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    Do Your Kids Use You As Their Palm Pilot?

    By GalTime Parenting Pro Michele Borba, Ed.D.


    A mom was running late as she drove her two sons to school. "Can we pleeeease go back?" her six-year-old pleaded. "I forgot my stamps for show-and-tell."

    Any other day, this mom would have made a quick U-turn to retrieve the forgotten item. She'd done just that more than a few times. But something clicked in her head: "If I'm always rescuing my kids, they'll just take it for granted that I'll do it for the rest of their lives."

    So this time her response was different. "I know you're upset," she said, "but we're not going back. I'm sure we can figure out something else for you to share. Let's brainstorm some ideas."

    Her son was not thrilled, but by the time they got to school, he did have a plan-and this mother experienced an "aha" moment that would help her children learn to be more resourceful and less dependent on her.

    Related: The SuperParent Trap

    What's Your Current Parenting Style?

    How would you have responded? Thinking about how you usually act when your child seems frustrated, seeks help, fails or isn't doing a task up to your standards. Are you more likely to be a

    Protector: "If you need anything, I'll be sitting right here during the party."

    Rescuer: "I'll figure it out for you, honey."

    Over-involved: "I'm calling that kid's parent and telling her to invite you."

    Enabler: "You're tired, sweetie. Go to sleep and I'll finish this for you."

    Perfectionist: "I'm remaking your bed; you didn't tuck the corners in just right."

    Or something else? The truth is, if you want to raise an independent kid who can someday thrive (and survive) without you-and oh how I hope you do!-you need to show some restraint in the "lend-a-hand" department. Data shows that the 21st century parenting style is a lot of protecting, rescuing, over-involving, micro-managing, and enabling and it's not doing our kids any favors.

    If you feel just a tad bit guilty, then make a list of reasons why you should break these habits. Or write yourself a letter and describe how it hinders your child's independence. Reading it everyday will help keep you motivated. Then take a pledge to stop your habit, and go for it! Breaking old habits is hard work, but it's doable. Here are tips to help you move from "Doer" to "Guider." (Believe me, your child will thank you someday!)

    Related: 7 Secrets to Reducing Parental Stress

    A simple first step is getting your kids involved in chores!

    Learning to Guide, Not Do

    No parents want their children to suffer heartaches and disappointments. Our basic instinct is to try and protect our kids from frustrations and solve their problems for them. But doing so prevents them from developing the very skills they'll need to deal with the multitude of issues they'll face in the real world.

    If you really want your child to become self-sufficient and thrive without you, your role must be of a guider, and not doer. That simple twist teaches your children that you expect them to be resourceful by solving their own problems-whatever they may be-and that you believe they are capable of doing so.

    Here are some ideas to help build self-reliance and resourcefulness in your children.

    Identify what your child can do alone and then back off. It may be time for your child to fix his own lunch, make her bed, do some laundry or call for a dentist's appointment. It depends on your child's age, maturation, and current capabilities, of course. The goal is to not overwhelm children with new expectations. Gradually introduce one new task at a time.

    Stop rescuing. You may have found yourself rescuing your kids a lot lately. Kyle's too busy. I'll do her chores tonight. One way to change this pattern is to start with a family meeting where you agree together on a new policy about taking responsibility-whether it's for doing chores or finishing homework-and how any lapses will be handled. That will also help teach children that their actions have consequences.

    Boost organizational skills so your child won't use you as his palm pilot. Is your child misplacing library books? Unable to find sports gear? Losing teacher notes? Instead of bailing your child out, ask: "What can you do to solve this problem?" For instance, kids might hang up a special calendar on which they mark library due dates, music lessons, field trips and tests. Even a young children can draw "picture reminders." Learning to organize is an important skill all children need for managing their own lives-so they rely less and less on you as time goes by.

