GIVING CHILDREN WHAT THEY NEED TO MATURE
Christopher Ebbe, Ph.D.
9-13
ABSTRACT: The
guidance and experiences that a child needs in order to most easily and
completely mature psychologically and morally are described.
KEY WORDS: maturity,
childrearing, raising children, morality, ethics
Most parents would like to equip their children to become
mature adults, with experiential learning as well as adequate food, clothing,
and shelter. Using my definition of the
processes and evidences of maturity, experiences for children that will help
them to grow and mature are presented below.
The capabilities needed for maturity are (1) a reasonably
accurate understanding of self, others, life, and the world (including an
accurate sense of likely consequences of various behaviors; (2) awareness of how people tend to make reality
what they want it to be and to fool themselves about this, and a desire not to
do this when it could result in harm; (3) enough empathy to enable one to
understand others and their needs and feelings reasonably well, and the desire
to understand them; (4) reasonably good ability to manage emotions (not letting
them push one to distort reality or push one to violent and impulsive behaviors
that harm self or others); and (5) a basically positive attitude toward others,
so that one is oriented toward cooperating and helping others Persons who have these abilities in sufficient
measure will be mature and will be seen by others as mature.
Observable behaviors that usually result from engaging in
the five processes above and that most people would consider evidence of
maturity are honesty, responsibility, trustworthiness, self-control, good
judgment , fairness, positive relationships with others, above average concern
for those around one, tolerance for people in general, generally appropriate
behavior (resulting from above average clarity about right and wrong and above
average concern for others), constancy in mood, emotion, and behavior
(including willingness to endure discomfort in order to reach goals), a
tendency to avoid excess and harmful behaviors, and being self-supporting.
These attributes result in mature persons fulfilling their various roles (parent, worker, leader, friend, citizen, etc.) in a praiseworthy and effective way and result in them contributing more than others to the essential tasks of society—raising children to be productive members of the community, sustaining life, and building and sustaining the community itself.
What You Can Expect From Using These Principles
Every system of ideas that promotes a program for living or
a way of living has a particular way of living in mind, whether that is made
clear or not. The principles presented
here will move your child toward being a person who is honest, responsible,
loving, accepting, cooperative, fair, self-aware, self-confident, empathic, and
compassionate, who has good self-control and can manage his or her emotions
effectively, and who can stand alone when necessary in support of what is
right. They promote a way of being and
an existence that has the greatest chance of maximizing joy, fulfillment,
contentment, and satisfaction for individuals, maximizing equality among
people, and minimizing conflict, hatred, and violence. These principles provide a comfortable
context within which to live joyfully, serenely, effectively, with great
satisfaction, and at peace with oneself, others, and life.
People who utilize the principles presented in this book
will be generally happy with themselves, others, and life, will be zestful in
using their abilities in seeking goal attainment, and will be seen by others as
unusually mature.
This system promotes “good” or “positive” interactions among people, which are defined as interactions in which both parties feel comfortable and safe (as a result of understanding each other and feeling treated appropriately by the other person) and in which both parties are motivated to cooperate to achieve mutually agreed-upon goals. These interactions succeed through understanding and cooperation and result in minimum amounts of conflict and violence between people. People living by these principles will approach others and life with positive expectations, will be able to be emotionally close with at least some others, will seek good outcomes for both self and others from all of their behavior (partly through "doing the right thing" in all circumstances), and will be calm, compassionate, and understanding with others.
Guidelines For Parents
General
Meet your child’s
needs reasonably, promptly, and reliably, so that the child accepts and becomes
comfortable with his needs. Don’t make your needs (or those of anyone else)
systematically more important than the child’s needs, for if you do, you will
teach the child that he is inferior.
Be trustworthy and
responsible toward your child, thus demonstrating that she is worth treating
well.
Teach your child that a certain amount of stress, pain, and
discomfort is an inevitable and necessary part of life but not to accept pain
that is unnecessary.
