Grandma was right! There is an easy way and a hard way to
raise kids. By and large, today’s parents are choosing the hard way. This
series of blogs (posted on Tuesdays) will tackle familiar phrases that used to
be commonplace but fell out of favor during the last few decades of the 20th
century—and why parents should not be afraid to follow the sentiment expressed
in the phrases.
Sixty years or so ago, mothers had a life of their own. They
weren’t waiting around for their children to “need” them—they were out having
cocktails with the neighbors, chairing committees and whipping up Jello-molds
with one hand tied behind their backs. Involved in their children’s lives? Not
on your life.
Image courtesy of Gualberto107/
FreeDigitalPhotos.net |
Fast-forward to today: most mothers are over-involved in the
minutia that is their children’s lives. No detail is too small to be overlooked
or commented on, or scrapebooked. To say you didn’t want to get involved in
your children’s lives is tantamount to saying you don’t love your kids.
Which is why the phrase, “Don’t get me involved,” has fallen
way out of usage. Some of you reading this blog are wincing, wondering why any
decent, loving mother would want to say that to their child. Shouldn’t good
mothers be involved?
In a word, no. It all comes down to whose life is it anyway.
Is it your child’s life or yours? If your child’s life is yours, then you
should be involved. But your child’s life isn’t yours to live—it is your
child’s and your child’s alone. Or to put it another way: back off and let your
child live her own life.
That’s where “Don’t get me involved” comes into play.
Parents of yesteryear used this phrase to encourage their children to solve
their own problems, whether with school, siblings, friends, etc. Parents used
to know that the only person capable of solving the problem was the person
involved with the problem. In other words, when a child has a problem, the
child is the only person responsible for solving the problem.
The parent shouldn’t step in just because the child doesn’t
want to solve the problem. The parent shouldn’t shoulder the responsibility of
solving the problem because the child doesn’t want to or says he can’t solve
the problem. The only person capable of solving the child’ problem is the
child.
That’s the beauty of “Don’t get me involved.” Telling your
child when he comes to you with a problem, “Don’t get me involved,” reminds the
child that it’s his problem, not yours, and that your involvement will not
solve the problem, but instead will create more of an uncomfortable situation with
the child. This works especially well with sibling conflict. The only ones who
can solve sibling conflict are the siblings involved in the conflict. Telling said
siblings, “Don’t get me involved,” gives them more incentive to come to a conclusion
that satisfies all involved.
I encourage you to brush off the old chestnut “Don’t get me
involved,” and use it freely with your children. You might find that you can
join a book club, have a glass of wine by the fireplace or take up yoga with
all the free time you’ll have by not being overly involved in your children’s
lives.
In October, Sarah will
be giving a series of talks on The Well-Behaved Child: Discipline that Really
Works through the City
of Fairfax Parks and Recreation Department. Also in October, Sarah and Mary
Elizabeth Peritti will speak on Parenting With Love & Leadership in a
four-part webinar series. Contact Sarah through her website for more
information.
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