
Editor’s
Note: Welcome to the Meridian Family Value for October. As you
may know by now, Meridian Magazine, in collaboration with Linda
and Richard Eyre, presents a specific and particular value each
month, complete with methods for teaching each age group of children.
At the first of the month there is an overview article (like this
one) and then each week there are follow up bulletins with additional
ideas and teaching methods. Meridian readers can also send in
their own thoughts and ideas on the value of the month (click
here to read the explanatory article that started this series).
Anytime during the month, you can click on the “family value
of the month” icon on the Meridian home page and go directly to
the teaching ideas for the month.
There is a certain comfort
and power in knowing that thousands of other Meridian reading
families are working on the same value each month. You can also
go to www.valuesparenting.com
for additional ideas on each value.
Now, for this great month
of October, let’s turn our attention to the pivotal value of self-reliance and potential.
Of all the monthly values, this is one that has the most to
do with maturity and growing up and with children finding and
becoming their best selves. We define this month’s value as:
Individuality. Awareness and development of gifts and uniqueness.
Taking responsibility for own actions. Overcoming the tendency
to blame others for difficulties. Commitment to personal excellence.
Introduction
Our
fifteen-year-old daughter, true to her age, her hormones, and
her nature, had spent the evening altering between hot anger,
cool sullenness, agitated irritation at other family members,
and woeful, sorrowful withdrawal. “I’m going to flunk math because
the teacher is so weird. He never explains anything. He grades
way too hard. He never calls on me when my hand is up. I don’t
care anyway, grades are way too important to most people. Actually
it’s my brothers and sisters who are ruining my grade. They’re
so loud and noisy, I can’t study around here. Forget about an
A! A B- is okay. It’s not best, but it’s good, and no one should
be dissatisfied with good. If you’d been around more to help me
study, maybe I wouldn’t be this mess.” It was a not-so-rare collection
of statements illustrating self-criticism and the blaming of others
that goes on so often with some adolescents. But it wasn’t our
daughter’s truest self. We had learned that at such moments there
was little to do but wait for that truer inner self to emerge.
It
finally did, about ten-thirty. “I’m sorry, Mom and Dad. That was
stupid. It’s my class and my grade. It’s my own fault about the
last test. I’ll go see if I can make it up. I know I have the
ability to get an A.”
Jekyll
and Hyde? So many adolescents are. The challenge for parents is
to encourage the Jekyll and help it win over the long run.
There
are two separate but closely related principles involved here.
The first is the self-reliance of accepting the responsibility
for and the consequences of one’s own actions and performance,
rather than blaming luck or circumstances or someone else. The
second is the finding of our full abilities by trying to be one’s
best self and asking the best from oneself — the conscious pursuit
of individuality and potential — and the conscious rejection
of avoidable mediocrity.
“Self-reliance
and potential,” as we have called it, is a powerful value. Those
who have it help others by accepting responsibility and doing
their best in the world. Those who don’t have it hurt others by
blaming them and by failing to develop the gifts and talents that
could serve or enlighten or benefit other people. One who reaches
his potential helps others in many ways as he develops
himself. One who never seeks his full potential indirectly hurts
others by not doing the good or setting the example
he is capable of.
This
value is about trying to know ourselves, to do our best, and to
accept the consequences both of who we are and of what we do.
One
way to think of self-reliance and potential is as two sides of
the same coin. Self-reliance has a lot to do with taking the
blame or the responsibility for negative things that happen.
Potential has a lot to do with taking a little credit and
taking the right kind of pride in what we are able to become and
what we are able to accomplish. When we take blame and responsibility,
we resolve and grow and improve. When we don’t we become bitter,
jealous, and defensive. When we take positive pride in what we’re
doing with ourselves and our gifts, we feel the growth of individuality
and self-esteem. When we don’t, we tend to become followers of
plodders in the standard ruts of life.
Good
luck in making this your family’s value for the month of October!
General Guidelines
Use
yourself as the model and example.Show your children that you “value this value” and that you work for it.
Take every opportunity to show your children how you are
trying to improve. Talk about the things you think you’re good
at and working to become better at.
Show
pleasure in thing you do well. Also, be obvious about taking the
blame for mistakes you make. Say, “You know, that was my fault.
Here’s what I could have done differently …”
Let
your children see that you can accept responsibility and blame
and let them see that you take pride in who you are and that you
are working to be better.
Watch
your children. Try to recognize
their gifts and help them develop their unique individuality.
We must know potential before we can reach it. Children
are not interchangeable “lumps of clay” that can be molded into
whatever we please. Rather, they are “seedlings” that have their
own separate and distinct gifts and potentials. We can never change
an oak into a pear tree. But we can watch and recognize as early
as possible who they are — and then nourish and encourage them
to be the best of whatever they are. As parents we must consciously
commit ourselves to finding out who our children truly and deeply
are rather than trying to conform them to who and what we wish
they were or to extensions of our own egos.
It
is tragic that, despite our professing that our children are our
highest priority, the average parent spends only seven minutes
per day with an individual child.
Praise. Reinforce your children’s self image
and individuality and build their confidence — that is required
for self-reliance. Like flowers under rain and sunshine, children
blossom and bloom under recognition and praise. “Catch them doing
something good” and when you do, give effusive praise! When they
make mistakes or fall short, help them accept responsibility for
it and ten praise that acceptance to the point that their pride
in their self-reliance outshines their concern over the shortcoming.
We’ll
be back in a week for some age specific teaching methods for preschoolers,
elementary age, and adolescents. Remember to visit the Eyres at
www.valuesparenting.com.