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Jenny
doesn't see herself as a grown up. When dealing with her kids,
she easily regresses to being one of them. She says things like,
"Aw, come on
" and "I don't care." Children
deeply resent a parent who is afraid to parent.
Being an adult is a scary thing.
It means taking responsibility for our lives and our actions.
Jenny may have grown up with parents who did everything for her
or she may have grown up feeling discounted rather than supported
and secure. She has little self-confidence and looks outside herself
for reassurance.
Jenny is not in touch with her own
inner authority. She's not able to look her kids straight in the
eye and say, "Turn off the computer and come to the table."
Instead, she argues, cajoles and becomes frustrated. Jenny doesn't
believe that her kids will listen to her so she stands around
and makes a nuisance of herself. Since she doesn't respect herself,
her children don't respect her.
Jenny needs to become an authoritative
parent. An authoritarian parent is one who says no just
to prove that she is more powerful than the children. An authoritative
parent, on the other hand, understands her children and gives
each child the amount of independence and freedom needed for his
growth. An authoritative parent says yes far more often than she
says no and the no's are well chosen and designed to make
a clear statement about what's important in life.
It's much more challenging to be
a parent in the year 2000 then it was in the 1950s -- you cannot
manage children by being the boss (authoritarian). You need to
develop a relationship based on trust and openness while at the
same being prepared to make the hard and sometimes unpopular decisions
that go with the job description of being a parent.
Jenny doesn't trust herself. She's
afraid that if she puts her foot down, her kids won't like her.
She's afraid of her kids making a scene, but in her desire to
avoid scenes, she creates them. She's so afraid of making a mistake
that she ends up making the biggest mistake of all: She stops
being a parent.
I'm assuming that Jenny resents her
husband for his lack of involvement but since she's afraid of
conflict, she doesn't have the strength to confront him appropriately
and demand a more involved relationship with the kids. So she
expresses her resentment through what we call passive-aggressive
behavior: She becomes ineffective. She unconsciously sabotages
the job of being a parent because it doesn't seem fair that it's
all on her. If she felt she had a partner here, then when she
said no, she would feel backed up even if Jim weren't physically
there. She doesn't feel like part of a team.
A family is only as good as its management.
If the two managers -- mother and father --are not a team, then
the children will take over. And that's exactly what Jenny's kids
have done.
What does she need to do?
1. Talk to her husband and get him involved.
2. Try taking a class in assertiveness training.
3. If after these two steps, Jenny still feels powerless with
her kids, she may need more in-depth counseling to overcome this
challenge.
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