There’s No Pressure Here!
by
Tom Chartier
by Tom Chartier
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It’s a sad
thing when our children fail in the most important subject we can
teach them.
What is
the most important subject in school? Is it one of the three "Rs,"
readin’, writin’ or ’rithmetic? Important subjects for sure, parents
can’t help but be concerned about their children’s mastery of the
three"Rs."
Good grades
and high SAT test scores open doors to better universities. Graduation
from better universities can lead to better job prospects, success,
money and a better future for our children and their children. What
do you want for your kids? Can’t you just see the 5,000 square foot
show home on Elm Street with a wide screen TV in the parlor and
a garage packed to the gills with BMWs and jet-skis? We only want
the best for them, but is the material world the best way to measure
it?
Unfortunately,
as test scores on the three "Rs" have plummeted,
so alarms have been raised in homes across America. Terrified parents
fear… and I shudder at the thought… their children’s failure.
Parents pressure the educators, and the educators pressure the kids
by trotting out myriad solutions ranging from the desperate
to the ludicrous.
As a result
everyone is under more pressure. Parental worries force children
to have longer hours at school, more homework, summer school classes
and tutors. To up the test scores, frantic educators adjust tests
to make them easier. But lowered test expectations falsely reflect
better education. When did the ends ever justify the means?
Doesn’t the
method of achieving a goal describe the value of that goal? What’s
a high test grade when the test was a give-away? What’s an A student
if he or she is stressed out, alienated or just plain hostile toward
the world? What good is opportunity to succeed when it has mutated
into all-out pressure to succeed?
Isn’t there
enough pressure in our society already? I could be wrong, but I
don’t see a lot of what I would call "happy" folk. People
these days seem to carry around a lot of repressed anger. They act
like pressure cookers about to blow. Some of them do. All too often
the stress erupts in the form of heart attacks, strokes, alcoholism,
broken homes, road rage… or much, much worse. Must our children
bear the brunt of it all? Are they being trained and conditioned
to become good, little stressed-out workaholics?
There’s nothing
bad about a strong work ethic… up to a point. Work hard! Get ahead!
Or… die trying. However, there’s sure a lot wrong with a child pressured
to think about nothing but success. Are we so busy with our jobs,
our power dinners, golf games or PTA fundraisers that we don’t have
time to listen to and play with our kids? How else
will our children have the ground rules to apply to real life?
Could it be
that the frustration felt by parents is the result of an uphill
battle against the unintended consequences of progress? Are you
as baffled as I am by the problems of the 21st century?
Are the challenges of technology, over-population, diminishing resources,
government regulations and taxes and unending wars
combining to make you feel pressured? How much of your frustration
are you passing on to your children?
Seems to me,
the most important thing children need to learn is civilized social
interaction… in other words, how to behave. Don’t get me
wrong: the three "Rs" are vital, and as are science,
history, literature, English, foreign languages, music, art, P.E.,
etc.
But when you
get right down to it, if our little darlings fail to learn how to
work and play well together, they will turn out to be obnoxious
adults… or troubled loners. Actions have consequences: when little
Georgie wrecks young Thomas’s Lego creation, he needs to experience
some consequences.
Let’s face
it, you are teaching your kids about life and that education goes
on 24/7. The example parents set at home will be as valuable, if
not more so, as activities inside and
outside of school.
Lost to stress
and pressure is the importance of play. The time to be a child is
when you are a child. That’s when children really learn to
interact with their peers. Last time I looked, you only get one
chance at it… a fact many grownups choose to ignore.
Our job as
parents is not to relentlessly pressure our children to succeed.
Our job is to set an example with the self-discipline, morals, and
kindness that are the backbone of a productive, honorable, serene
life and civilized society. Even as children need to learn the value
of hard work, they need to learn how to be content with who they
are and what they have.
It’s tough
teaching a child to take the rough with the smooth. Attempting to
turn our children’s world into a perpetual Disneyland is a one-way
ticket to failure. Pressure to be happy all the time can be as detrimental
as pressure to succeed.
How many of
us have succeeded at being content with ourselves? How many of us
are examples of serenity and strength for our children? Are we frustrated
with our own lives? Are we pressuring our children to fulfill our
fantasies of what we thought we should become? Are we
trying to relive our lives through our children… at their expense?
Our children
don’t need all that pressure from us. There will be plenty waiting
for them down the road. But hey, relax… there’s no pressure here.
Elizabeth
Gyllensvard contributed to and edited this story.
April
21, 2007
Tom
Chartier [send him mail]
played lead guitar in legendary Los Angeles punk band The Rotters
for 26 years until their final appearance in January of 2004. He
has lived in Tokyo and Los Angeles. Currently he resides somewhere
in the Caribbean.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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