Disadvantaged Youth

452 Relax and Succeed - I am two

When parents talk about kids having it easy, they’re talking about the fact that they’re not dealing with either money or relationship issues. But to the child their challenges are very real and the emotions they face as a result are the exact same ones we face.

This means terrible disappointment feels like terrible disappointment whether we’re broken up about a divorce, or broken up about the fact that we can’t play at our favourite friend’s house. Relatively speaking, the disappointment is just as big and it’s felt just as strongly and we would do well to remember that.

Another thing worth remembering is the fact that kids are human. We see this all the time. A child is considered to have misbehaved every time they do something other than exactly what the parent wanted. They essentially get scolded for being their age.

Kids learn through interaction. They learn through trial and error. To be scolded for that is to be scolded for being human.

It’s understandable that parents get frustrated when their kids repeatedly drop stuff off their high chair in their attempt to understand concepts like gravity or here and gone—but we put up with it because they’re babies or toddlers.

Notably, as soon as kids can talk they’re treated increasingly more like employees or soldiers. They’re simply supposed to do what they’re told and anything else is classified as misbehaving, not healthy human independence. That said, finding the right line between those two can be very challenging.

There is a very good reason for a parent to have time sensitivity in the modern world,  but there is also a very valid reason that explains why making adult choices about time management are impossible for a kid. These are often days where parents can create teaching moments regarding how to apologize.

452 Relax and Succeed - So often children are punished

There are days where you get a bad sleep. Maybe it was the way your body was positioned. Maybe it was the dreams you had. Or maybe you’re ill and don’t know it. But everyone’s woken up feeling less than ideal and it makes the day a lot harder. Diets can impact our moods as can the various bacteria and viruses that compromise much of who we say is ‘us.’

Again, notably, adults can have those bad days. Kids don’t get bad days. Kids are being bad when they’re disagreeable. They don’t have the luxury of a grumpy day from a rough sleep or through not feeling well. We rarely give them that latitude, and if we do we often overcompensate and give too much. Bottom line; if a problem’s not visible, we act as though it doesn’t exist.

Despite being independent humans with their own thoughts, kids often can’t even just  want something different. They often aren’t ‘allowed to’ need some time alone. Every disagreement is seen as bad behaviour rather than recognizing that it’s possibly just being created by the simple and very real differences between the parent’s personality and the kid’s.

Sometimes kids aren’t being obstinate and difficult —sometimes they just know who they are and they know what directions feel like theirs.

The fact that society makes demands on them that are unnatural doesn’t mean there’s something wrong with the kid —the concept of society itself is just a subconscious agreement we all make to follow largely silly unnatural patterns.

Just because some guy invents the concepts of a clock and a job doesn’t mean that every individual human being is wise to live their life according to those two things. (See: Intentional Being Video)

452 Relax and Succeed - Normal is getting dressed in clothes

If we want to be truly healthy we have to respect what we all have a nature that often feels out of sync with our lives. We should consider that at least in some cases, forcing ourselves into the shapes that society demands for conformity may not be healthy.

Kids are still wise enough to resist society’s pressure as unnatural. Yes, kids will have to learn ways society cooperates with each other, but we can go too far. Adults get subdued into a state of mind where they just follow the patterns and lose all consciousness. And then they wonder why they’re always tired and barely laugh while their kids laugh all day and then zonk out.

Yes, kids need to learn society’s systems because those are mostly formalized methods societies have developed to manage large numbers of people, like traffic or the tax system, or how business works, being able to flow within those systems is helpful. But we do not want to do that at the expense of losing our Selves.

Humans are imperfect beings that learn as we go. Because of this, parents must maintain their emotional resilience while their kids test limits and make mistakes. Without those, we steal every individual’s ability to grow.

We all need to avoid an expectation of perfection from kids. We need to start to understand their behaviour not as something that’s not only relative to us and our rules, but as something unto itself. Egos assume everything has to do with them. So when a kid has a tantrum in a public place, it is often first seen as the kid is making the parent look bad, rather than the kid is having their own very distressing experience.

Do we think back in our ancient tribal history that, when we saw a kid freaking out, our reaction would have been to try to get them to conform so we would look good to our fellow tribesmen? Or do we think we would have watched them in an attempt to understand their actions? Might we then see that the kid is discovering how the world works, or maybe they’re actually noticing something valuable that we’re missing?

452 Relax and Succeed - Childhood is not a mental disorder

Parents will have conflict with their kids when they try to talk them out of a noisy instrument like drums in favour of some musical instrument they have zero interest in. If a kid loves drums and we buy them a guitar because it’s quieter, then the kid isn’t being difficult by not wanting to go to guitar lessons —he or she is just being a drummer.

Largely we spend too much time reciting complaints and shortcomings to kids. We need to stop and ask ourselves if what they’re moving toward is really a problem, or are we creating one by wanting them to do what we expected rather than what was natural for them?

As an example, some people are naturally nighthawks and some people are natural early-risers. An early-rising parent who forces a nighthawk awake is placing a greater value on society’s external rules than on nature. Even their love for and appreciation of the individual that is their child doesn’t overcome that. We may not find that fact convenient but it’s true.

Cities and nations etc. make us conform. We have to surrender who we are to some degree to function smoothly with others. But beyond that a lot of people will still demand changes just to suit them personally. We can’t blame kids for pushing back against any unnecessary restriction —they’re right. We’re the ones who’ve been brainwashed and convinced to subjugate our own natural impulses just a little too often.

452 Relax and Succeed - Play is often talked about

We need to watch ourselves around kids to make sure we’re behaving less as a corrections officer at a prison camp filled with rules, and more as a fellow human being who is co-discovering the world alongside them.

In the jungle there are no bedtimes, no wake times, no school and no rules. There is the world and how it works and after that everyone’s allowed to be who they are. And it works, because that kid in the jungle will know and understand their world far better than any city kid who only sees the world as a set of pre-organized concepts that can only be manipulated in pre-decided ways.

Ego based life is life is being a Transformer or a Go-Bot that can strictly change from this into that. A spirit based life is more like being Lego, where we have the freedom to become anything we can imagine and find a way to create.

Kids are people first and the children of their parents second. It helps them if we respect them as individuals. Instead of only and always telling them what to do, we also need to try listening for who they are. What do they place a value on that we don’t? And is that idea worth pursuing?

Maybe no one in our family plays an instrument but our kid sits at every piano they see. Now that’s a kid to put in music lessons. Maybe we want them to sit still and they can’t. Well maybe they’re a kinetic kid who’s a dancer or an athlete. Maybe our kid likes to be off alone drawing or reading. That’s not anti-social, that’s a dedication to practising something creative.

We all need to respect children as future adult individuals. Yes, they do need our help establishing healthy limits. But we shouldn’t always assume we know best. For daily practical daily reasons there is no question about the fact that sometimes they just have to water-ski along behind our adult days. But, whenever possible, we really should do our best to try to see their behaviour as having less to do with us and life’s rules, and more to do with their own individuality and how that meets this great big world.

And don’t let this panic you too much. Most parents are doing better than they think, and that’s largely because humans in general have the capability to be remarkably resilient when they know how.

In the end, parents can take some pressure off themselves. It ultimately isn’t a parent’s job isn’t to teach a child who to become. It’s strictly to stay open and aware enough to be able to help each child realize whoever they already are.

peace. s