Teach your child to do what is truly best for himself at
all times, since doing what is truly best for himself includes taking into
account all of the consequences of his behavior (immediate and long-term, as
well as his impact on others) and often includes letting others take a turn or
have their way.
Help your child to recognize and believe that she will get
more out of life by treating others well than she will by trying to take
advantage of them.
Give special
support to children who have been victims of trauma or who for some reason
receive chronically negative messages about themselves.
Psychological
Help your child to learn about and
become comfortable with everything about herself—all of her perceptions,
thoughts, feelings, needs, motives, potentials, abilities, and body. Help her to be always self-aware so that she
can make the best behavioral decisions.
Help your child to establish sufficient security in the
world by facing problems confidently, acting responsibly, and accepting life’s
inevitable misfortunes with good grace yourself.
Make it clear that
the child has a definite and irrevocable right to exist in this world, by
taking the child’s needs seriously and communicating that he is important to
you.
Help your child to be adequate in the world by teaching her
needed knowledge and skills and by encouraging her as she practices new skills.
Help your child to feel adequate and feel like she is
“enough” by demonstrating your love and acceptance of her.
Give affection and love
generously, including safe, appropriate, and loving physical contact.
Convey to the
child, verbally and non-verbally, that she is valuable, worthwhile, important,
and deserving of nurturance and good things in life.
Respect your
child’s equal rights and basic equality with others (including yourself) at all
times and in all circumstances, without exception.
Act toward your child with
respect at all times, just as you would show respect to an adult and would want
respect from others yourself.
Help your child to
be appropriately accepting of himself, by accepting your child as he is, with
his own needs, feelings, and behaviors. Help him find a way both to be himself
and to be socially acceptable. Don’t pressure him to be someone he is not.
Accept the ways in which the child is different from you, and don’t force him
to be just like you.
By recognizing,
acknowledging, accepting, and praising the child’s personality and unique
traits and abilities, give the child the message that she has the right to be
exactly who she is, and that to be herself is a great thing.
Help your child
construct a positive self-concept by verbalizing positive perceptions of the
child whenever possible.
Help your child
construct an accurate self-concept by helping him recognize his negative and
his positive behaviors and traits.
Help your child develop a positive identity by showing your
love and acceptance of her. This will also
remove the need for trying to be OK through being superior to others.
Accept your child’s
feelings as a natural part of him. Don’t make them “bad” in an effort to
control his behavior. Help him to control the expression of his feelings by
teaching him adaptive ways to manage feelings and by showing him how you do
this. Accept that it takes children years to learn to manage their feelings.
Be satisfied with
your child.
Help your child to feel just as
deserving of the good things available in life as others are.
Praise and
encourage your child’s efforts and successes.
Provide comfort and
support in times of frustration and failure, so that your child can learn to
comfort herself.
Help your child to understand what it is to be oneself with
integrity—to be true to oneself, to make one’s private and public selves as
congruent as possible, to stand up for one’s values, and to express one’s love
and enthusiasm for oneself by being oneself completely and with vigor.
Encourage your child to express thoughts and emotions as
needed and useful every day. (This could
involve conversing, singing, dancing, or creative arts, alone or with others!)
Tolerate your child’s “adolescent rebellion” by supporting
his need to prove to himself that he can disagree with you and be his own
person without losing your love.
Expectations and Standards
Hold clear,
consistent, humane, and appropriate expectations and standards for your child
that she can readily understand and, with appropriate effort, can readily
meet. If you always expect more or urge
the child to be perfect, she will learn that she is not OK.
As your child matures, encourage him to evaluate all
standards and expectations, including yours, and to formulate his own humane and
reasonable standards and expectations, particularly his standards and
expectations for himself.
As your child grows, encourage
your child to think hard enough about right, wrong, good, and bad, to
construct—using the basic values that you have taught—his own values and sense
of right and wrong.
Teach your child to do all that she wants to do to make
herself, others, and life the way she wants them to be, and then accept the
results without further desire, distress, internal conflict, or stress.
