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Tuesday, January 18, 2011

A Non-Parent's Opinion on Parenting

I'm not a parent yet.  Not even close.  I don't even have a dog.  But I don't think you have to be a parent  to have a reaction to the recent articles in the Wall Street Journal that commented on parenting styles.  The first was written by a Chinese mother who very boldly, profoundly and confidently stated the reasons why Chinese mother's most often produce highly successful children. And she bluntly meant more successful children than Western mothers.  She started out the article with a list of things that her children were never allowed to do: "attend a sleep-over, have a play-date, be in a school play, choose their own extracurricular activities."

Me as Alice
I had an instant reaction to the writer's words.  I was allowed to do every single one of those activities.  In fact, I was proud I had assumed the role of Alice in the fourth grade for my elementary school's production of The Trial of Alice in Wonderland.
I attended many sleep-overs where we stayed up too late, watched far too many movies in one sitting and ate more candy than was ever allowed in my household growing up.  So in reading the WSJ article I can say that my blood seemed to boil a little and I felt enrage at the suggestion that because of those things, this mother would have assumed I would turn out less than perfect.  Okay, I'll admit I'm not perfect, but I doubt attending sleep-overs and participating in school plays lowered my grade point average in the fourth, fifth, sixth grade or made me a less successful kid.

During my
ballet days (hard work!)
I can flat out say that I couldn't really agree with anything the author stated in her article, in fact, most of it just made me cringe.  But there was one line that especially stood out to me as being true and rather thought-provoking: "What Chinese parents understand is that nothing is fun until you're good at it."  The lady has a point.  I think as humans we are all inclined to like an activity, a subject in school, a musical instrument if we are good at them.  However, becoming good at something takes hard work, determination, dedication and I believe that initially to have the desire to work that hard at something, you have to like it, at least a little bit, far before you are any good at it.


You have to read the article to gain the full depth of this discussion.  If interested, I've made it easy, just click on the link below:
Why Chinese Mother's are Superior  


Clearly, I was not the only Western American that was riled up by the Chinese mother's article.  The rebuttal came only a few days after the first article, again in the pages of the Wall Street Journal.  This time, it was by a Jewish mother and outlined her antithesis to parenting which included letting her children decide what activities they wanted to partake in and when they wanted to quit said activities, the copious amounts of TV and computer games they were allowed to partake in and the fact that even though her kids were allowed to do these things, they too received good grades in school.  I had a problem with this article too.  The mother seemed to be almost too far on the other end; not pushing her children to excel when the opportunity was there and allowing them to quit when it seemed things got a bit hard.  I finished this second article with the feeling that both extreme points had been made but that I agreed with neither of them.  I suppose that's what these types of commentaries are meant to do...


Rebuttal article:
In Defense of the Guilty, Ambivalent, Preoccupied Western Mom


I hardly ever read the Wall Street Journal so I appreciate both these articles for making me pick up the paper and become interested in what each author had to say.  Since reading both pieces, I've thought about each message and the points that were made in the black and white letters typed out on the newspaper pages. Here I am, not even a parent, and I became a bit enthralled with the ongoing discussion of what was the "correct" or more "successful" way to parent is.  What I realized is that this discussion reaches beyond the boundaries of parenting.  I know I'll face all these decisions one day when I am a parent and frankly, I haven't really thought about how much TV my kids should watch or how many sleep-overs I will or won't let them attend.  But right now, as an adult, I need to just focus on the kind of person I want to be.  What new boundaries and new challenges will I set for myself.  I for one, think my western parents did a very successful job raising me so now it's time for this western grown up to live successfully.


"The purpose of life, after all, is to live it, to taste experience to the utmost, to reach out eagerly and without fear for newer and richer experiences."
~ Eleanor Roosevelt

6 comments:

  1. I thought they both had good points. From my end, I can only say, as a non-parent myself, that parenting seems really hard.

    http://ficklecattle.blogspot.com/

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  2. Rachel: I saw the interview you speak on on NPR. Made me cringe as well. This Mother: Totally humorless, totally controlling, borders on child abuse, crazy making, if anything, suicide inducing! Can't children be allowed to be children and learn joy of just being? We are first and foremost social animals in need of contact and love. How can we love, if we are not allowed to grow with love? This Chinese mom is way off base when she thinks that kids grow healthy with this kind of unrelenting harassment to be perfect in everything academic. I would love to see what these girls are doing in 10 years, 20 years. What kind of children will they raise?
    Uncle Paul

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  3. Rachel,
    I read both articles and think you make excellent points. I can't imagine restricting children so much...not letting them even be in a school play can help with raising a well balanced, creative, independent well rounded child. All I know is that it does take hard work if you really want to be good at something. Far to often children want to give up when it gets too hard. Life is a balance and learning that at a young age is invaluable as children grow. Rachel...you'll make an amazing mom!

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  4. Rachel,

    Perhaps one of the most difficult aspects of being a parent is taking enough time from the rush of daily activities to consider how your current decisions might impact your child's future development. In that you are considering this before you even a child, there is no doubt your children will be fortunate to have you are a parent!

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  5. Ditto with PJ's and your mother's comments. Different cultures, different parenting styles, that's for sure, but I still don't understand why being in a school play should be absolutely forbidden. (Is Chinese theater going out of style?) I can only imagine being the "less than perfect," "garbage" child of a one-child family in China and the living with an intense, relentless "mother from Hell." No wonder the exodus to the Western World... Conversely, this parenting style may be why you see so many brilliant Chinese people with strong family traditions. It makes my blood boil when I see disrespectful, lazy (and fat!) U.S. kids, with no boundaries, a "you owe it to me" attitude, who are also violent, on drugs, messed-up, etc... What a great TV reality show it would be to have a Family-Swap with this type of family and a Chinese family! That would certainly be interesting... Professor Chua's comments that children do need to be pushed and need rules to go by is true, but, I also agree with Mrs. Roosevelt's quote at the end of your piece, that we need to live our life, to "to taste experience to the utmost, to reach out eagerly and without fear for newer and richer experiences."

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  6. Parenting: One of life's most difficult jobs, no requirement for a license, and no instruction manual. Yet, when it works out, it's a beautiful thing. Wouldn't have it any other way.
    Besides, I'm trying to stay on my son and daughter's good side. Someone has to buy me a condo in "The Villages" when I can no longer eat solids.

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