Tag Archives: psychology

Kids These Days

by MouthyGirl

I read an article on MSNBC about children called, Today’s tykes: Secure kids or rudest in history? a very interesting read.

The article discusses Generation X (those born between 1965 and 1977) and Generation Y (those born between 1980 and 1996) and how our lifestyles, parenting styles and children themselves have changed over time.

I know as a parent it’s hard to decide which ideology to subscribe to, whether to spank or to put your child in time out, whether to have your kids calendar filled with activities or let them play outside with neighborhood kids, to allow them to have a cell phone or not to, it’s inevitable that there’s gonna be a misstep or two.

This article takes a closer look, a psychological one to try to explain what’s set this change in motion:

“Many researchers consider members of Generation X to have been among the least nurtured children in American history with half coming from split families, 40 percent raised as latchkey kids — literally, home alone.

‘They are trying to heal the wounds from their own childhoods through their children,’ says Dr. Michael Brody, a child psychiatrist and chair of the Television and Media Committee of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

In indulging their children’s moods, Brody argues, some parents may be trying to protect their children from experiencing the kind of anxiety and neglect that they themselves suffered as youngsters.”

They’re talking about the shift in discipline, the fact that children are often not held accountable for their behavior, regardless of how appalling.

As I grew up and as an adult now, I’ve seen this gradual change, of course there’s the usual scapegoats, video games and television, but I’ll tell you something. Your children should know the difference between television and real life.

Our children are seeing things in their childhood that we never saw in ours, the news showers us with bad news and horrific tales of crime constantly, this is all true. But it is our job as parents not to let television and popular culture teach our children about the world and how to behave in it, it’s our job. OURS.

Your children need more education than they get at school, they get educated intellectually there, but it’s your job as a parent to teach them about the real world and how they’re expected to behave in it, you know “street smarts”. Or have we forgotten that term?

If you don’t teach them and you fail to bring the real world to their doorstep, it is you that will pay the price. When your child can’t keep a job, won’t keep a job or worse, has no intention of ever working because he has parents that pay his way – you will understand far too late the consequences of not providing them with consequences for bad behavior.

The article goes on to describe the future..

What does this mean for their future as adults? We may be starting to see some of the effects in Generation Y, those born between 1980 and 1996, whose self-centered — if not downright arrogant — workplace behavior has been well-documented in the popular press since the mid-2000s.

“They’ve grown up questioning their parents, and now they’re questioning their employers. They don’t know how to shut up, which is great, but that’s aggravating to the 50-year-old manager who says, ‘Do it and do it now,’ ” says Jordan Kaplan, an associate managerial science professor at Long Island University-Brooklyn in New York, in a USA Today article.

As for today’s little kids? “No one will want to hire them,” says Brody. That’s not an encouraging thought, especially in these economic times.

Generation Y has already been in the workforce for 10+ years, while I have seen the bad attitudes and refusal to accept work life for what it is, necessary and not fun. To those parents still struggling with what to do, I recommend “The New Dare to Discipline”. I read the original Dare to Discipline in paperback when my son was about 4 or 5, and another book, “The New Strong-Willed Child“, I read “Parenting the Strong Willed Child” at the same time I read “Dare to Discipline” and it gave me new tools to use, which I desperately needed. At the time I was a single mom, overcompensating for what I felt I lacked with my son, which was leading me straight down the path to having a child that had absolutely no respect for himself or anyone else and I had to do something.

These books were in perfect time for me, I felt they both gave reasonable tools for discipline, made a lot of good common sense, and worked in practice with my son very well. At 11, he’s a good kid and aside from little things here and there that truly can be attributed to boys being boys (window broken and occasional bad grades) all his friends’ parents like him. For my son, the rules are simple and few, but they must be followed.

No rules is a bad thing, too many rules is a bad thing, but rules that make sense for your child and lead them down the path to productive adulthood are necessary. Kids need consistency and accountability, it’s what shapes their drive and self discipline later in life. It is your job to turn your child into a productive citizen of the world.

There is a little hope though…

Economic climate does seem to have an effect on manners. Indeed, some experts believe that trend of rudeness among kids first emerged with the rise of Wall Street and its culture of entitlement in the mid-1980s, which is when Generation X began having children. It has been building since then, they say. But today’s downturn may inspire renewed prudence.

“I think that people who lose their wealth, their jobs, and other emblems of success that gave them a mindless assurance about their social status — plus with the new standards in the White House — may examine their values more seriously,” predicts pediatrician Gordon. “It will be less easy to fob off your inner questions by purchasing an expensive education, summer camp or horseback riding classes.”

It may also be easier if Gen X parents start implementing the popular campaign that they grew up with themselves: “Just say ‘No.’ ”

What do you think?


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This Teenage Mother Did Alright

by MouthyGirl

I remember when I found out I was pregnant with my son, I was terrified, I had always thought that I would never have children. Frankly, it was because I had 100% doubt in my ability as a parent. I knew my example was not what I would want to portray as a mother and thus, I decided early on not to have children.

I knew I wanted a child, and I knew I wanted a boy because I grew up around girls, but I didn’t think I would make a good mother so I wrote off the idea until that moment that the pregnancy test changed and showed that I was expecting.

I’ll always remember that moment in the bathroom of my boyfriends house, looking at that pregnancy test and at myself in the mirror. I didn’t know what I was going to do and I realized in that moment I wasn’t with the person I would be with forever which started my tears. I cried so much that day, I felt horrible for my unborn child, for my lost childhood and for the years ahead of struggle that I was going to endure and take my child through.

Then I devised a plan of action. I was still in high school, it was around November of my senior year in high school when I found out so I changed my class line up for the following semester. I changed Dance class to Parenting class, switched my regular Psychology class to Child Psychology and Early Childhood Development and quit smoking and drinking and the other things I did in high school. I graduated 7 months pregnant with my son.

I have never been so terrified in all my life but books are a good thing, parenting classes are a blessing! I took classes and read books and by the time I had the little one, I was still terrified but I felt like I might be able to handle it.

I wanted to raise a productive member of society, someone that will go out into the world and have a job, raise a family if he wants to and be successful in his life. Now we’re approaching his 12th birthday and I think it’s safe to say I did okay. We’ve been through a lot he and I in his short little life, but for the past six years we’ve had peace and have settled in a way that is hard to explain.

I love him so much I dare not think about the day we say goodbye as Mom and My Little Boy and hello as Mom and My Grown Son. I get teary at the notion – I know it’s coming, I just don’t want to think about it.

I’ve struggled with being a mom too, there were times when I wanted to run very far away and hide from my responsibilities, there were times I wished I could party like the other people my age, back when people my age were partying.

Overall though I think he’ll look back and have good memories, I’ve tried like the devil to keep the hard times from him, make sure he didn’t feel it and let that burden be on me. We’ve kind of grown up together. I’m at an age where a lot of people are starting their families, beginning their lives as parents where I just have six precious years left.

I remember his cute little chubby face when he was five and his cool mohawk we let him wear when he was 7 and again at 8 and now how he’ll do chores and crack jokes and entertain us the way that only he can. I love this child, so much that I can’t believe I entertained the notion of not having a child. What a fool I was!

My kid is a great kid. For all of you out there that think you can’t be a good parent, that’s hogwash. Read a book or two, learn a little something about how kids work and you’ll be prepared, your instincts will kick in and you’ll be amazed at yourself. Trust me.

This teenage mom did okay.

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