Showing posts with label maturity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label maturity. Show all posts

Tuesday, 22 May 2012

Relationships with Humans

 

sidebarFamilies

Relationships with humans are hard.

I’ve been having interesting conversations with folks about teens, rebellion and the ‘need’ (experts tell us it’s a need, so it must be, right?) for children to butt heads with their parents in order to leave the nest.

I’ve written about this before, but today I’m thinking about it from a slightly different angle… in a conversation about ‘normal teens,’ in response to this:

Some children really DO need to "butt heads to leave".

I said this:

In the same way that people who are genuinely frightened (the result of a break-in, or even a physical attack) start arguing when they don’t know what else to do with their fear, people who are leaving or on the verge of being left will often lash out, because they simply don’t know how to handle the fears or the overwhelming feelings that come with large life changes.

I’ve lived in a navy family my whole life, first as the daughter of a sailor, and later married to one (still). I am experienced in the leavings (and returns) of loved ones… and I’m familiar with the dysfunctional and the enlightened ways of handling both.

Dysfunctional is what is considered the norm: depression, lashing out, infidelity, worry, ptsd, insomnia, ocd… the list goes on and on. But however ordinary and common those responses are, they’re hardly enlightened or even helpful. They are simply what people do with overwhelmingly large emotions when they don’t know what else to do.

It’s not surprising that people don’t know what to do –culturally, we don’t know what to do, we have few models of more enlightened or mature responses, and few teachers who could pass that information on. If I had a nickel for every time someone said to me, ‘I could never cope with my partner leaving’ or ‘how do you manage?’ I’d have a room full of nickels. And, it took me a long time to stumble across healthier ways of handling it.

Children leaving home brings up the same kinds of overwhelm, for themselves and their parents –and their friends, and their siblings… and we end up with the Freshman 15 (kids who eat to displace their feelings when they’re at college the first year) and Empty Nest Syndrome (for parents who can’t sit through long-distance ads without bursting into tears), et cetera.

There are two keys, I found, to understand comings and goings:

1. worry and,

2. control

There are two primary reasons people mind so much, life transitions of this kind: they don’t know what’s going to happen, and they don’t like feeling out of control of what’s going to happen. So they worry –that’s personal and internal stress that just adds to the real issues in their world—and they seek to control what they can reach, which is generally the other people close by. [I think it’s hilarious how rarely most people think of themselves when they’re looking around for something to control.]

Now, how to avoid and minimize both of those is a completely other post for another day, but that’s the core of it: children who express an apparent need to butt heads are picking #2. Parents who become depressed, teary or insomniac are using #1. Lashing out and ocd are #2. PTSD is #1.

Handling comings and goings with equanimity is hard:

  • it’s hard to lean into the pain of separations, to know that the pain is not just okay, but perfect
  • it’s hard to open a lifestyle up when someone comes home after the heartspace they had lived in has healed

Neither are anywhere near as hard as the results of lashing out, butting heads, depression… et cetera.

Wednesday, 31 December 2008

Just Stop: pushing kids to grow up is terrible

https://www.flickr.com/photos/67331818@N03/8548222863/in/photolist-ayRGJi-oZiYTd-RD9qP3-RD9qCb-oBkCkr-64qbTH-e2nSQP-i8JnzV-jxTR2P-6iqrq4-jxUQG9-a16oGn-5ZHRwc-fFmA3o-cAzPTY-9uJNPV-4r186C-2UB3W7-oJGH8G-diXa8E-dZznGR-q2EnEv-dZDu57-SjDG2A-a49s3N-e3Dzah-8rou28-9L1FVK-dbXWYJ-4Lx3Lo-T4Q1AR-SJfVnx-dDE381-6PrKx-iFiov3-ctAbmU-5vPWwN-2Det9B-jhzi2z-8RBiA2-72Tby1-9QD5xq-iowxZ-8Zfd8t-4mpem4-8AULzy-9FEZSo-5wMr15-cyc995-rUC4p
There is a fair pressure in our culture to shove children ever faster through the phases and stages of growing up. As a society, we think we know where we want them to be in 20 years, but we don't have faith that they'll get there without force. We do not believe they will automatically and naturally grow and mature. We are wrong.



https://www.flickr.com/photos/13476480@N07/15771366061/in/photolist-q2EnEv-dZDu57-SjDG2A-a49s3N-e3Dzah-8rou28-9L1FVK-dbXWYJ-4Lx3Lo-T4Q1AR-SJfVnx-dDE381-6PrKx-iFiov3-ctAbmU-5vPWwN-2Det9B-jhzi2z-8RBiA2-72Tby1-9QD5xq-iowxZ-8Zfd8t-4mpem4-8AULzy-9FEZSo-5wMr15-cyc995-rUC4p-fv5vnS-SdrZR1-8MN14Z-aZhWgp-8MR1wh-q5Y7E2-2V2uSq-q9yhq4-pCYRsM-fmEauV-fELaz9-k1H7g-8AWue9-RD9qWC-rfDVCP-e2oFke-qoBwiV-RD9r8Q-7iRjDT-e9cWh4-8MMWJaIt takes continual effort to impair a child's natural drive to mature, just as it takes willful effort to stop them from responding to their bodies' needs. When children are trapped for years on end in a closet or cellar (or sensory disability) without any contact with adult activities like walking and talking, yes, children will fail to progress appropriately. For some reason, though, this realisitic concern has bled over onto everyday parenting. Ironically, the result of trying to force children to mature is actually to stunt their growth.

