Five Dangerous Things YOU Should Do To Your Kid

Abraham and Isaac

Abraham and Isaac

FWIW (“For What It’s Worth”), from the Huffington Post:   “Five Dangerous Things YOU Should Do To Your Kid:    [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-jim-taylor/5-dangerous-things-parent_b_4562960.html]

Nutshell:
1) Give Your Children Conditional Love
2) Don’t Praise Your Children
3) Let Your Children Fail
4) Let Your Children Feel Bad
5) Don’t Give Your Children Your iPhone

Indeed, what if we “expose (y)our children to truly ‘dangerous’ experiences such as conditional love, no praise, failure, bad feelings, and boredom. These treacherous encounters will surely serve (y)our children well as they begin to experience the many perils that lie ahead in their lives.”

************************************************************************************

Here’s the article copied in full:

Perilous Parenting

Dr. Jim Taylor Headshot

5 ‘Dangerous’ Things Parents Should Do to Their Children

Posted: 01/10/2014 9:13 am EST Updated: 03/12/2014 5:59 am EDT 

Click here to watch the TEDTalk that inspired this post.

I thoroughly enjoyed Gever Tully’s TED video of “5 Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Kids Do” and agree with his thesis that parents these days are far too protective of their children. Paradoxically, in parents’ well-intentioned attempts at protecting their children from harm, they actually leave them less prepared for the real dangers that kids will face later in life.

I also concur that exposing kids to a little danger can be beneficial to their development. Exposure to what are for them risky experiences can build confidence, resilience, competence, respect, and responsibility, as well as develop cognitive, emotional, and motor skills that will help children as they transition into adulthood.

Like most things in life, unconditional and conditional love are neither good nor bad; it is what you do with them that makes them so. — Dr. Jim Taylor

Of course, it’s easy for Mr. Tully to make this argument when he doesn’t have kids; he doesn’t have the hard-wired “protect your children to ensure their survival” instinct kick in at the first sign of danger.

Though exposing children to Mr. Tully’s tangible dangers offers many benefits, I would argue that the dangers that he wants you to expose them to are far less threatening than they actually are because the potentially harmful consequences are immediate and will surely be mitigated by a watchful–though hopefully not overly intrusive–parent.

In contrast, I would suggest that you can do five things to your children that are far more “dangerous,” yet will have a far greater impact on them as they develop.

Give Your Children Conditional Love

Here is a statement that will be truly heretic to today’s “parent-industrial complex”: Conditional love is good! Like most things in life, unconditional and conditional love are neither good nor bad; it is what you do with them that makes them so.

I’m not talking about what we as parents feel; of course, we always love our children no matter what they do. But rather what children perceive, and I believe that they do perceive loss of love. They don’t know the difference between disapproval and withheld love.

Conditional love that is used to threaten or control your children is bad, for example, when you use what I call outcome love, in which you make your love conditional on your children’s success or failure in school, sports, etc.

Love is your most powerful tool for influencing your children. Rewarding your children–love is really the ultimate form of reward–regardless of their behavior robs them of one of their most important lessons, namely, that their actions have consequences. What more powerful inducement to good action is there for your children than their perceived threat of losing your love?

You can instill healthy values and behavior, such as respect, responsibility, compassion, and generosity, by giving praise–offering love–when your children demonstrate these and showing disapproval–withholding love–when your children don’t demonstrate these values.

Don’t Praise Your Children

“Good job!” is the most common praise you hear parents giving kids. Yet, it is lazy and worthless praise. The reality is that children don’t need to be told “good job!” when they’ve done something well; it’s self-evident.

The purpose of praise is to encourage children to continue to engage in positive behaviors. So, if you’re going to praise them, be specific, for example, “You worked really hard on that school project!”, so they see that their great effort is what led to their success.

Unfortunately, many parents have been misguided by the “self-esteem movement,” which has told them that the way to build their children’s self-esteem is to tell them how good they are at everything. But research has shown that students who are lavished with praise were more cautious in their responses to questions, had less confidence in their answers, were less persistent in difficult assignments, and less willing to share their ideas.