Help your child to
learn that while certain behavioral standards must be obeyed, all human
standards are the opinions of fallible men and women and should be questioned
or replaced when more humane and reasonable standards are possible and
appropriate.
Show your child how to play and relax, so that he
understands that it is good to work hard but also good to play.
Discipline/Behavior Control
Use only
appropriate and fair means of discipline with your child, concentrating on
withdrawal of privileges and communicating your feelings in response to the
misbehavior, and avoiding physical punishments except for light spanking in the
early years.
Do not use the
overly simple and terribly destructive labels of “good” and “bad” on your
child. You can communicate your love or your displeasure (e.g., “I don’t like
that,” “I don’t like it when you do that”) clearly without “good” and “bad,”
and you can reinforce behavior adequately without them.
In showing
disapproval as a method of training a child, help the child to understand that
it is his behavior that is unacceptable, rather than himself as a person.
Help your child to be able to know what is appropriate, by
taking into account standards and expectations, using empathy to understand the
needs of others, and applying the principle of fairness.
Teach your child appropriate self-control by demonstrating
good self-control yourself.
Help your child to learn to delay action and delay
gratification when useful, so that he has the self-control necessary for
achieving his goals.
Help your child not to
automatically “feel bad” just because another person is upset with her or wants
her to be different. What your child
wants is just as important as what anyone else wants.
Help your child to avoid extreme, excess, and dangerous behavior
by showing good judgment yourself.
Thinking and Problem Solving
Encourage your child to learn as much about the world as
possible, so that he is not restricted to his immediate environment in his
thinking or his relating.
Help your child to learn useful methods of deciding what is
true and what is not.
Discuss with your child how people make thinking errors by
such things as overgeneralizing or broadening definitions, so that he can
improve his thinking.
Help your child to understand how people distort reality to
make it what they want it to be, and encourage her not to do this herself. Show her how to stick to the truth, rather
than make herself feel better by denying or lying about it.
Help your child recognize how much we dislike the unknown
and not knowing and how we are prone to making up answers when we have none, in
order to manage our anxiety. Help her to
accept and tolerate ambiguity and not knowing.
Help your child to not base his perceptions of reality on momentary
and changeable emotions, so he can be “a rock” for others when needed.
Show your child how to reflect on and choose her own
attitudes, assumptions, and expectations about others and about life, by
showing her that you know how to talk about your own attitudes, assumptions,
and expectations.
Help your child to learn how to consider what is right, independent
of how she wants things to be, so that she can come to appropriate conclusions
in balancing her needs with the needs of others.
Help your child to understand that sometimes longer-term
rewards are more important than short-term gratifications (getting an
education, contributing to the community, deeper relationships, etc.).
Help your child to develop good judgment by showing him how
to take all relevant information into account (including long-term as well as
short-term results and the impact of his behavior on others), to consider
others’ welfare as well as his own, to understand the reasons for the rules, to
remove his personal biases, emotions, and needs from his conclusions about
reality so as to make them as accurate as possible, and to choose actions that
create the greatest benefit for both self and others.
Discuss with your child the fact that a culture’s beliefs
and assumptions are just that—beliefs and assumptions—rather than truths.
Help your child achieve the insight
that no one's and no group's "reality" is really "reality,"
which helps us to avoid conflict and to allow for learning and cooperation.
Help your child to have a well-developed sense of morality
and ethics by focusing on the positive or negative impact that we each have on
others with our behavior, by helping your child to empathically appreciate what
others experience, and by telling her your formulations of principles of right
behavior.
Help your child to develop inspiring and useful ideals, by
living in ways that are consistent with your own ideals and telling her what
those ideals are.
Emotions/Motivation
Help your child to know his emotions (by properly
identifying your own) and to manage them adaptively (by your example). Demonstrate for him appropriate restraint and
appropriate expression.