    Related: Ways to Help Disorganized, Forgetful Kids

    Teach brainstorming so your child can solve problems without you. The first step is to identify the problem and express confidence that your child can work it out. You might need to help kids at first understand that brainstorming means coming up with lots of different ideas, no matter how silly those ideas may sound. The next step is to identify the best ideas and figure out a plan for how to try them. With practice, children can use brainstorming to solve many issues that arise-without your help.

    Teach how to negotiate. Do your kids expect you to always be the arbiter who will end their battles? Try a new tactic. Teach them how to solve problems on their own. Explain that the purpose of negotiation is to work things out so all sides are satisfied. Establish clear negotiation behavior: Take turns listening to each other without interrupting. No put-downs. Only calm voices are allowed. Then practice using this skill as a family. Another negotiation skill kids can do by themselves is to use tie-breakers such as "rock, paper, scissors," drawing straws or following the rule that "Whoever went first last time goes last this time." Kitchen timers can also reduce squabbles over sharing.

    Talk about the future. Encourage children to think beyond the here and now, as appropriate for their age. For example, with a young child you might talk about the next day or with an older child, the coming summer. This is particularly important because, as author Mel Levine wrote in A Mind at a Time, we are experiencing an epidemic of "career unreadiness." Levine believes there are four major qualities common in young people who make successful life transitions:

    1. They are self-aware.
    2. They are keen observers of the outside world.
    3. They possess certain "tools" (the ability to master skills, develop work efficiency, and think productively)... and
    4. They are strong communicators.

    My favorite parenting quote is from Confucius: "The most beautiful sight in the world is a child going confidently down the road of life after you have shown the way." Tape it to your mirror so you don't forget your real goal in parenting.

    Are you overprotective? Are you a 'doer' as opposed to a 'guider'? Do we go too far as parents helping our kids today?

    More from the NEW GalTime.com

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    26 comments

    • Anona-gurrl  •  1 year 1 month ago
      If they did use me as their Palm Pilot they might be the only one's earth still using a Palm Pilot. :) Really though, it's a good article.
    • Caryn B  •  1 year 2 months ago
      I will wear my over protective parent title with no shame. At least every six months since my kids have been born a little girl in their age range has been kidnapped and/or raped and killed.
      So if you expect me to drop my kid of at some house and drive away hoping they are supervised - think again.
      The things that happen to little girls in this country is a shame - and they need to be protected - that should not even be on this list.
    • Dawn  •  1 year 2 months ago
      Our son's school has us sign and he signs a don't rescue contract at the beginning of every year since Kindergarten ! It's very empowering for us as parents and for his personal growth and sense of responsibility. This article spells out why it's such a great tool
    • crimsonlycans  •  1 year 2 months ago
      I think it's all my ego...
    • ME  •  1 year 3 months ago
      Great article! Guilty! I am more of a protector and probably just a 'touch' of everything else, except the over-involved. Thanks for a very informative article!
    • My02Cents  •  1 year 2 months ago
      I never complete tasks for my kids that they are supposed to do themselves. If they are assigned homework or chores - that is for them to do. They gain nothing by having someone do it for them. If you set up a rule or a chore, it's important not to back down from that or you will have a battle from now on. But I am guilty of keeping them on track. If I don't remember the library books or remind them to take their lunch to school, then I am the one who gets the phone call from the school that my child doesn't have a lunch that day or past due notices for the books. So in that case I save myself the extra trip to the school & pack the lunch myself or put the books in their backpacks. (My kids are in early elementary school BTW.)
    • Yellowhand  •  1 year 2 months ago
      I feel that I'm a rescuer as a parent. Once my children get frustrated with doing something I tend to swoop down and try to solve the problem for them. Instead of letting them solve it on their own. I've also been called and overprotective parent and grandparent. I have this need to try to protect my children at all times even as they are both adults. Like my 18 yr old still calls and let me know where she's at and when she's on the way home.
    • vasweetie09  •  1 year 3 months ago
      This is a true and wonderful article. I know of many parents who set heir children up for failures and then respond by reinforcing their rescue habits even stronger. It will weaken their children's ability to be independent and in some cases parents want that , so Im sure this article isnt for everyone.
    • TS  •  1 year 2 months ago
      I know that parenting does NOT come with a handbook,but as parents, especially mothers since we are generally the nurturers, we need to think about how our overprotecting and enabling makes for pitiful, dependent/co-dependent future adults and mates.
      The advice of this article is excellent, but I would absolutely love for an article, such as this, to be written specifically for parents that foster adult-child relationships...you know the one where they are still overprotecting and enabling their ADULT children when they are themselves parents and mates.
    • Msh  •  1 year 2 months ago
      Lets train up our children in the way that they should go and when they are old they will not depart. Train! We must do our part. Teach them to be the next generation of adults in charge, making decisions, laws, rules, etc. The family is the nucleus and the lives of the people that we touch are the community. What we send out will come back. Believe and receive!
    • The Prisoner  •  1 year 2 months ago
      Oh good grief, so now its the parent's fault. Face it some kids are just dumbspits. Nothing you do or don't do is going to change the course of history. Your kids will just end up where they were meant to end up and that is it. If you are a dumbspit and your babymaker is a dumbspit, your kid is going to be a dumbspit. Plain and simple. Just ask George and Barbara.
    • Nikki  •  1 year 2 months ago
      Love the article. I've been guilty of almost all of them at one point of another. But I am always trying to find that right balance!
    • Julie  •  1 year 2 months ago
      My son is 3 going on 4 so all of a sudden I'm repeating, "Now, I know you can do this yourself. Go on." But it's mixed with a lot of, "I'll be right here for anything if you need me." My problem is hubby never making our son do anything himslef. Afetrall, we did it yesterday, why aren't we doing it today? I feel like I'm teaching both of them.
    • Bonnie Belle  •  1 year 2 months ago
      I was made "too independent" as a child, with divorced parents of 5 that were both working and too busy to oversee the little things. This has led to me being very much an "oversee-er" with my own kids. I don't want them skipping baths, missing birthday parties b/c I didn't keep track of invites/our schedule, forgetting to brush their teeth, leaving their homework, forgetting show and tell items or whatever. Sometimes I wonder how I made it through those years! LOL. I don't overdo my involvement, but I keep do tabs on everything and do a lot of reminding.