Children develop a sense of competence by experiencing success, not by being told they are successful.

Let Your Children Fail

Fear of failure among children is epidemic in America today. At the heart of fear of failure is the belief that if children fail, bad things will happen. For example, they will disappoint their parents, experience embarrassment or shame, or feel worthless. In a culture of “never good enough” and an economic landscape filled with uncertainty, parents are terrified of their children failing.

Yet, by protecting your children from failure, you are making it less likely that they will succeed. The reality is that the most successful people in all walks of life have failed frequently and monumentally on the way to success. Only by failing can your children learn essential life lessons, such as resilience, perseverance, and problem solving, that will ultimately lead them to success.

Let Your Children Feel Bad

As a parent, you hate it when your children feel bad. It tugs at your heart strings when they are afraid, disappointed, or sad. Your natural tendency is to try to make them feel better as quickly as possible by soothing, placating, assuaging, or distracting them from their ill feelings. Yet, in doing so, you rob them of the opportunity to experience, learn from, and, ultimately, master their emotional life.

When you don’t allow your children to experience their emotions, you prevent them from understanding them and figuring out how to deal with them in a constructive way in the future. Your children need to be able to just sit with their unpleasant emotions and ask “Why do I feel so bad?” and “What can I do to get over feeling this way?”

Don’t Give Your Children Your iPhone

Expediency is one of the most dangerous words in parenting. It means doing what is easiest for you, not what is best for your children. You now have more ways than ever to keep your kids entertained and out of your hair. We have truly reached new heights (or should I say depths) thanks to the iPhone, the Swiss Army knife of parental expediency, for dealing with bored or cantankerous children.

What are the ramifications of children who aren’t left to their own devices (no pun intended) when they don’t have anything to do? Your children may become literally addicted to technology because its frequent use triggers the same neurochemical activity brain as do drugs and gambling.

Children are deprived of the opportunity to get out of their doldrums on their own. And they will struggle when they get bored later in life in the classroom or office. Children may also not learn that sometimes they have to be respectful of others and need to just sit and wait until their parents finish what they are doing.

In conclusion, I encourage you to expose your children to the risky experiences that Mr. Tully advocates. More importantly, though, I urge you to expose your children to truly “dangerous” experiences such as conditional love, no praise, failure, bad feelings, and boredom. These treacherous encounters will surely serve your children well as they begin to experience the many perils that lie ahead in their lives.

Ideas are not set in stone. When exposed to thoughtful people, they morph and adapt into their most potent form. TEDWeekends will highlight some of today’s most intriguing ideas and allow them to develop in real time through your voice! Tweet #TEDWeekends to share your perspective or email tedweekends@huffingtonpost.com to learn about future weekend’s ideas to contribute as a writer.

Parenting in Biblical Proportions

Parenting Choices of Biblical Proportions

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Mom, I Popped Part of It Off!

Wednesday, December 17th 2014 ~6pm

It’s like my kid can *smell* the spirit of my Adventure Play Parenting thrust. Bless him. After dialing in on the small hammer at our local hardware store (that has screwdrivers nested in its handle, no less!), striking out with me (“Probably but not today Darling, Christmas is coming…”), he successfully worked his Grandmother until she had me take her there yesterday to buy it for him for Christmas.  He returned from his weekly visit with her this afternoon proudly wielding the new prize already opened as a special EARLY Christmas Present.

Mom called to share her success in giving the boys nails and cardboard for hammering (Cousin Miles got one too; “They were over the moon,” she reports). I started to give him a coffee can from the recycling, but a cat food tin was stuck in it. When I started to pry the cans apart, my husband reminded me our son is waiting to use his *hammer,* a-HEM! So he pried it apart without incident, and then rode his roller skates on his scooter off to the neighbors for a while.

