Showing posts with label emotion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emotion. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Ten steps to great parenting. Not.

Raising a child is a chaos. But its not. Really? So they say- those many many authors and specialists who have broken it down, classified it, demystified it. Now we have a formula for play time, shortcuts to easy dinners, simple steps for potty training and behold, a process for tantrums. All packaged and ready to use like a cake mix. A reason to rejoice, right?

Not for me. This system of simple steps has always raised mild alarm bells in my head. I wasn't too sure why. Some soul searching and a lot of recent reading has given me a clue to why "organized" child rearing" bothers me so much. Well, to start there is the approach where the parent pulls back to look at the child as a separate little entity that has to be trained into a certain way like a little dog, pushed and sculpted to fit an accepted mold. I wonder why we have to detach ourselves so severely from the tinies who were a physical part of us and continue to be an emotional part of us, to be so rigidly objective or to plan our responses so methodically.

I understand that there needs to be a "letting go" at some point to demarcate the child's sense of self, to build his/her confidence but perhaps it doesn't have to have a formatted transition. Each culture has its own path to this letting go, its own processes and its own values it seeks to transfer. There is no ONE way, there is no ONE solution.

I also feel that planning our parenting strategies to such a great extent kills our emotional responses, or spiritual instincts that are otherwise at play in this relation between parent and child. A naturalness in our natures that automatically reaches out to nurture and relay aspirations and despair. The contemporary science of parenting seeks to propagate only the positive, only the "presence" but what can be positive and present if it weren't for the negative and "absent"? How can we block one dimension- the one that lends us depth- of our existence from our sensitive little people without consciously pushing them away? I think, though it might sound rather regressive, that transmitting positive and the negative- happiness and sorrow- are so so essential for the wholesome development of a child. (By negative, I don't mean intense anger, hate or any other emotion that is self destructive and extreme) And we don't live in a happy, yet plastic Disney Land- we exist in a real world with real emotions. So why not be real with our children?

When a child is born, so is a complex multi-conscious bond that replaces the physical cord that was cut. This connection is not a uni-direction or even a dual directional one like a string but one that is fluid and pervades the ether of our lives. So in essence it silently fills into the negative spaces and mixes into the everyday like an ocean. Parenthood is a hybridization of our existing lifestyle with the life of the newcomer. This mixing is a gentle process, a quiet process that may have many a turbulent turns. But it is a natural process. One that needs time, patience and understanding- precious commodities that our jobs, schedules and hobbies don't permit.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Wonder Child

I cannot believe that two years have flown past so quickly. And it will be just a matter of time before A will be all raring to go to college and I will be sitting wondering how life just zoomed by me. So easily I forget to catch hold of each day and savour my son's wonderful accomplishments- his learning a new rhyme, his first understanding of numbers, trying to scale the bookshelf (Ok, thats scary...and its fine if I freak out!!!) as I am caught up in our little skirmishes about food, giving him his bath on time and other such trivialities and I fail to thoroughly appreciate our soccer matches, how smartly he imitates me, his apptitude for technology, his stubborn streak. When I do open my eyes I'm amazed at how much of me there is in him. The little things that annoy me so much like his singlemindedness, passion to explore and wanting to be constantly challenged(read that as gets bored easily) are qualities he probably inherited from his momma who most definitely gave her momma a very tough time. A, you're so very precious and perhaps you won't realize this until you have kids of your own but your daddy and I are so dependant on you that you'd be surprised. Though you need us to keep you safe and fed, we so desperately need you to keep us sane, together and in love. You're our mission, our cause and our soul.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

I'm feeling.....Orange!!!

Have you ever had an orange feeling? I mean its a feeling that doesn't have a descriptive word in the English language. A warm feeling...not entirely good but not bad either. Kind of hanging, kind of missing something. Maybe a little restless and a little lazy. You go about doing your job somewhat enjoying it. But your mind flits about. You want to here...but there as well. Its like you haven't made up your mind. A little surreal.

Or am I just crazy?

Monday, April 23, 2007

Little nothings

My fingers brush against the keys
To find the words that scurry away
Like little crabs upon deserted shores.

Its heavy, its strong,it grips my heart
but what it is I cannot say,
If I could I wouldn't feel this way.