      The one way I will admit to being overprotective on is being out of my or my husband's supervision. They visit grandparents, but overnight visits with others aren't allowed until they are much older and I don't allow them to roam the neighborhood or visit just anyone to play. Every single day there are stories on the news about missing kids or sexual abuse cases and that scares me to death. There are too many untrustworthy and sick people out there. So, Anonymiss, that may be your mother's line of thought... parents just love their kids and don't want them to be hurt.
    • Pinkamena  •  1 year 2 months ago
      My mother is overprotective in a different way. I have to ask her permission to even go outside into the yard. She makes it her goal to know exactly where I am and what I'm doing all the time. I am not exaggerating.
    • Julie  •  1 year 2 months ago
      Wow, could I make more typos???
    • robin  •  1 year 2 months ago
      I see this on a daily basis. Most parents are raising a generation of self absorbed, thoughtless, incapable zombies. The goal of parenting is to give your child the tools they need to be successful in their own lives. It is the most important job you will ever have and the hardest. I have raised 2 teenagers that I am very proud of, and truth be told helped raise others children too because they either asked for the help or there were no parental figures present. So do your job and do it well.
    • iupme  •  1 year 2 months ago
      I think this is a GREAT article for a lot of circumstances. As both a parent and an elementary teacher, I have seen the result when parents don't allow their children the opportunity to fail and work through a problem rather than fixing it for them while reassuring them that they are there as a safety net. Some parents never even let their kids onto the tightrope...
    • Lucky  •  1 year 2 months ago
      Excellent article! FANTASTIC advice!! It's about time new parents remembered the PARENTING part of having kids and not just the short term keep-em-happy!
    • good llak  •  1 year 2 months ago
      Yes, and I don't give a sh** what you think.