There never was or ever will be a book or
treatise on how to be a parent that fits all situations especially in a parent
and adult child relationship.
How do you advice an adult child on the
possible and even probable consequences of a choice when bravado or machismo or
stubbornness or even desire is obscuring parental logic? It’s not easy and
sometimes impossible to do so. The young need to experience the prideful glow
of right choice and the disappointment via consequence of wrong choice. It’s
the way they grow intellectually and the way they grow up and mature
emotionally.
The difficulty for parents is when an
adult child makes a decision that is inimical to the values of family, illegal,
or the choice will put the adult child in harm's way that he or she cannot
imagine because of their youthful enthusiasm and limited life experience.
A case in point and question comes from a
Mother, a reader, of this blog.
Her son in his early twenties decides to
join the army. He’s young and strong and with youthful strength there often
comes the illusion of being invulnerable.
The parents believe that once committed
and trained the young soldier will probably be sent to a war zone. A place no
parent wants a child to go, no matter how old and mature or trained a young man
or woman is. It’s a parent protection thing that often usurps the zeal of
patriotism or even an altruistic desire for humanitarian service if the action
puts the child in harms way.
There is no one answer to the Mother’s
question on this issue. Do you encourage or discourage with reason the son’s
choice?
Parents must answer that question as they
see fit and handle it uniquely for their given situation. The only commonality
between all parents of all cultures is the love of their children.
All parents can do is unconditionally
love the child, offer good counsel and make sure their suggestions are not
interpreted as demands and then let life take its course.
It will anyway.
No comments:
Post a Comment