Real
Parents Parent
by
Linda
Schrock Taylor
by Linda Schrock Taylor
Fridays
have been finding me emotionally and physically worn to a frazzle,
and these feelings are not a result of me teaching reading. Teaching
is invigorating and nothing stimulates my mind, and my enthusiasm
for life, better than leading a great vocabulary or language lesson.
What wears me out is having to parent students whose own parents
opted out of their parental responsibilities.
Frequently,
when people learn that I am a teacher, they ask for advice, or share
horror stories of modern children they have met or observed. Last
week I was told, "You should have seen how those kids behaved right
in front of their own parents!" Behind my sympathetic smile I was
thinking, "You should see how they behave at school it is no better;
in fact it is worse. In many cases it is much worse…except in my
room."
Most
students rapidly learn that I do not tolerate any behaviors or attitudes
that conflict with my teaching, or keep other students from learning.
My rule is, "Don't start anything that I will have to finish." Those
who foolishly "laugh in the face of the giant" learn that
Lunch With Linda means that they will miss social time with
friends, but gain time for solitary soul searching while under my
supervision.
My
room is generally a beehive during lunch, as students roam in and
out, eating, playing games, visiting with friends. Several just
like to be near me, even if I am too busy to chat. However, if they
are required to show up, they find that facing consequences
feels much different. No games; no computer; no pleasant conversation.
It changes perspectives and behaviors rather quickly.
Recently
three new students, ones not used to behaving and attending, were
placed into two of my classes. I notice the appalled looks on the
faces of the other children who quietly wait for instruction to
continue as soon as I "help" the new students see exactly
where my "line in the sand" is drawn. The veteran students
are horrified that these new ones dare to speak to "the
Mrs. Taylor." Some have forgotten that they, too, went through
similar guidance until deciding to let others learn, even if they,
themselves, choose to sit silently and do nothing.
This
week I gained further insight into life in some homes as I asked
a misbehaving boy, "What will your mother say when you are expelled
for interrupting the learning of others?" With a great laugh he
said, "She won't say anything! She is just like me!" (Office
referral time!) Soon the boy returned, led by the assistant
principal, followed by a stern grandfather. The boy apologized and
promised that upon his return he will manage himself with much more
restraint and common sense. I thanked him and reminded him
that he will still owe me several Lunches with Linda.
"Oh, yeah…"
The
students appreciate my candor and my control, and know that they
are physically, mentally and emotionally safe in my classroom. Most
days I arrive to find a line of students forming at my door, waiting
for me to unlock their haven of security. Some hate to use the tiny,
crowded lockers, so they have permission to tuck their things in
out-of-the-way spaces in my too-small room. Gym bags too large for
lockers are stored in corners. Several students seek my attention
as I remove coat and boots; get materials ready for the day. I keep
a small tutoring table at a right angle to my desk, affording me
a bit of "space" to call my own. Without that gentle barrier,
I have found that many children are so needy that they edge ever
closer and I really am not prepared for middle schoolers
to park on my lap for a comforting chat.
Far
too many children are greatly in need of emotional support and fair,
developmentally appropriate discipline. Parents are busy. Parents
are uneducated. Parents are uninvolved. Parents are often too weak
to discipline children, especially preteens and teenagers, with
firmness, fairness and consistency. Parents must put the raising
of their own children to become polite, responsible, respectable,
honorable adults as a top priority in their lives. If families
are unwilling to properly parent their children, hope of saving
American values and freedom is lost.
Families,
schools, churches, businesses are suffering from the effects
of undisciplined "big two-year-olds" being turned loose
upon the culture. I once heard that to know what kind of teenager
a child will be, observe the parent and child relationship when
the child is two. It is painful to observe parents being controlled
by small children, and alarming to watch parents being controlled
by teenaged "toddlers." It is awful to hear a parent say,
"Johnny! You stop kicking that dog right now! OK??" Why do parents
give an order, then follow it by asking for the child's permission?