Beautifully, my husband and I managed to settle into a little happy hour action on the couch this evening. (Surprisingly unprecedented, but we *must* do this more often, DH.) After a while, we suspected our Dear Boy was off engrossed in video games or shows at the neighbor’s and asked our Dear Daughter to go invite him back home. He was, and she did. But he did not come. So I wrote a note and asked our sweet willing girl to deliver it. (He loves to read so I knew he would.)
“Dear Gavin, Please come home now. Love, Mom.”
No boy materialized.
Thanks to my Montessori Training, and her good nature, a second note was delivered:
“Dear Gavin, This is your third and final request to come home NOW. Love, Mom”
Pause a beat and a very grumpy boy comes stomping in the house. (Classic.)

“What’s with all the notes?!?” he demands.
“I was asking you to come back home.”
“Ya I KNOW. WHY!?!?!!!”
“First of all because we said so, that’s why.  And if you want to know other reasons, you can come over here with respectful body.”
[Reluctant grumbling and vague compliance.]
“Well first of all, this is your home and you live here. Also we are your family and we like to see you.”
And then he says this: “Well I’m going to spell this because my sister shouldn’t hear it. But *I* think that idea is F-U-K…[pause here while our jaws fly open in surprise and amazement]…I-N…[and he searches for the letters of his next word]… D-U-M… [more scandalized awe between us, mental searching for letters in him] …*E*!”

Frankly!? We reel in amazement. And scandal. Consult each other real quick down low about First Time Flukes, then let him know; “Gavin, I think we all know those words are totally inappropriate.” He nods in agreement. “But since is the first time you’ve tried it, and the fact you had the composure to spell it instead of say it… we’re going to let it go this one time.”
“Yeah because of my SISTER!” he points out, optimistically. (What chivalry. Such concern and, lo, *grace.* Ha.)

[Also, that he is willing to spell *without* worrying about accuracy is actually a big recent breakthrough for us, but that is another story.]

“If you want to hear the other reasons we wanted you home, we can tell you, or you can blow it off. Either way.” He wants to know the reasons.
“Well for one, we thought you might be watching videos or playing video games at your friends.” (He’s vaguely rolling around on the couch, being a six year old in constant kinetic motion.) “Also, you have your new tools and there’s the hand-vacuum that’s pretty much broken, and thought you might want to dis… assemble it,” and I’ve lost him.  He’s instantly dialed in on it with 100% of his being before I finish the sentence.

Disassembling Boy

Disassembling Boy

Fast forward several interesting discoveries later, and we have a budding expert on our hands:

“Mamma! There are no more electrical forces going on. You wanna know how? I cut all the wires, and I even broke the chip in half. See? No more electrical forces going on!”

Hey It's Magnetic!

Hey It’s *Magnetic*!

Dear Boy has also been learning about Chanukah and wants to light a Menorah, so we did.  (Starting imperfectly our first time ever, on the 2nd night, during dinner, which is the only time we seem to accomplish anything as a family.  I hope it’s not offensive to not do it correctly.  I wouldn’t resent someone else trying to emulate traditions practiced in my family’s culture.)

ClaraJane Lights the Menorah

ClaraJane Lights the Menorah

I guess there’s nothing like playing with fire.  Glad to know there are opportunities for exposure to nature and physics around us all the time.

I’ve also noticed this exposes us to more mess:

2014-12-17 19.59.54-1

Side-effect of exploration; Mess

Mess with Photobomb though:

Side effect of exploration: Mess

Photobombed Mess

That does look better already, doesn’t it?

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Five Dangerous Things Kids Should Do

Have you heard of Gever Tulley and the Tinkering School?

Here is an amazing 4 mins on the types of Life Lessons kids derive from TINKERING:  

 

MOREOVER, here is Gever Tulley’s TED Talk on 5 Dangerous Things Kids Should Do:

(This is a true gem, so I hope you find a way to play it at least for a part of your brain while you’re multitasking something else.) [9mins,22secs]:

 

In a nutshell:

5 "Dangers"

5 Dangerous Things Kids Should Do

 

What could possibly go wrong?

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No worries Mom!

