Lauren is a smart, articulate mom of four – including twins. She is not only a writer but also an editor for a magazine about children. I first “met” her through a parenting article in the Washington Post. I was impressed by her candidness and honesty as she expressed her frustrations in raising her four children.
“My kids don’t listen to me. Or, rather, they listen to me, but rarely the first time and rarely without protest. Everything, it seems, is up for negotiation in our house … How do you command respect as a parent? This is a question I’ve been asking myself a lot recently, because I am increasingly convinced that I don’t.”
Wow. I could relate. I think she captured the frustration of hundreds, perhaps hundreds of thousands of well-meaning parents.
She goes on to say, ““My mother has long believed that for young children to listen to their parents they need to fear the consequences. I yell at my kids when they get out of hand, and to my own ears I sound like a banshee, but it doesn’t necessarily scare them into submission.”
Like Lauren, as a young father I wondered why my kids would often force me to get angry before they would obey. Why won’t they just do as I ask because they love me and know I love them?
At that time I was serving as Principal of a Christian school and I had a wonderful, seasoned teacher explain it to me. It turns out Lauren’s mother is right! Continue Reading