I always imagine that I hear the child thinking, "Heck, no!" as
he continues to kick the dog.
Big
two-year olds say "No!" back to authority figures parents, teachers,
bosses, police officers. Big two-year olds refuse to be fair, respectful,
and responsible. Big two-year olds always want their own way. Big
two-year olds call employers and say, "I won't work on Saturday
night, after all. I have a hot date!" leaving the boss short-handed
on the busiest night of the week. Two-year olds follow bad role
models without stopping to think. Small two-year olds stick beans
up their noses. Big two-year olds have their noses and other parts
of their bodies pierced and tattooed. Big two-year olds want the
rewards of life grades, scholarships, jobs handed to them, as
they were once handed cookies. Big two-year olds are not prepared
for life, and many of them grab and take, then end up filling punk
and adult prisons across America. If parents were parenting toddlers
toward self-restraint, honesty and common sense, their children
would grow up to be healthier, happier adults.
Webster's
New World Dictionary, Third College Edition, defines "discipline"
as: training that develops self-control, character, or orderliness
and efficiency; self-control, orderly conduct. Discipline need not
be severe to be effective. Lunch With Linda causes no pain,
and offers the child a peaceful half-hour for reflecting on better
choices that might have made a difference. For some very strong-willed
children (like my son) I keep my message "short and sweet," as my
Dad would say, "Respect or Restriction? You name it." The decision
is then the child's to make with a clear understanding of the consequences
positive or negative that will follow either choice.
It
is time for Americans to take back America. First, however, Americans
need to take back their children and manage their social and academic
learning with love, nurturing, and an eye to the future for each
child, as well as for America as a whole. Parents need to again
place "milestones" in their child's life steps earned towards maturity
and freedom, instead of turning children loose in this crazy, scary
world, hoping that they will make good decisions.
Premarital
sex and out-of-wedlock babies are not the result of mature, careful
decision-making. The lifelong scars of piercings and tattoos are
not the result of mature, careful decision-making. Today I overheard
two teenage girls talking as they tried on clothing. One said, "For
my birthday, my mother bought me a belly button ring!" I was aghast
as I thought, "Oh no, now we have big two-year olds having babies
and raising big two-year olds."
Never,
in a million years, could I imagine my mother allowing, let alone
purchasing, an item that I would wear through a puncture in the
skin of my belly button. Of course, never would I have been allowed
any clothing that would display such "jewelry," even if
I managed to sneak it past her. Yet in school hallways I see far
worse than belly buttons. Flesh is made to purposely bulge out from
under tight and skimpy clothing. I stifle ironic laughter as I am
reminded of the year that my son found his belly button. He spent
his days pulling up his shirt to show everyone his "belly-but."
He was one year old at the time. His behavior was age-appropriate.
The underwear and skin displays currently popular in the youth culture
are several years past the days of age-appropriate skin displays
to show off body parts.
Milestones,
Guidelines, Boundaries, Expectations, Limits. Our youth are crying
out for these structures from real parents; brave parents. Guidance,
conversation, spiritual leadership, suppers as a family at
the table and away from the TV. Our youth are crying out for these
emotional supports from real parents; involved parents. Real parents
parent, even when that means foregoing the "toys" that
the consumer-driven market browbeats us into coveting and purchasing,
at great expense to our children. The cost of, and the paying for,
such items robs us of time and energy for parenting the wonderful
children that we have brought into this world.
It
truly is OK to "Act Parental" and provide loving, appropriate
discipline to the children you chose to have. Not only is it OK,
it is your responsibility and your duty to the children;
to the society in which those children will interact; to the nation
that those children will inherit. Real parents parent their own
children, even when that job is tiring, stressful, or even downright
unpleasant. Real parents do not push the responsibility onto anyone
else.
February
16, 2004
Linda Schrock Taylor [send
her mail] lives in Michigan.
She is a free-lance writer and the owner of "The Learning Clinic,"
where real reading, and real math, are taught effectively and efficiently.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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