school.
- Take a step back. If you see your child struggling with something, don’t jump in right away. Step back and let the child figure out if he can tie his shoes, ride his bike without training wheels or whatever else is the trouble. Sure, the kid will likely fall off the bike more times than he stays on in the beginning, but by not rushing in to help each time he experiences frustration at his lack of ability, you’ll help him learn to succeed on his own.
- Share your own failures. When your kids see how you handle life’s disappointments, they learn how they can, too. I recently had a novel rejected by an agent, a nice rejection, but a “no” all the same. I shared the news with my family at dinner one evening, and while the children could see I was disappointed, they also saw that I wasn’t crushed beyond hope. In talking about my own failure, I helped them see how they can process their own failures.
Until next time,
Sarah
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