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Week 3 of October:
Self Reliance and Potential
In Connection with Richard and Linda Eyre
Editor’s Note: This month the Meridian Family Value of the month is
Self Reliance
and Potential. Each week during the month we will post
an update in Meridian, illustrating a couple of the Eyres’
favorite methods for teaching Self Reliance and Potential to each age group.
Methods for Preschoolers
Give
Your Children Opportunities to Do and Decide Things for Themselves
This
will help small children gain the beginning sprouts of self-reliance
and self-confidence. As much and as early as possible, let children
dress themselves, do small household jobs, decide which shirt
to wear or which color of juice to drink, get themselves in and
out of cars, highchairs, and so on, and help you even when it
would be easier without their help. As they accomplish even the
smallest things, praise them and emphasize their ability to do
things for themselves and by themselves.
Keeping
“Records”
This
is a good way to help young children feel the joy of improving
on their own. Competitive instincts generally begin to run high
in four- and five-year-olds. If these drives are too focused on
winning over or beating others, lots of insecurity as well as
intolerance can result. Help children learn the concept of competing
with themselves by setting up some simple “personal records”
(anything from how fast they can get ready for bed to how far
they can throw a ball). Let them try to beat their own record
— not to compare themselves with others. In this type of activity
you will find many opportunities to talk about doing one’s best,
practicing, trying, improving, and so on. With older preschoolers
you can even introduce the term potential and help them
understand that the word means looking for our own best.
Methods for Elementary School Age
Let
Your Children Buy Their Own Clothes
This
can help children feel both the pleasures and the pitfalls of taking
responsibility and being self-reliant. Once children have a way
of earning their own money (the peg system that was explained in
our last article — they should
also have some responsibility for what they do with that money.
Having them buy all their own clothes and personal effects with
“their money” can provide tremendous learning experiences.
*
In our family, when a child turns eight, we take him
on a special “mommy-daddy date” to a nice restaurant and essentially
induct him into the world of self-reliant adults. We tell him
how proud we are of him and flatter him by telling him that we
think he is now old enough to earn more money from the pegs, to
help more with the smaller children, and
to start choosing and buying all of his own clothes with his own
money.
They certainly make mistakes. Sometimes they spend more
than they should on certain things. Often they spend too much
and save too little. They buy things they’ll have little chance
of wearing and forget things they really need.
But they learn. Experience and trial and error are extremely
swift teachers. The bottom line is self-reliance. And we’ve come
to believe that the mistakes of eight year olds are not serious,
while the mistakes of eighteen year olds who have just received
responsibility can be deadly. In today’s society, children are
often given license too early and responsibility too late.
Eight is a marvelous and unique age. Eight-year-olds
are old enough to take initiative and make thoughtful, reasoned
choices, yet they are young enough to be flattered by responsibilities
and to accept it without the cynicism and resistance of children
a couple years older.
*
Consult
Rather Than Manage
Put
yourself in a role that maximizes your children’s development
of self-reliance and self-knowledge. Try not to take initiative
away from your child. Suggest rather than command whenever possible.
Ask if he needs help rather than forcing it on him. Try to notice
what he likes and where his natural gifts and abilities lie rather
than trying to decide what he will do and what he should be good
at.
When
he asks you to do his homework, say no — but tell him you’ll check
it after he’s done and tell him if it’s right and help him on
the parts he’s tried to do but still doesn’t understand.
As
children are old enough to understand the terms, tell them that
you want to be their consultant and not their manager.
Explain that they are the ones who have to decide what they
will do and how well they will do it and that you want to help
but not force. (Be sure they can separate this consulting help
and guidance that relate to their choices from the laws
and absolutes that govern their behavior.
Methods for Adolescents
Discussion
of Politics
This
works to help adolescents see the practicality as well as the
honor in accepting blame rather than making up excuses or cover-ups.
At dinner or some other opportune time see how much your children
know about current events, or even “ancient history” such as Watergate
and the Iran-contra affair. Help them with details if necessary
so that they know that Watergate involved a break-in and some
illegal acts followed by a cover-up and that Iran-contra involved
selling arms illegally to Iran and funneling proceeds to the contras in Central America.
Ask
if both the break-in and the arms sales and fund diversions were
illegal (Yes.) ask what the difference was in how the two presidents
responded (Nixon made excuses, participated in a cover-up, was
not able to accept blame and be self-reliant in terms of admitting
his mistakes. Reagan accepted blame and apologized publicly —
to some extent at least — for mishandling or being ill-informed
on events.) Did the public judge the two men differently? (Most
certainly.) How could this principle apply to us? (Discuss.)
Good
luck with this value and with these methods. Send your own ideas
to meridianvalues.com and be sure to visit the Eyres at www.valuesparenting.com!
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© 2005
Meridian Magazine.
All Rights Reserved.
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