I keep reading posts proclaiming
this generation of young people to be a generation of entitlement. As I dig
further into these pieces, I learn that mothers who plan great birthday
parties, glue googly eyes to gift bags, and play with their children bear the
primary responsibility for creating this generation of pompous youth. As a high school teacher and mother of five
members of this generation, I would like to challenge this seemingly popular
interpretation of society.
Never in my
twenty years as a teacher have I encountered a generation with more altruistic,
empathetic, and compassionate young people in it. When I talk to my students about their future
plans, they speak almost without fail about whom they want to help and how
their careers will allow them to do so. They tell me stories about mission
trips where they were forever changed, homeless people they have served in area
soup kitchens and gotten to know, protests for social justice they have felt
compelled to participate in, and prayers they say for others every day and
night. They are planning their futures
around the idea that they play a role in improving the world in which they
live.
I do
understand where some of the misunderstanding of kids and parenting today comes
from. We all know those parents who have
been planning their children’s college application since preschool. We know
those schools where recess creative play is pre-empted for anti-obesity
training on a regular basis and we have definitely sat next to at least one
parent at a sporting event who has her son’s camp schedule organized so that he
will be sure to make the NFL draft by the time he is 20. Of course there are
extremes out there; that is true with anything. But before we start shaking our
fists at the glue-gun wielding mom at the elementary school party or blaming
that Pinterest-inspired valentine for the downfall of society can we take a
minute to consider what those parents are modeling for their children? I would
argue the messages children learn are not about self-centeredness as much as
they are about self-giving. I confess that I have thrown my children some over
the top birthday parties, led four Girl Scout troops, played elaborate games of
pretend, built American Ninja Warrior courses in my backyard, and yes – glued
googly eyes to any number of objects – in fact a jar of googly eyes was our
table centerpiece for several months last fall. But my children are well-adjusted
and giving people. Here is what I and all the glitter sparkling parents out
there are teaching this generation:
- · Parenting if fun.
- · Parenting is a job worthy of lots of time, lots of focus, and lots of creativity.
- · Imagination doesn’t go away just because you grow up.
- · They are worth my time.
- · They are worth my creativity.
- · They are loved more than anything else by someone.
- · When you love someone, you give to them even if that means you are a cruise director to make them smile, even if it means you learn to do something you don’t like to do, even if it means you sacrifice some small part of yourself to do it.
See, I don’t
think these are such bad lessons for children to learn and I don’t think a
child develops a sense of entitlement by having selfless love modeled for him.
On the contrary, I think sometimes children who have parents who go to great
lengths for them learn to go to great lengths for others. I think children see
how their parents love them and then want to go out and love the world with
that much passion and that much enthusiasm.
That brings
me back to my students and to the real issue that is sparking these
conversations and concerns all over the internet. See, kids today are actually different. Those who have
been loved by these parents whose over-involvement we so criticize have learned
a few things that make people uncomfortable.
They have learned that they are valuable just as they are.
They have learned they should not let anyone dim their lights because their
lights make them special. Boy does that
make compliance a challenge sometimes.
They have learned that every day is an adventure with the
potential for fun. If we could harness that as teachers instead of squelching it, what
power we would have!
They have learned that they are important enough to ask
questions. No! We simply cannot have a
child asking why he needs to learn about misplaced modifiers or algebraic
equations! We might have to figure out the answers.
They have learned that they are entitled – yes entitled – to
LOVE and RESPECT. Apparently this means
we have to be nice to all of them!
Here is the thing: we don’t all have to shake our glitter
bottles to be good parents. But we do have to stop criticizing those parents
who do and not only that but we may have to start appreciating the sparkly and
enthusiastic generation they are preparing for the world.
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