 

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Kids are Born Scientists: Get Out of Their Way

OK, THIS:
Want Scientifically Literate Children? [2mins,9secs]:

This is the most grumpy I’ve ever seen Neil deGrasse Tyson speak, but I appreciate his conviction. Here the same point articulated another way:

Neil deGrasse Tyson and how Kids are Born Scientists [2mins,14secs]:

“We don’t have enough parents who know how to value the inquisitive nature of their own kids.”  ~Neil deGrasse Tyson

And if you don’t know Neil deGrasse Tyson, and his incredible series COSMOS, here is a mere taste:

To me Neil deGrasse Tyson is nothing less than than the world’s authority on all things Science for the People; someone whose every word I am prone to dangle on… even if I do nod off to sleep at times under the spell of his sonorous voice during the infinitely interesting episodes of his COSMOS series (available on NETFLIX… DO NOT MISS IT).

And of course, this series is meant to pick up where Carl Sagan left off a few decades back. Speaking of which, I just found the first episode of THAT one on YouTube! [1hr]:

OK, that’s my public service to science, and kids, “and people,” for the day.

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Cuteness Overload: ClaraJane and Fluff

Thursday, December 10th 2014 @2:25pm

This just in. ClaraJane’s ride home from school today:

ClaraJane and Fluff [28 seconds]:    [http://youtu.be/wDgT_mPGjnM]

Correction:  I misquoted ClaraJane in this film.  Where the subtitle says, “A CJ little girl,” she informs me she in fact said, “A ClaraJane Girl!”  which I agree has a better ring to it.  Moving imperfectly forward however…

Girl and Bunny

Girl and Bunny

 

Fluff and oh, a GIRL!

Fluff and oh, a GIRL!

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Gotta Start Somewhere – ClaraJane and Simra

Even as I sit down to type right now, my daughter is climbing out of the empty drawer slot in the living room entertaining our 1 year-old next door neighbor girl, and our son is outside the door making fabulous Hotwheel creations with young neighbor boys; either of which I could create scintillating documentation around. But after generating media, one need also REVIEW, EDIT, POLISH and CURATE.

The paradox however, is when surrounded 24/7 by this nonstop firehose of material that is KIDS… as for handling the media one so readily generates in spades… the question remains; WHEN?

To wit: now the big little girls are intently playing KITCHEN with the innumerable items in the Play Kitchen area we have partially blocking the door to the office, while being studied equally intently by the CAT.  And it’s adorable.  But am I going to take photos and videos?

Am I?  I was going to say, “no I am not,” because I want to tell you about this other stuff. But who am I kidding?

I Can't Resist This Stuff

I Can’t Resist This Stuff

And speaking of these two, here is my favorite photo of them:

They're Practically Twins

ClaraJane and Simra

They’re practically twins.  (o:

Anyway, I hoped you enjoyed this digression as I have.  This one in near real-time.

On to other recent happenings!

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Rockwellian Christmas Tree Day

Sunday, December 7th 2014

Blessed with no work on this early December Sunday, Dear Hubby and I undertook to take our kids OUT of the city and INTO the country to find ourselves a Christmas Tree.  Imagine:

A drive just long enough to shake off shades of the city, and voila:

"Country, Etc."

“Country, Etc.”

A simple greeting from the lovely proprietors of Wolf Hill Farm, and we’re off through the woods.  First up, this heavenly brook:

I wanted to capture the essence of it and slip it in my breast pocket and take it home forever.  But with kids such a fleeting thought is about as close as you come to actual communion with nature.  Or anything.  Like, thoughts.

"MUST POKE WITH STICK."

Boy:  “MUST POKE WITH STICK.”

On the other hand, possibly my favorite photo bomb of all time:

Girl:  YouKnowWhatMom?

Girl: YouKnowWhatMom?

And the moment is gone.  But lo, what’s this?

Pinch Me

Hi Boys

Pinch me.

Am I Dreaming?

Am I dreaming?

Through the woods to a Christmas Tree field:

With the Twins

With the Twins

Looking for The One:

Can you spot the Boy?

Can you spot the Boy?

Hmm, why does that tree have pirate boots?

Oh that explains it

Surprise!

Not sure which tree to choose, so let’s try a Flamly Pic:

CircusKitchen Selfie

CircusKitchen Selfie

We agree on a tree and Daddy does the honors. (Sorry tree!  And thank you farmer!)

