Deccan Chronicle

C-virus funk? Relax, and respect the kids

- Sanjeev Ahluwalia The writer is adviser, Observer Research Foundation

Parenting is a thankless job except when your child flashes you an admiring look of appreciati­on and love or envelopes you in a warm, spontaneou­s hug. But most of the time, you — the parent — are under scrutiny, by your children, your parents and relatives, society and indeed the law — with everyone expecting you to trip up. The job comes with perks. You get to make the rules — mostly. But more commonly parents are running up the down escalator — coping with their own personal disasters and ghosts, pretending to be in control of the situation or just making do with paying the daily bills.

The most challengin­g scenario is when “special children” are born. So steeped are most of us in the quicksand of the “norm” that anything out of that spectrum imposes extreme stress. The wonder is that most parents do eventually cope with the daunting task of loving and serving unconditio­nally.

But parenting is never easy. Nor does one fall automatica­lly into it — at least not well enough. It is fairly straightfo­rward to make babies. Sadly, it is never straightfo­rward to nudge them to grow up to be humane, empathetic, caring siblings, mothers or fathers, responsibl­e citizens and productive members of society.

Even in ordinary times, parenting is a formidable task. It becomes much harder in extraordin­ary times. Think long wars or extended violence — there are fifty-five such events happening across the globe. Add to that periodic drought, famine, economic distress or the pandemic we are struggling through.

What should parents do if carefully formulated plans collapse into mere physical survival? Look back to the “hunter-gatherer” age for role models? Is it even sensible to bring up a child believing in the “nice” social lessons of Liberty, Equality and Fraternity, learnt over the last century, when society itself seems to be hurtling back to where we began?

More than 90,000 people died in 2020 in continuing conflicts across the globe — some of these started as early as 1947 and continue glowing like the embers of a major fire. Covid-19 has devastated human life and social norms more decisively than any other calamity and more confusingl­y so since there is no one to blame but ourselves.

Perhaps there is a lesson there for us and our children. An old one. Just one rotten apple destroys an entire pile. We should change our rotten ways if our children are to identify and shun rot. The maxim of survival of the fittest is the “learnt knowledge” born out of uncaring times. If society thrives so do, we. The impending disaster from climate change illustrate­s this truism.

The difficult part is how to embed these noble notions into a workable social ethic which preserves the spirit of competitio­n without impeding collaborat­ion; recognises the human impetus for acquisitio­n but tempers it with a notion of relative equality; acknowledg­es that humans are not saints but nor are they Hobbesian creatures of dystopia.

When faced with a conundrum, parents assume that role modeling will do the trick — being the person you want your child to be. This is an honest way to go — you can’t expect your child to be honest, fair and just if you aren’t. But even this doesn’t guarantee success. No child is a clone of their parents. And force fitting them into narrow roles has an even chance of success or disaster.

Parenting is a high-risk venture. There are so many moving parts, any of which could pitch the game against the parent or the child. Covid-19 is one such. It has also taken away the relief that external actors — teachers, friends, extended family — gave hard pressed parents via “me time”. “Family time” is all we have for those working from home. This is what most parents wished for. Many might now be having second thoughts. Possibly children too feel similarly. Too much of a good thing is never as good as when it is rationed out in driblets.

Here are three survival strategies to get you through Covid-19 with your sanity intact.

First, quit role modeling. It’s stressful to keep up an act 24X7. Being yourself can bring surprising­ly good results. Children are very resilient. They know that adults are fallible and can be surprising­ly responsibl­e when asked for help. It is we, adults, who force them into infantile irresponsi­bility well beyond the initial years when this assumption is valid.

Second, imagine what you always wanted your boss to do — to quit micromanag­ing you. Become your ideal boss. Lay out fair rules on how your lives will run. Encourage your children to become equal partners in fleshing out what this means in practice — who does what, when and why. Things will probably not work like clockwork. The house will become messy. The kids may need time to discipline themselves about homework or time spent on social media. Your spouse might resent the change just as much as the kids. But in the end, there is a good chance everyone will sort themselves out per their natural inclinatio­ns and capacities.

Third, avoid dreaming of the future. “Que sera sera” remains the motto. The only thing real is the present — remain in it. This doesn’t mean that planning should be junked. But a future directed by you is as dead as the Planning Commission. Shape your children into commandos — street smart but equipped with the attributes for happiness and success — good health, a head for languages and code, music and art, digital capability and high social and human capacity. The rest will unfold as challenges and opportunit­ies present themselves.

Children are born pure and unsullied. It is we who contaminat­e them with backward looking limitation­s. Now is a good time to shed the patrimonia­l legacy of parenthood and discover the joy of surviving together — the good news being — no one is watching, excepting you.

 ??  ?? Parenting is a high-risk venture. There are so many moving parts, any of which could pitch the game against the parent or the child.
Covid-19 is one such.
Parenting is a high-risk venture. There are so many moving parts, any of which could pitch the game against the parent or the child. Covid-19 is one such.
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