Monday, June 28, 2010

Be More Gooder: A Parentalogue on Process

This is what it sounds like (for privacy, I’m using the pseudonyms of Heckyl and Jeckyl when referring to my son [10] and daughter [7]):


Example #1

Dad: Have you practiced guitar yet?

Heckyl: Uhm, … (followed by a blank stare at book, video game or TV).

Dad: Well? You told me you were going to do it at 4:30. It’s 5:45 now. Where are you at with practice and organizing the books in your room?

Heckyl: Uhm, … ah … yes ... no … yes …what?

Dad: Hey, Heckyl. Hello? HELLO?!? Can you look at me please when I’m talking.

Heckyl: Uhm … ah o … k … . Oh! Hey dad. What’s up?



Example #2

Jeckyl: Daddy!

Dad: Hey monkey! How was school today?

Jeckyl: Good.

Dad: Tell me about one thing you learned.

Jeckyl: Good.

Dad: Good, yes, alright, it was a good day. Why was it good? Tell me about something you’re proud of.

Jeckyl: No.

Dad: Yes.

Jeckyl: No! The day was good. I don’t wanna talk about it.

Dad: How about later?

Jeckyl: I love you love you can we stop for snow-cones?


My children are really cool to hang out with. They’re smart, funny, strong, fast, clever and often curious. But, for some reason they have resisted all of my attempts at training them to be interesting and interested in the manner that I idealize for them. No matter how I try to draw their understanding and attention to the idea that we teach other people how to treat us through how we treat them, they insist on demanding my attention while refusing their own to me.

I think my expectations are pretty reasonable. I don’t expect them to “study” my invitations to manners and communication, nor do I ever suppose to impose that they repeat my lessons by wrote. They are 7 & 10 and they view the world through lenses that are always filtered by their own emotional and situational immediacy. Still, their fun-house mirroring of my entreaties is absurdly frustrating and I am left with only two options if I am to find some acceptance on the matter:

A) Allow time and practice to do their magic and slowly inculcate them through their own experience alongside my repetitious reminders on how to win friends and influence people.

B) Tattoo a short-list of my insights upside down on their upper thighs so that whenever they are resting in repose my “rules to live by” will unavoidably accost their sparkling and eager eyes.

Considering that there are laws which prohibit option B, I am left with no real choice but to continue down the path I’ve already hewn with option A, and hope for the best. However, since my short-term memory is receding at a greater rate than my capacity to redirect their attentions over and over and over and over again towards my live-by suggestions, I’ve begun an elastically revisable list that I can keep crushed up in my pocket at all times. Then, when the moments arrive in which I sense a susceptible opportunity on my children’s part to suspend all defense against me, I will yank the list from my pocket and lovingly work to subliminally leak all manner or explication and example of the simple premise that, “interesting people are those who show genuine interest in others.”



The Always-Already Incomplete Draft of Live-By Suggestions

* Remember what people tell you and ask follow-up questions later.

* A real person is “always” more important to listen to than television.

* Ask questions if what someone is telling you seems confusing or unclear.

* Please and thank you are powerfully persuasive communication tools.

* Be specific, give details and elaborate thoughtfully when asked about your day.

* People don’t know what you’re feeling or why unless you tell them.

* Eat healthy snacks frequently.

* Ask others to explain how they do their job, what they’re most proud of, and about the role they play in making people around them effective and happy.

* Look people in the eye when they speak with you, unless you’re in a part of the world where this a sign of disrespect (thus, the importance of always knowing where you are).

* Ask people what they want you to learn (not just do) when they’re angry at you.

* When juggling many people and expectations, make a reasonable plan and a plan to be reasonable.

* Identify and avoid clichés. If a cliché is necessarily pragmatic, be willing to make fun of its routine and elegant simplicity.

* Drink more water than you want to.

* If you don’t feel like talking, tell people when you think you will, or inform them you’ll let them know when you do feel open to sharing.

* Meditate on your self-awareness and practice of distinguishing between being quiet and being absent.

I’m starting to feel like a day-glo poster in an elementary school counselor’s office. But this is my list, crumpled in my pocket, not yours. You’ve got one. We all got one that we like to brandish on others at the slightest perceived provocation. We’re all full of rules and suggestions for how we want the people around us to act, to listen, to behave with us. It’s what makes us human, and not, say, a chimp or a sandwich.

Let me finish by admitting that I do all of these things badly. Or, at least, not as good or as frequently or as thoroughly as I idealize for myself. It’s hard work sharing space with other people. For some of us it comes less naturally than others. Distractions abound. They are ripe and beckon us deeper into our own hopes and dreams and fears. There are no fundamental tricks for being a present and loving dad or kid or mom or worker. At best, all we can do is ask good questions, listen carefully, and (even if we have to pretend) let the people around us know that we give a damn.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Excellent advice. mom

Anonymous said...

love it. sounds very familiar, and it's heartening to see it put into words so well.... i may have to start my own blog, and get some of this off my chest too, dammit!

Anonymous said...

i want that tattooed on my thigh.

Bernadette said...

I want your list.