HaloHope
Senior Member
- May 25, 2007
- 506
- 165
- Faith
- Christian
- Marital Status
- In Relationship
- Politics
- UK-Liberal-Democrats
I understand your point. It's good for children to know the different ups and downs and ins and outs, when they are ready. Morality needs to be instilled by parents, because if it isn't, then it will be instilled by something/someone else. Thanks to television, even inanimate objects can be where they find their moral roots (hope you have the channel locks on lolol). And also there is peer influence, which tends to override morality at times, and if the child doesn't have any moral guideline from their parents, its anything goes.
There is one major difficulty with your approach, I've tried it, and there has got to be a parent/child boundary in place. It's much easier to be a friend, but if you care about your child's future and wellbeing then you have to know when to draw the line between friendship and parental responsibility.
Children are very self centered, even from birth. They are very instinctual, so the common theme is "memememe". If they are never taught to move past that, then they will have much difficulty with social interaction, as well as learning humility.
Hmm, this is an interesting subject.
Would you say that your own upbringing influences your view here?
I was raised in a single parent family, my mother never really put any boundries and restrictions on me. I did what I liked and really, when I liked too. My mother was more like a freind than a parent.
While I dont nessecerily agree fully with her casual approach to parenting, I liked the fact I could talk to her as a freind. I feel it certainly helped me deal with problems in my life a lot more easily that I could talk to my mother as a freind other than a parent. If she had been a strict authority figure (like my grandather was when I temporarily stayed with my grandparents) I would not have been able to talk to her as easily as I had.
Upvote
0