She's a Beauty

She’s a Beauty

I’m happy this is the most barbaric thing we do in the woods:

Man and his Coup

Man and his Coup

Boy moves in for the kill with Hand Saw:

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Shaped like a *gun* no less!

[Kids and tools: a whole other post.]

kljhkjl

Saw with Daddy

More Boy in Glory:

Chisel and Hammer

Chisel and Hammer

Even sharing the love with his Sister!

Here's how you hammer and chisel, Clarita.

Here’s how you hammer and chisel, Clarita.

When she did it, he exclaimed, “You’re DOING it Clarita!”  (Such sweet Big-Brotherly Love his Mamma drinks in like Manna.) #swoon

On another note, one huge perk of pulling out the Christmas decorations is dressing up the cat:

Peter Parker as Mrs. Claus

Peter Parker as Mrs. Claus

You can tell he totes *loves* it, although perhaps not as much as Flash Cat here with us cracking up at him:

Kill me now

Save me

In case you’re worried about the cat, here he is contemplating his life in the corner:

How did it come to this

How did it come to this?

Because I’m usually everywhere but home on weekends, having the day off and spending it with my family and feeling like a stereotype -archetype perhaps- never felt so good.

Tree’s not decorated yet, but here’s a taste of the magical Christmas Spirit infiltrating our home we love so entirely:

Star Light Star Bright

Star Light Star Bright

First star I see tonight!

 

 

 

 

 

 

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ClaraJane and Mary – True Plintecity

December 4th 2014

That time when my 3 year old daughter ClaraJane met her brand new cousin –my sister’s ONE DAY OLD baby daughter Mary– and had this to say:

2014-12-04 True Plintecity [90 seconds]:

 

PS:  Posting on March 4th 2016.  HAPPY BIRTHDAY AMANDA!

*          *          *          *          *          *          *         *         *          *         *         *         *

See also:  Miles & Gavin – The Beginning! 

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Chain Reactions

Friday, November 28th 2014

Prime Number Themed Robot

Prime Number Themed Robot

On this day Gavin and I headed over to M.I.T. (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) for our first time attending the annual F.A.T. (Friday after Thanksgiving) CHAIN REACTION event. It was so cool. Teams from anywhere enter their home-made “Chain Reaction” Rube-Goldberg-esque contraptions in this event where they all get linked together.  (The theme this year was “Prime Numbers.”)

Here we are waiting for the Games to Begin:

Mom & Boy Date

Mom & Boy Date!

Here is a team of boys Gavin got to ask about their use of HEX BUGS (little robotic kinetic toys) in their contraption:

Hex Bug Driven Chain Reaction Contraption

HEX BUG Driven Chain Reaction Contraption

Team members were all ages, including many engineers of course, not just kids.  Gavin and I agreed there is probably no where else you will find so many grownups playing with kids’ toys in one place.

As part of the event there were also materials available for spectators and families to play and build with, including stacks of dixie cups, old DVD cases to line up and knock over like Dominoes, and toothpicks for linking together with GUM DROPS.  This gave me the inspiration to throw a jar of toothpicks and *raisins* in my purse before heading out for dinner that night with Grandpa and the gang.  It was a hit!

Building Boy

Building Boy

Cousin Olivia got on the action too:

Naturals

Cousins Busy Building

What Naturals!

Here is my son’s beautiful face (pardon me for saying so) absorbed in the gorgeous Rube Goldberg Machine at the Boston Museum of Science, which we visited the next day:

Dreamin'

Dreamin’

*sigh*

Here is a page featuring 10 brilliant Rube Goldberg machines from around the web/world, all of which I hope to watch with my Boy: http://coolmaterial.com/roundup/rube-goldberg-machines/

If you only get to see ONE video, this is it; arguably the world’s most famous Rube Goldberg machine, created by the incomparably creative rock band OK GO.  ENJOY!

 

[Also hope to watch every dang video OK GO has produced, which can probably all be seen here on their OK GO YouTube Channel, but alas that’s another day.]

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Charlie Brown Thanksgiving

Happy Thanksgiving everyone!

Enjoy.

Charlie Brown Thanksgiving [25mins]:

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