![]() The long-term negative consequences of obsessively protecting children from encountering difficulty ensures they won’t learn to solve problems, won’t learn to bounce back from failure and won’t learn to adapt their approach. However, leaving a few natural challenges and obstacles in their path doesn’t seem too unreasonable. ![]() ![]() Now I’m not going to suggest we need something as drastic as a war to harden up our children’s psychological health. Has anyone found that is how life works when you get out there in the real world? Smooth sailing all the way?Ī bulldozer style of parenting, while terribly well-intentioned and meant to “protect” the child from short-term harm, ultimately results in a psychologically fragile child, fearful and avoidant of failure, with never-learned coping strategies and poor resilience. In a passive-aggressive manner they forge ahead before their child, removing all obstacles, ensuring success at every turn. However, the bulldozer parent takes a completely different approach. Kids have to know what life is really like out there. Let them learn what life is actually like Figuring out for themselves how to meet increasingly difficult challenges will build self-confidence and encourage goal-striving across the lifespan. ![]() This allows the child to learn adaptive coping functions that build failure-tolerance and resilience. This “vaccinates” the child psychologically so they can respond in an adaptive and functional manner when a larger stressor comes their way. This strategy will provide them with “stress inoculation” - small amounts of stress will give the child the opportunity to learn adaptive coping strategies. Then keep upping the ante, as they master each step, have them ride on different terrain, in harder circumstances. Give them some training wheels to start, but little by little release your grip, even if that means they might fall off the bike a few times and risk injury. The way I would suggest you do this is to start your child young, when the brain’s motor development is most receptive. Imagine you want your child to become a competent bike rider. In fact, avoidance of failure (and a total disregard for how important it is in progressing child development) appears to have become somewhat of an obsession in the modern parenting cohort. “Failure”, however, appears to have become a dirty word in modern parenting. That’s right, fail! Because in the face of failure children will need to develop some effective coping strategies to deal with their emotions they will then need to figure out what they did wrong and finally, adapt their approach and try again in a different way. One thing that has fallen off the radar of modern parents is the importance of offering genuinely challenging tasks that give the child the opportunity to fail. Kids can’t learn from their mistakes if you wrap them in cotton wool. Essentially, parents have a terrific opportunity to offer constructive experiences to their child in order to shape their brain (and therefore psychological) development, especially during “critical” or sensitive periods where the brain is most receptive and malleable. I recently wrote an article outlining how the developing human brain “wires itself” to the environment in which it finds itself. Letting your kids failįast forward to today’s culture, in particular the experiences we provide for our children in preparation for their lives ahead. It also keeps your individual focus on the bigger picture and prevents you from ruminating and dwelling on a range of perceived negatives, that relatively speaking, aren’t that important after all. But one aspect that most psychologists agree upon is that working together to find solutions to overcome a serious problem (Hitler), even when it involves high risk and high cost, is surprisingly good for building community resilience. Now there’s a range of reasons for this beyond the scope of this article. They had all lost dearly loved ones in brutal circumstances and did not waste time stressing over what we would now term “first world problems”.īut surely, I hear you cry, something like a war causes untold psychological damage and widespread mental health problems! Well here’s the conundrum: during WWII and the period shortly after, mental health-related mortality was at its lowest. They also had a great sense of perspective. They were all, as a result, tough old birds. My grandparents lived through the Great Depression and World War II. I found this comment very amusing (possibly more than I should have given the context), but as a grand-daughter of four WWII veterans, I knew exactly what she was talking about. “You know something though,” she quipped “compared to the WWIIs, the baby boomers, well … they’re so … emotionally needy!” An aged-care nurse was recently telling me that their nursing home was seeing most of their World War II veterans pass away, to be replaced by baby boomers.
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