Be available to listen to your child concerning his
emotions (insecurity, shame, guilt, rejection, disappointment, loneliness,
etc.) and his attempts to figure the world out. (How can I both be myself and be pleasing to
others? How can I be close without
losing myself in the relationship? How
do I tolerate the risks in life that are there all the time but that we mostly
ignore? When should I stand up for what
I believe, and when should I keep quiet?
Etc.).
Give your child life experiences that provide opportunity
for her to develop tolerance for unpleasant emotions but that do not overwhelm
or ask too much of the child. We learn
how to tolerate or live with frustration, disappointment, and other painful
emotions through experience, by getting familiar with and used to them and by
developing ways of understanding those situations and “advising ourselves” on
how to get through them. Help your child
by describing for her your methods of managing emotions. Do not give her the belief that all pain
should be avoided or try to take away all of her pain.
Help your child understand her motives, so that she can
choose better when to get what she wants and when to allow others to get what
they want.
Teach your child to deal himself with his emotional
reactions to others and their behavior (instead of trying to get others to
change so that he can feel better or more comfortable).
Teach your child to enjoy being herself, so that she can be
alone sometimes and still be happy.
Show your child how to be comfortable and happy being around others outside the family, so that he can have a basically positive attitude and positive expectations of others.
Help your child
learn the skills needed in order to get along well with others and to get what
she needs from others, in positive, mutually beneficial relationships.
Help your child develop realistic
trust, based on the assumption that most others will treat one well in most
circumstances, and the ability to determine in what ways and to what degree each person can be trusted.
Help your child make his peace with
the facts that his needs are not the most important thing in others’ lives (as
they were to his parents), that he has the primary responsibility to gratify his
own needs (instead of continuing to depend on others for this), and that in
general he can take better care of himself than others can (because one’s needs
are primary for oneself and because one knows oneself much better than anyone
else can).
Help your child to have a
basically accepting attitude toward others, instead of wishing to change them
so that she can be more comfortable, while knowing enough to avoid people who
are harmful or toxic.
Help your child to be able to
love and to join in loving relationships and treat others lovingly, by showing
your affection and love for him and for others openly.
Teach your child to treat others as she would most like to
be treated, to use reciprocity as a guide to ethical living, and to make
fairness the touchstone of her ethics.
Help your child to recognize and believe that she will get
more out of life by treating others well than she will by trying to take
advantage of them.
Educate your child that many people try to appear to be
superior to others as a means of competing with others and of feeling OK about
themselves, and make clear to her the damage that this does to the self-esteem
of those who are defined as inferior.
Through helping your child to
feel good about himself and to be confident that he is adequate and lovable,
minimize your child’s temptations to use hatred, status striving, and
superiority to bolster his self-esteem.
Help your child to
insist on basic equality with others in the world and not to settle for less.
Help your child
develop appropriate assertiveness skills, to support the various requests and
demands he must make of the world.
Give your child experience with people from other cultural
backgrounds, so that she will learn that most differences do not have to divide
us, and she can be tolerant of others.
Help your child to recognize how we tend to identify others
as either being part of “us” or part of “them,” with the latter being more
likely to be seen as outsiders, competitors, and unworthy and to be treated
less well than those who are “us.” Help
your child to have the broadest possible definition of “us,” so that he can get
along with everyone in the world.
Help your child to achieve
the insight that no one's and no group's "reality" is really
"reality," which helps us to avoid conflict and to allow for learning
and cooperation.
Show your child how to understand others using empathy for
them and for their experience, so that he develops concern for others’ welfare.
Help your child to view others’ needs as being as important
to them as his are to himself, so that he can see the fairness and workability
of viewing others as basic equals.
Teach your child to be honest and to tell the truth, by
being honest and telling the truth yourself.
Teach your child to be responsible and trustworthy, by being
responsible and trustworthy yourself.
Encourage your child to see the humor in his foibles and
his behavior and in those of others.
Help your child to make a healthy adaptation to
competition, enjoying the challenges that stretch our limits but knowing that
application of our capacities to real life is much more important than
expending energies in delimited, structured competitions, and knowing that more
cooperation, rather than more serious competition, is the key to better
outcomes for everyone.
