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Parenthood is not a power status

Eating out used to give rise to heated arguments. My husband defines a good restaurant as something where the serving is substantial and the price is low. He doesn’t care much for physical comfort. 14-year-old (15 now) Sam is a burger and Japanese food addict. I hate fast food and love Chinese food. 13-year-old Alex loves fries and Japanese food but won’t balk at eating Chinese.

Japanese restaurants are relatively more expensive that others so my husband will always find some excuse not to go Japanese — unless his wallet is loaded. Chinese seems to be the middle ground but Sam does not like Chinese food. Sam and Alex would be happy with burger and fries but I hate fast food junk. What do we do — flip a coin? No, we take turns in making decisions. One weekend, it’s Sam’s choice; the next weekend, it’s Alex’s; then it’s mine and then my husband’s.

It’s not as though conflicts have been totally eradicated in our family. We still have arguments. For instance, Sam is into digital photography. She has a 4-megapixel point-and-shoot camera but she’s whining for a DSLR — quite an expensive piece of gadget. Her father would say, “You’re too young. I didn’t have my own digital camera until I was 45.” To which Sam would retort, “But they hadn’t invented digital cameras when you were 14!” Great point, as far as I’m concerned.

But we have seen Sam’s photos. I’ve published some of them on my blog and they have earned praises even from professional photographers. She is good, she knows it and she wants to become a professional photographer. She is even reading books on photography. Should she be deprived of the opportunity to hone her talent because of traditional beliefs? Oh, some on. Sp, what happened with her father’s insistence that she is too young for a DSLR camera? He agreed to buy a DSLR that the three of them can share. No kidding.

We have come a long way, really, considering that when we got married, my husband and I were quite ready to accept the traditional roles of husband, wife, father and mother. In many ways, the change came with having children and learning from them. When we open our minds and our hearts, and stop asserting that we are always right because we are the parents, listening to youthful arguments can be a humbling experience. In their innocence, children have a way of telling us to our face how illogical we can be at times and how we justify so many things with reasons that start and end with “because I am your parent and because I say so.”

People will always have different standards for successfully raising a family. For me, it begins with the acknowledgment that we are all unique individuals. Balance and harmony follow when we respect uniqueness and differences, and do away with traditional notions that parenthood is a status of power and authority. It isn’t — it is an enjoyable role, a responsibility and a life-long learning process. It is not a matter of compromise but, rather, a conscious decision not to impose our beliefs and a willingness to re-asses them whenever the need arises.

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Comments

  1. The Mentat says:

    Parenthood is definitely not about power or rights. It is about privilege. The privilege to bring kids into the world and see them grow up to be better persons than ourselves.

    I’ve always dealt with my kids with a warrior’s state of mind. If you’ve studied the martial arts, you’d understand. You go into something with the kids with a blank mind. A mind free of preconceptions, assumptions and expectations. Ready to go anywhere the energy takes you. The results almost always surprises me. :D

    When I was on my housebanding stint, my kids used to love lunch hour on weekdays. Those were lunches without my wife around as she was at work. My kids turned lunch time into their philosophical free-for-all no-holds-barred question and answer forum because they know I answer each and every question they throw at me. Yes, including sex. (This is my fault, I let them watch The Clan of the Cave Bear with me) :D

    Of all the questions they’ve asked me, there’s only one question I never ever had the answer for. hehehe…

  2. auee says:

    Hear, hear. I will not add to your valid points.

    Just wanted to say that those tips about sharing the cooking & taking turns in the restaurant of choice, is a really good tip! I suspect we’d need to do this @home in 1-2 years’ time.

    re: “expressing a false and self-serving kind of martyrdom”
    Reminds me of two women:
    One was a former colleague and whenever we have to introduce ourselves she’d always mention she’s mum to a disabled child. I thought I was the only who noticed it but another whispered one time that it was weird to point it out like a badge.
    Then there was this nurse in London (now in the US) who kept “complaining” about having to do so much overtime to ease their financial burden. Her husband keeps on moaning about her not staying at home as often & being addicted to OT pay. She will complain about doing the household after being tired @work. He will insist their house is a state because she’s not there. Admittedly there are a number of problems there & not all from her, but I always get the sense that she yammers about her “sacrifice” to make her look good and her husband inadequate.

  3. Connie says:

    The Mentat, I like the warrior’s state of mind reference. It’s fair to the kids not to treat them with pre-conceived notions and expectations.

    Auee, allowing them to decide makes them understand better when the parents say they respect them (the kids) as persons. Otherwise, they’re just words, di ba?

  4. The Mentat says:

    Again agreed. Respecting the kids and making them choose for themselves, treating them as adults, make them self sufficient, independent and self assured. When those are fulfilled, responsibility and self reliance is assured.

    Point in fact… I mentioned before my kids have their entrepreneurial ideas. They acted on it before informing me. Made me damn proud to be their daddy but I just had to lecture them about their pricing scheme. hehehe… they were charging an arm and a leg for their products! :D

  5. Connie says:

    You just can’t teach responsibility and self reliance, ‘no? But parents can help their kids develop both. :)

    Re entrepreneural skills. That is new! Most daddies I know lecture their kids about raising prices. hehehe

  6. The Mentat says:

    Well, I wouldn’t have complained about their prices if they were reasonable. Imagine, I bought stickers for them at somewhere between P50 to P100 per sheet with each sheet having 20 to 30 stickers. Say a sheet of 30 at P100. They sell the stickers retail at P20 per sticker. That was waaay too much and I was afraid their classmates parents were going to complain so we settled on P10. :D

    Then my eldest diversified into food. Lunch at school. He bugged his grandma (my mom, bless her heart) for a menu. My mom sells the lunch sets to my son for P20 per set, he sells it to his classmates at P40 to P50 per set. Worth it, of course, but I sometimes wonder about their pricing.