https://www.amazon.ca/Te-Piglet-Benjamin-Hoff/dp/0140230165Benjamin Hoff, in The Te of Piglet, describes a time in Chinese history when people felt it was essential for children to learn the art of conversation as early as possible. While the activities that directed this early learning were absolutely effective, the unintended side effect of all that focus on early talking was to push later and later and later the onset of walking.

Today, much the same thing can be seen in the early reading programs: yes, it is possible to teach a child's brain to decode written language earlier than it would on its own. So? At what cost is this 'earlier is better' promotion of reading? I don't know, but it is not possible to divert the energy of the brain's development from its natural path and not derail some other development.

Do early readers wind up as better readers? Absolutely not. I have personally known children who read before their third birthday because their brains were clearly attuned to that task. Today they are indistinguishable from their peers... in fact, they are indistinguishable from the many children I have known who didn't catch on to reading until they were 12. This is also the case with potty training, walking, dancing and playing the violin: by the age of 18 it is impossible to tell who started at 2 and who didn't start until 12.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/istolethetv/4735459382/in/photolist-8dst6q-ekMAb3-npwVFj-npx37h-ekGkQp-nFPSKJ-ekN5cA-ekGhMX-nDYCNU-nFJj2r-nG1dw9-nHNwUT-npx4Ny-npwFpU-nG2u3i-npwyKn-h1Bi7v-dPvkPn-npwLu3-cwb4f1-pBvtEi-eFhwUy-gtPmHU-nGXf2A-nfUhiS-ekN4aU-pKhaBj-cvxCw9-cwb3VY-eFhw7L-q2Enk6-e7EbFt-anRP8-nhBWrk-gtQGFN-akER9P-nhBWRr-gvs8rH-q2uURZ-nz7Epn-ekMreb-nFZM4W-nFPMYE-nG2gae-5YimsY-nG11su-nFJwv4-dhZ6ms-npwUbr-npwQHx
Beyond this, where is the evidence that all this coercion to do things as early as possible isn't solely responsible for the arrested development seen in the 20-somethings who still wear what look like toddler's clothes and carry stuffed animals (or wear costume ears or tails everywhere) and respond to challenging tasks exactly like 2-year-olds: by refusing to do anything at all, with or without a temper tantrum?



Where is the evidence that it is safe or healthy to manipulate the growth and development pattern of a child?

https://www.flickr.com/photos/h-k-d/6084516475/in/photolist-8NuGDD-q5ncSm-6TwuDj-SKK2Fm-7vYaJe-SPhwaZ-TZM2qS-gwmAC2-agEJLt-4J9Y3b-4J9YhC-4J5JdZ-4J9Yam-8Hg5U4-4J5Jwv-4J9Yku-4J5J6R-4J5J8X-4J9YsW-4J9Yyh-i3ijRk-YxX-Yy2-YxZ-8Qp5S9-fPxGqz-4LWC8y-gwmN7H-88bgji-6KjkJK-SLw8NA-LJ76Qy-dX8M7i-g1EDcJ-e3ne6z-RxjBvE-ha1HUp-5aeWmS-m6AhLv-5b495D-6pypBR-5tFwKC-bmPGrX-7iMcnb-bmPKHz-6pypTD-TtnH9S-cATJj5-7nU7cC-bmQfJcThere is a lot of fear that a child will be (to quote the frightful US government program) 'left behind' if she doesn't get pushed ahead as fast as possible. Well, there is a lot of fear in parenting and children's education, period. But what benefit does this fear of the future have for kids? Children become aware that they are 'behind' or that others are 'ahead' and because of our deranged and contradictory values, quickly learn to believe that this is the same as failing--and worse: being worth less. Their self-esteem becomes predicated on things outside their control (viz: the growth pattern of their brains), which is a simple recipe for a lifetime of misery.

Children, given space and time and access to a variety of people in a variety of settings, will learn everything they need to know, develop all parts of their brains, and become (eventually -- not immediately) well-rounded, fully-grown adults. Just as it is not possible to make an infant into a physically-mature, full-grown adult in 6 years, it is not possible to make an infant into an emotionally-mature, fully-educated adult any faster than it will happen on its own. It is possible to stunt growth, but it is not possible (or desirable) to accelerate it.

Children are driven internally, physically, mentally and emotionally, toward the things that aid their maturation, at exactly the speed that is right for them. Normal, healthy kids in reasonably normal, healthy settings, the children will grow and develop into adults in about 20 years. Try and stop them.