Time throttles closer and each week, A asks, "Mommy, have you signed me up, yet?" I look at my nine-year-old and sigh. "Are you sure you're ready to spend an entire week at camp? You won't be able to call or see us at all. No texting either." Way to crush her joy, Scrooge. Should I mention the bears?
As I ponder my hesitancy to send my daughter to camp, I realize that many of my fears are rooted in a deep-seated insecurity about my own parenting skills and how her behavior will reflect on my own lacking as a mom. The other fears are genuine concerns about her welfare so far from home (really camp was an entire hour and a half away.) Most, though, lie in an inability to let go and come to terms with a daughter who is growing into a young woman. I'm halfway through the critical years of parenting, and this will be the first real test of how well we are preparing our girl for the real world. I suddenly find myself wanting to cling and hover rather than release, which is pretty much the point of parenting, the releasing, not the hovering.
It seems that I'm not the only parent who struggles with releasing my grip on my children. One need not look too far to see the disturbing headlines. From Psychology Today, "Helicopter Parenting: It's Worse Than You Think." This article proceeds to detail how the parents of 25-year-old graduate students are calling admissions offices to assist their child in getting admitted. Parents are actually tagging along on job interviews, and the kids are welcoming it. I can just picture the mom dabbing her tongue to a napkin and wiping Johnny's mouth half-way during the questioning.
The Washington Post paints the same bleak picture with its article "How Helicopter Parents are Ruining College Students." Colleges have become surrogate parents for kids who can't resolve conflict with roommates. Deans are dealing with "she took my shirt without asking." Police are being called to set mouse traps for skittish coeds. We're paralyzing our children. Rates of anxiety and depression are skyrocketing among children because we aren't allowing them to fail, risk, or make decisions. Colleges can't keep up with the demand for counseling.
from our children's science projects to career decisions isn't minor or short-term. It's affecting them well into the future, leaving employers and future spouses baffled.
Every day offers a new opportunity to allow my children to safely take risks and to fail. We, as a society, must change our attitude concerning failure. We've begun celebrating failure when it forces us to try harder. Our homeschool mantra is mistakes are ok because that's how we learn. Children who are allowed to fail in the safety of their homes become more resilient adults. Of course, we shouldn't allow our children to take dangerous, life-threatening risks, but most risks aren't that dramatic. How we teach our children to handle failure is critical, which means despite a deep desire to prevent them from ever feeling pain, we have to sometimes watch them fall. Preparing a path filled with lollipops and daisies is not preparing our children for the dog-eat-dog real world.
So often, I find myself stepping in to rescue my daughter from messes she created herself, but I have to remind myself that I'm not preparing her for life. I'm handicapping her. When she doesn't practice piano or finish a project, I must allow her to bear the brunt of the consequence that choice brings. Sometimes its easier to save our children because it preserves the peace. We don't have to deal with tantrums or breakdowns or bad grades, but that short-term ease will result in long-term detriment. I often find myself praying for the courage to stop taking the path of least resistance.

When I was a freshman in college, a naive eighteen year old, my mom allowed my sister, who was a junior in high school, and me to drive to Virginia to visit a friend at UVA during spring break. I remember my mom handing us my dad's giant bag cell phone, explaining roaming charges, then waving as we backed down the driveway. This is the point where I would have run headlong down the drive and jumped onto the back of my sister's little red BMW and tagged along, (mother/daughter weekend anyone?) but if my mom had concerns, she didn't register them. She stoically stood by as my sister and I drove off into the sunrise. My mom gave us the gift of a lifetime, and despite her desire to hang on, she chose to let go, and I'm sure pray without ceasing, allowing my sister and me to reap the benefits that weeklong road trip. My mom taught me to trust God and to trust my children.
Think on your own life. When have the biggest breakthroughs come or the most valuable lessons been learned? Is it through the trials or in the ease?
I arrive at camp at the end of the week to find my baby girl beaming. She's eager to introduce me to new friends. (See homeschooling kids aren't socially awkward.) She isn't sunburned or stinky. In fact, she's glowing and is eager to tell me all about movie night, canoeing, swimming, singing, and all the other adventures she experienced that week. She did get homesick, and not only did she get homesick, she threw up when she ate something that didn't settle with her. And, you know what else, she survived. It was through the homesickness that her friends were able to rally around her and show her support, thus deepening the friendships. She survived a moment of vulnerability and learned to lean on others. She learned that she can survive a week without her mommy, and I learned that I must be doing something right because the counselors shared what a lovely, polite girl she is. Most importantly, A learned that she is resilient, capable, and strong. Lessons she would probably not have learned sitting in the safety of her home.
2 comments:
I love this!!
I love this!!
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