Child Rearing

Parenting Barriers

Parenting today has become somewhat of a tight-rope walk. Needs are demanding and channels of communication are choking.

By Neda Mulji | July 2022


There is an old adage that says parents are quick to promise that they will support their child’s every wish but refuse a simple request for an ice-cream cone. Parenting is a primal struggle to maintain a balance between the essential and the superfluous, and the assumption that ‘parents know best’. Perhaps, to the child, the ice-cream is more important than a bigger milestone such as an academic achievement. Small moments create precious memories that sometimes last a lifetime. One of the pervasive struggles is to step back and consider whether parents actually do know best or would do better if they followed a child-led decision-making policy. How much empowerment is acceptable to the parents in our society? It seems most of us want to empower our children but only with some heavy-duty condition attached – we want them to be empowered as long as they aren’t stepping on our toes or going against our wishes.

For most of us, the power struggle and flexibility in decision-making becomes a tight-rope walking experience that lasts a lifetime. The answer may be in exploring when and how to establish boundaries. These are not permanent either – as the child grows, the parent evolves to cater to different needs and offer greater flexibility to support their independence. Respecting children’s boundaries is perhaps as essential as maintaining boundaries with them. Sometimes simple things like asking for permission before entering their room, giving them space with friends, letting them choose whether they wish to accompany you somewhere or not, having a discussion about a raise in pocket money rather than making a unilateral decision, letting children decide the weekly menu are all examples of enabling them to make decisions for life.

Parenting unfortunately doesn’t come with a handbook and many experiences are daunting for both parents and children because of their physical and emotional demands. However, no matter how difficult it gets or how tricky the terrain, it helps to remember that parenting is not a project but an ongoing experience of teamwork. Often children, no matter how young, can come up with easier or more effective ways of doing things so ‘letting go’ is a gift that parents can give themselves, especially in big families where delegating roles and responsibilities can free up the adults’ schedules drastically.

Another slightly harder demand on parenting styles is the need to ‘withhold judgment’. Some of us who have raised teenagers may be familiar with the term ‘you’re being judgy’ as our children dish out that accusation promptly and brutally. Brutal as it sounds, they aren’t too far from the truth. They are growing up in a generation far removed from the ‘people pleasing’ ways we were taught. It took a village to raise a child, there was lots of social policing with extended family giving unwarranted advice, approval and criticism as they pleased.

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Neda Mulji is an adult educator, and the author of The Love Connection, a work of research on parental patterns in different cultures across all ages. She can be reached at neda.mulji@googlemail.com

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