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An
excerpt from: Hidden Messages: What Our Words and
Actions are Really Telling Our Children
By
Elizabeth Pantley
Casual
Remarks
It’s a
curious affliction: the tendency to talk about one’s
children in the most brutally honest and hurtful ways
without realizing that the cherished subjects of the
offensive comments are listening to every word. Right now,
you may be saying to yourself, “This never happens to
me.” Perhaps. Perhaps not. But I think there’s a good
chance you’ll see yourself in at least one of the
following examples.
Unloading
a cart full of Cheerios, macaroni-and-cheese and hot dogs at
the grocery store’s checkout counter, a harried mother
chats animatedly to the cashier.
“… Only one more week ‘til summer vacation,
then the kids will be home all day. I can already hear the
bickering and whining! I don’t know how I’ll manage to
live through the next few months! Want to buy two kids,
cheap?” The cashier laughs and shakes her head, “Oh, no
thanks, I have my own! I know what you mean! I’m already
waiting for next September!” In their supposedly innocent
light-hearted banter, neither one notices the shopper’s
two children standing right beside her, listening quietly to
every hurtful word. Neither one notices a pair of small eyes
cast downward just so, or a nervous little cough.
Consider
Amir’s situation as he walks in the door after another
grueling day of work. His joyful, eager children run for
Daddy, but Mom spies him coming in just before they have
their chance to pounce. And the daily gripe session begins.
“I am SO glad you’re home. I need five minutes of peace
and quiet. These kids drove me crazy all day! Abdi and
Sheida have been like wild animals. They were fighting in
the living room and knocked over the potted fern. Aria has
been acting like a two-year-old—having temper tantrums
over every little thing. The wash machine is broken again
and I have four stacks of kids’ dirty clothes piled up in
the laundry room . . .” Quietly and unnoticed, three
dispirited children fade into the background of the family
room and turn on the TV.
Then
there’s Megan, chatting on the phone with her best friend.
As usual, the conversation turns to the daily issues with
their children. Megan dramatically relates how very annoyed
she was with Kyle at baseball this morning. “I was so
embarrassed!” she groans. “Kyle struck out and he
stomped his foot like a baby and threw his helmet on the
ground. You’d think he was five years old instead of
15!” She chuckled. “ I think adolescent hormones are
taking over.” Meanwhile, said adolescent is just a few
feet away, pretending to work on his homework—but actually
suffering the embarrassment of listening to his mother talk
about his very real pain as if it were some big joke.
I know
many parents who slip into the type of unfortunate
conversation of a mother and father who approached me after
a recent parenting lecture. They were anxious to talk with
me, bemoaning their three-year-old’s latest behavior
problems. “Molly’s been a good girl until recently.
It’s like we’ve entered the terrible twos a bit late.
She’s just no fun anymore. She’s constantly yelling
‘No!’ to us and won’t listen to a word we say. We’ve
tried to be patient, but she’s pushed us to the end of our
rope!” I glance down to see a little three-year-old
(Molly, perhaps?) clinging tightly to her father’s leg.
But she’s only three, she doesn’t understand what
they’re saying, this couldn’t possibly hurt her.
Or so we
think.
The Hidden Message
“I
can talk about you all I want, and since you’re just a
child you’re not listening to what I say anyway. You’re
not worthy of the same respect I’d give another adult.
Besides, this is how I REALLY feel about you, and I don’t
care about your feelings—you’re just a kid so your
feelings aren’t important.”
Think
About It
If you
don’t believe that your children hear your casual remarks,
try this: As you chat with a friend or your spouse, casually
slip a question in the middle of your conversation.
Something along the lines of, “Do you think we should
round up the kids and take them out for ice cream?” Be
ready to hop in the car when you hear the chorus of,
“Yes!” from the four corners of the house.
Children
do not always react outwardly to what they hear. However, if
you could see into their hearts, you would find a record of
every careless word, every thoughtless action, every adult
laugh, that here, in the most tender and vulnerable of
places, was not found so funny. Here would you find also
significant—and often, inappropriate—meaning attached to
these products of childhood observation. Children struggle
through the growing-up process, and along the way they
question who they are and what their meaning is to this
world and to their parents. A parent’s potent words, and
the multitude of other comments, gestures and actions, help
a child paint a picture of who he really is, and how
important he is in this world. How tragic for that child if,
despite how we really
feel, that painting is not the masterpiece we
envision!
Changes
You Can Make
Given
the extreme importance of your words, it simply makes good
sense to choose them carefully. From now on, if your child
is within hearing distance assume that he may be
listening—and don’t say anything about
him that you wouldn’t say to
him.
If you
see a bit of yourself in the previous examples, you’re no
different than most parents. But that doesn’t mean that
this behavior needn’t cease. Such a simple change could
have a very positive impact on your children’s lives. As
you talk about your children—and let’s face it,
they’re among our favorite topics—pay attention to how
those words sound from your child’s point of view. If you
think that what you’re saying, or about to say, can be
construed as hurtful or embarrassing, stop. Talk about something else.
If
you’re not sure what you’re saying has a negative impact
or not, ask yourself how you would feel if you overheard
someone talking about you in those exact words. Or perhaps
you can ask yourself, “If I were talking about my
boss/spouse/best friend to another person, with the object
of my comments listening, would I ever say such a thing?”
If your answer is a mortified laugh, then stop mid-sentence
and rephrase your comments in a more positive way, if you
find them absolutely crucial to the conversation.
Better
yet, find something shining and wonderful to say about your
child, and be sure your child hears it. That type of
“casual comment” can yield life-enhancing benefits to
your children. It may help them compose a more wonderful
vision of themselves. An image that they can carry with them
for the rest of their lives.
(Excerpted
with permission by NTC/Contemporary Publishing Group Inc.
from Hidden Messages – What Our Words and Actions are
Really Telling Our Children by Elizabeth Pantley, copyright
2001)
Website:
http://www.pantley.com/elizabeth
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