Tonight, I made my son cry. No, not cry, sob. No, not sob,
HOWL. Seriously, I think our neighbors down the street were wondering why the
coyotes were out in January. But it wasn’t really my fault. I gave him multiple
warnings. He knew exactly what I expected him to do and he knew exactly what
the consequences were if he didn’t do it. And yet, he didn’t do it. And then he
seemed completely astonished when I enforced the consequences.
Let me pause for a moment here and assure my readers that I
am not a pushover. I am, admittedly, more lenient than Daddy. But when I say, “You
will do [X], or [Y] will happen,” if [X] doesn’t happen then [Y] does. I tell
him the consequences, I give him one warning, and then BOOM. Consequences. After
all, I was the Sunday school teacher/babysitter who was often told by parents, “Why
does s/he always do what you say but never what I say?” It was because I told
the children the consequences of their behavior, and then I enforced them. Just
like I do with my own children.
The difference is that with my own children I feel horribly
guilty when they cry and protest. I don’t relent, mind you, but I do feel
horribly guilty. Which I why I felt so vindicated when, after having a discussion
with my son tonight about how sometimes you make decisions with your words and
sometimes you make them with your actions, and then telling him that he’d have
a chance to make a different decision tomorrow and that I loved him even when
he made decisions that neither one of us was happy with, he quietly told me, “Thanks,
Mama. That got all my cries out.”
Well. If that doesn’t just break a mother’s heart and then
put it right back together again.
Disciplining my children is by far the hardest part of
parenting for me. I know I have to do it; I know they NEED it. But finding the
right balance of being harsh enough that they’ll think twice before disobeying
again and being gentle enough to not break their spirits is not an easy thing, especially
since I am a very meek-spirited mother of two very strong-willed (but
sensitive) children. It constantly surprises me how much I think back to my own
childhood and my own parents’ consequences and discipline each time I
discipline my children. I am all too keenly aware of the things that my parents
said to me that cut me to the quick, and also of the things that made me laugh rebelliously
to myself. And, like my parents did, I try to walk that tightrope.
And most of the time, I fall off. As do all parents.
Not once, in my son’s 4 years on this planet or my daughter’s
2, have I not had a second thought about a punishment or consequence that I
imposed. And yet, my children still come running to me in the morning, begging
for hugs and kisses. They want me to play with them all day long; they snuggle close
to me every chance they get; they long to show me new skills they’ve learned;
they run to me with tears running down their faces, craving a kiss to mend a
real or imagined boo-boo. Obviously, any mistakes I’ve made have not scarred
them psychologically or made them afraid or me or doubtful of my love for them.
They are as completely secure in my love and protection as any human being can
be of any other.
Maybe I make less than perfect parenting decisions
sometimes, but all it takes is a hug or a “thanks” or “I love you, Mama” from
my children to know that somehow, I’m still a pretty good mom.
And in the end, as long as they’re happy, I’m happy. Because
after all, what more could a mom want for her children than for them to be
happy for the right reasons? Knowing that my children are happy is what gets
all MY cries out.
Not sure why this showed up in my Facebook feed today, but this is in the category of "Best Of!" And I don't feel the least bit of guilt, which is probably why I'm the "heavy." That's why God invented two-parent families. The nurture and the rule. I love our partnership. And Ryan and Katie do, too. :-)
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