Help your child to be assertive in life but to refrain from
violence and hurtful behavior in general, through having empathy for the pain
that our violence and hurtful behavior causes to others and through believing
that compromise, communication, and cooperation almost always provide better
outcomes than violence. Demonstrate for
your child, both at home and in your dealings with those outside the home, that
compromise, communication, and cooperation do provide good outcomes.
Help your child to tolerate rejection, through
understanding that we all choose the relationships we prefer and that not being
chosen is not a statement about one’s unacceptability or unworthiness. This is much easier for your child if you do
not make her “bad” or withdraw your love for unacceptable behavior, but instead
focus on improving behavior and administering reasonable negative consequences.
Help your child to
judge accurately the difference between when another person’s feelings are hurt
and when that person is actually harmed, and to assess realistically whether he
himself has harmed the other person (instead of assuming that any time someone
else is upset or “hurt” that he must have done something wrong).
Help your child to achieve a healthy sexual adaptation, by
demonstrating an appreciative, accepting, but appropriately controlled attitude
toward sex yourself.
Help your child to develop
appropriate boundaries and comfort with our lifelong existential separation
from others and with being appropriately autonomous, so that she can function
independently and can protect herself from infringement and mistreatment by
others.
Help your child to understand and to accept that everyone makes mistakes, including you. Help her to respond to her mistakes with analysis and plans to minimizing mistakes in the future, instead of denying them or sweeping them under the rug. Demonstrate how to do this yourself.
Teach your child to take responsibility for as much of his
life as he can (for all of his reactions to everything that has happened to him
in the past and for everything that he can do from now on to make his life what
he wants it to be), which will make him see himself as the primary determiner
of his fate. (This includes defining
oneself and defining one’s standards and expectations for oneself, instead of
allowing others to do this.)
Help your child to understand the importance of each day’s
efforts in the context of our limited and somewhat unpredictable life spans.
Jobs/Professions
Teach your child to be effective in the world and to view
herself as being effective.
Help your child to cooperate with others helpfully,
responsibly, and without complaint in achieving joint goals
Self-Support/Self-Care
Show your child how
to meet her own needs, by taking good care of yourself,
meeting your needs acceptably, and doing good things for yourself.
Show your child how to take good care of herself by taking
good care of yourself (being understanding toward yourself, rewarding yourself
appropriately, comforting yourself, treating yourself lovingly, meeting your
needs acceptably, having compassion for yourself)
Show your child how
to be nice to himself, by loving yourself, being kind to yourself, and
comforting yourself.
Help your child to develop good friendships and to seek
support from others during difficult times, as well as being supportive of
herself.
Help your child see
the wisdom of leaving punishing, harmful, adult relationships that cannot be
improved, in order to seek better relationships in the world. Your child has no obligation to suffer for
the sake of someone else.
Help your child develop the ability and mechanisms for
forgiving herself and others, when appropriate, by demonstrating how to
recognize your errors, forgive yourself, and avoid similar errors in the
future.
Help your child to become appropriately self-sufficient, so
that he can support himself and those who are legitimately dependent on him.
Teach your child to assert his worth and value in the face
of group standards or expectations that demean certain people.
Encourage your child to talk to herself every day,
lovingly, intimately, and humorously.
Being a Good Citizen
Help your child to understand what it is to use his talents
and uniqueness to contribute to the social good.
Help your child learn to participate
adequately in roles necessary for group cooperation and maintenance (including
socialization of new human beings and passing on personal and cultural wisdom).
Educate your child about good parenting by being
understanding, supportive, loving, and fair with her, and using appropriate and
fair discipline.
Help your child cultivate the skills of empathy and
cooperation that will enable her to join in group efforts and conform as necessary
for group survival.
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I hope these postings are helpful and stimulating, and I welcome your comments and questions. I will not, however, be able to respond directly to very many questions, but I will note them as possible topics for future posts.