    Even my sisters-in-law are shaking their heads in amazement because all 3 of them were never given any seed money to begin with. No allowances. Hehehe… Yet they’ve found a way to make money and even treat their aunt to games at TimeZone. ayayayay…

  7. Connie says:

    Ahhh LOL Maybe the reasoning that lower prices will bring in more loyal customers will work. You know, long time thinking. :)

    But the lunch, well, you have to admit that the boy transports the food, does the actual marketing and selling. I don’t think anyone will complain at 40 to 50 per. That’s very reasonable especially pag masarap.

  8. Jon Limjap says:

    Ah, Father and Son comes to mind…

    “…from the moment I could talk, I was ordered to listen…”

    It is ironic that too many parents expect their children to listen to them without them listening to their children. They want their kids to be responsible but they don’t let the kids hold the reins. They want to have their cake and eat it too.

    Of course it all backfires when the kid becomes an adult. Sometimes, they forget that you actually exist. Other times, they just wait for you to die off to receive their inheritance. Others take their inheritance long before you’re gone.

    It takes a lot of effort to not make your child shut up. It takes a lot more effort to hear them out all the time. But the value of hearing them out (and having them be frank and honest with you) is valuable towards their teens and way beyond that.

  9. Connie says:

    Jon, re “It is ironic that too many parents expect their children to listen to them without them listening to their children.”

    Prevalent in cultures where AGE is equated with wisdom and authority. As bitchy as it may sound, I have no respect for old people just because they are older. Respect is earned and old people shouldn’t be exempt.

  10. KK says:

    Amen to “Respect is earned and old people shouldn’t be exempt.”

    I am seen as a rebel in my clan mother side family. I have declared that I have nothing to say to a greedy uncle, my Lola even wants me to forgive him, I refuse to respect people just because they are old. I only give my respect to those who deserve it.

    As for power, I had to assert my being “boss ” to my then toddler. She has a strong personality and leaving things up to her will create chaos when she grows up. When she asks me why she can’t be boss, I say that she can become a boss when she can take care of herself. She wants to change the rules(eating vegetables), I tell her she can have her own rules when she has her own house.

  11. Ria says:

    “Prevalent in cultures where AGE is equated with wisdom and authority. As bitchy as it may sound, I have no respect for old people just because they are older. Respect is earned and old people shouldn’t be exempt”

    Reminds me of a scene in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows between Harry and the Minister for Magic (Scrimgeour), when he told Harry “It’s about time you learned to show some respect”. Harry answered back, “It’s about time you earn it”. A classic example.

    I completely agree with you Connie. In today’s society, more often than not, we see old people who makes decisions only idiots could make, decisions which sometimes prompts younger ones to wander whether their actions are supposed to be honest mistake or they simply had an IQ of a squirrel and has lost any chances to advance intellectually.

    Kids can taught us a lot of things, if only we’ll take time to listen.

  12. nameless says:

    I was looking for a contact link here to personally email you about the past post you made about carlo Ocab, but I couldn’t find one. So I’ll just leave a message here with my email address and withholding my website for anonimity. But you can freely email me and i would gladly tell you my site. I jsut dont want to be accused of meddling with the issue im not supposed to mind.

    anyhow, I totally agree with what you said about the Father and son thing of the Carl Ocab.What really gets on my nerves are these elitists who are obviously jealous of the popularity of the father and son tandem.

    for me, they are just using the “ethics” as an excuse for their envy. my 10 year old nephew is also a techy and believe it or not he knows how to use the youtube more than me. Bakit kaya big fuss sa kanila, dahil ba sila ang may karapatan na magsabi kung ano ang acceptable sa hindi?

    congrats for your stand. like what the other blogger said in the comments area, I too am willing to be your pro-bono client LOL.

    pardon me kung dito ako nagsulat, sarado na kasi comment area mo dun sa post na binasa ko eh.

    Have a nice week.

  13. bayi says:

    I have always given my wife and children the first priority in budget expenditure. They are the reason why I work so hard all my life. They are my source of happiness (and occasional heartaches, of course!). :)

    My wife is given the responsibility of deciding how the budget is to be dispensed and will discuss with me most of the important issues before a decision is made. But if she does make a decision without discussion with me, I will still support her all the way. I have every confidence that whatever decision she makes, it is for the best overall interest of the family.

    This sort of evolved over the years and I am pretty comfortable with the way things are.

  14. Connie says:

    KK, oh, very young kids need to understand that parents do have a right to claim parental authority. The freedom they have a right to — the independence — the best way I can put it is for us parents to recognize their readiness in stages.

    Ria, one more reason to love JK Rowling, eh? Her perception of human nature and the interrelationships among people vis a vis culture is just amazing.

    Bayi, I think you hit the best word — confidence. If one trusts and respects the other spouse enough, I don’t see why the budget issue should be a problem. My hubby and I have an additional perspective — the spouse who earned the money has the right to decide how it should be spent — of course, AFTER the basic things have been paid for and attended to.

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