It is important that you do not confuse “nurturing the relationship” with “being your child’s best friend.” You will find it is not possible to be friends with your children in the traditional sense of the word�at least not while your children live at home. The primary reason for this is that effective parents do not share equal power with their children. You need to have the final say when necessary.
Parental leadership means that as a parent you set the expectations and rules. You make decisions about what is best for your children and the family. You hold your children accountable for their choices and enforce consequences when appropriate. Just as executives do not share all the information with their employees all of the time or include them in all discussions, you also must maintain appropriate boundaries by holding some discussions “behind closed doors.”
As your children grow they will undoubtedly test your leadership and hierarchies in general. As a result, you will inevitably find that your children may be mad at you fairly frequently as they test both your relationship and your leadership.
You probably cringed the first time your toddler said, “I hate you.” By the time your toddler is a teen there will be an array of such phrases they may use to test your relationship or to attempt to flip the family hierarchy in their favor. In those moments, do not give in to such phrases, reverse your decisions, or focus solely on attempting to make the child (or yourself) feel better.
Activity: List your family members in order of who has the most power in the family to who has the least power. Compare your observations with those of your spouse.
Do you think you have given some power to your teen that should belong to parents? If so, in what ways? Compare your answer with that of your spouse.
Parental leadership does not mean you should refuse to listen to your child’s opinions, ignore family members’ needs, or routinely make decisions without consulting family members involved. Parental leadership also does not entitle you to break agreements, have double standards, or mistreat your child for misbehavior. It does not release you of the responsibility to admit fault and apologize for your own mistakes.
In fact, parental leadership means you set the tone for the home and must therefore lead by example. Stephen R. Covey once noted, “The key to your family culture is how you treat the child that tests you the most.” It is part of your responsibility as the leader to model kindness, demonstrate respectful behavior, teach patience, and set the standard for positive, complimentary, communication.
Often parents don’t overtly recognize the ways in which too much power has habitually been given to a child. A common struggle many parents face is consistent arguing once a decision has been made. The continued argument frustrates parents and leads them to give up, allowing the teen to have his/her way. It is in this moment that parents give away some of their power to their child.
One mother stopped enforcing rules and consequences with her daughter in an effort to decrease the arguments they were having. Before too long this girl’s mom felt completely powerless and hopeless about her ability to parent. The hierarchy had been flipped and mom was at the bottom. It took time and the support of her husband, but the mother built her courage up and was able to take her place in the family hierarchy.
We have found that when teens ask for permission to do something, some parents have a tendency to immediately respond with “no” before understanding all the details. The teen then begins to argue for why it should be okay, giving additional details which lead the parent to change their mind. At other times, teens simply refuse to take “no” for an answer no matter when the answer is given. Eventually the teen wears the parent out and is successful at getting the parent to reverse the decision. No matter how it occurs, reversing a decision generally teaches teens to believe that “no” does not really mean “no.” As a result, parents give their authority away and actually invite more arguing.
Guilt is another thing that can lead parents to abandon their rightful place in the family hierarchy. When children don’t get their way and are frustrated, they may try to make parents feel guilty, often by bringing up perceived wrongs from the past hoping this will make the parent be more lenient. Parents need not feel guilty for mistakes they have made in the past. Rather, they acknowledge wrongs, seek to make amends and move forward. The best way to make up for a past wrong is to do things right today. Giving permission when you feel you shouldn’t will increase, not decrease your guilt.
What things have contributed to the current hierarchy in your family?
These basic guidelines and ideas will help keep an appropriate and healthy balance of power in a family:
Remember, when you effectively maintain parental leadership, there will be times when your children are mad at you. Your first priority must be to do what is best for your children, not simply what will minimize conflict.
We have found that when children have held a lot of power in their families for most of their lives, it is very difficult for them to let go of this power. While some parents have successfully reclaimed power from older children still at home, others have found it too overwhelming. As a result, there are some circumstances when parents should move to de-emphasize imposing restrictions and the need to obtain permission. At the same time, they seek to improve the quality of the relationship by maximizing respectful interactions and increasing communication.
They also focus on assisting the adolescent in making the transition to adulthood, where they experience the consequences of both their wise and poor choices. This includes setting up teaching opportunities for the basic skills they will need to live on their own. The bottom-line boundaries center around what the teen must do to continue to live at home or what they must do to continue to receive financial support from the parents.(A Homeward Bound transition coach can help you determine whether this approach is the right one for your family or not.)