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The Courage to be a Loving Parent
By Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
Most of us really don't like it when someone is angry at us. We
don't like it when people go into resistance to helping us when
we need help, instead of caring about us. We don't like it when
people withdraw from us, disconnecting from us and shutting us
out. We don't like it when people make demands on us and do
not respect our right or need to say no. Many of us will do almost
anything to avoid the soul loneliness and pain we feel when
people treat us in angry, resistant, demanding and uncaring
ways.
It takes great courage to stay loving to ourselves and others
when faced with others' angry and closed behavior. It especially
take courage when the people we are dealing with are our own
children. Yet unless we have the courage to come up against our
children's anger, resistance, and withdrawal, we will give
ourselves up and not take care of ourselves to avoid their
uncaring reactions. The more we deny our own truth and our
own needs and feelings, the more our children will disrespect
and discount us. Our children become a mirror of our own
behavior, discounting us when we discount ourselves,
disrespecting us when we disrespect ourselves. The more we
give ourselves up to avoid our children's unloving behavior
toward us, the more we become objectified as the all-giving and
loving parent who doesn't need anything for ourselves. When we
do this, we are role-modeling being a caretaker.
On the other hand, it is unloving to ourselves and our children to
expect our children to take responsibility for our well-being. It is
unloving to demand that our children give themselves up to
prove their love for us and to pacify our fears. It is unloving to
demand that they be the way we want them to be rather than who
they are. It is unloving to set limits just to make us feel safe,
rather than limits that support their health and safety. When we
behave in this way, we are role-modeling being a taker.
The challenge of good parenting is to find the balanced between
being there for our children and being there for ourselves, as
well as the balance between freedom and responsibility - to be
personally responsible to ourselves rather than be a taker or a
caretaker.
Our decisions need to be based on what is in the highest good
of our children as well as ourselves. If a child wants something
that is not in our highest good to give, then it is not loving to give
it. If we want something that is not in the highest good of our
children, then it is not loving for us to expect it. It is loving to
support our children's freedom to choose what they want and to
be themselves, as long as it doesn't mean giving ourselves up.
Children do not learn responsible behavior toward others when
their parents discount their own needs and feelings to support
what their children want. Our own freedom to choose what we
want and to be ourselves needs to be just as important to us as
our children's freedom and desires.
On the other hand, if we always put our needs before our
children's, we are behaving in a self-centered, narcissistic way
that limits our children's freedom. We are training our children to
be caretakers, to give themselves up for other's needs and not
consider their own.
The challenge of loving parenting is to role-model behavior that
is personally responsible, rather than being a taker or caretaker.
This is our best chance for bringing up personally responsible
children. However, we need to remember that we can do
everything "right" as a parent, but our children are on their own
path, their own soul's journey. They will make their own choices
to be loving or unloving, responsible or irresponsible. We can
influence their choices, but we can't control them. They have free
will, just as we do, to choose who they want to be each moment
of their lives. All we can do is the very best we can to role-model
loving, personally responsible behavior - behavior that supports
our own and our children's highest good.
About the Author:
Margaret Paul, Ph.D. is the best-selling author and co-author of
eight books, including "Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved By
You?", "Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved By My Kids?",
"Healing Your Aloneness", "Inner Bonding", and "Do I Have To
Give Up Me To Be Loved By God?" Visit her web site for a FREE
Inner Bonding course:
http://www.innerbonding.com or
margaret@innerbonding.com
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