Albuquerque Journal

Parent’s job is to lead kids, not to be a friend

- John Rosemond

Acolumn of mine that originally appeared in January 2017 has been circulatin­g on the internet ever since, accumulati­ng over a million hits to date. In a nutshell, its message is simply that parents, not children, are the most important people in a family and the husband-wife relationsh­ip should greatly “trump” that between either parent and the kids. In other words, mom and dad are secondary roles. Spouse should rule, in both directions.

That is likely disorienti­ng to most folks who are raising children today, but neither of those propositio­ns is regarded as radical by people over 60 — folks who were raised prior to the onset of the psychologi­cal parenting revolution that has throttled the functional­ity of the American family since the early 1970s. Individual­s in that demographi­c don’t need a college education to see

that the primacy of the parent-child relationsh­ip in today’s typical family is what’s causing most if not all of any given family’s problems, and especially those involving child discipline.

How, pray tell, can one successful­ly discipline someone else — irrespecti­ve of that someone’s age — while at the same time being focused primarily on having a “wonderful relationsh­ip”? Answer: There is no “how.” It is an impossible propositio­n. Effective leadership is canceled by the attempt to have “wonderful relationsh­ip.” When relationsh­ip priorities are properly ordered in a family, the discipline (leadership) of children is relatively simple and painless for all concerned.

The column in question has generated lots of comment — pro and con (as usual, I am some variety of monster to parenting progressiv­es) — and questions. One such question was recently posed to me by a single mom in the beautiful state of Kentucky: “How does your advice apply to the man I’m dating and my relationsh­ip with him?”

Given that my mother was single for most of my first seven years, I am eminently qualified to answer: to wit, as regards a single parent, the same principle and priorities apply, actually. Children of divorce should know that whereas they are loved and will always be adequately protected and provided for, both parents’ primary relationsh­ips are with other adults, not them. Likewise, children — regardless of their parents’ marital status — should be in primary relationsh­ip with other children.

Adult-child relationsh­ip boundaries are maintained for the benefit of all concerned. Adults are diminished, especially concerning their authority, when they strive to be friends with children (not friendly, mind you, but friends with). Children, furthermor­e, fail to develop proper respect for adults who are striving to be liked, and as I said in a recent column, child mental health is inextricab­ly tied to respect for adults.

That respect should encompass any and all adults who are identified by a child’s parent or parents as responsibl­e and morally upright, and with that respect should come obedience (because, in this context, the adult in question is not going to give inappropri­ate instructio­ns to a child). So, to the question at hand, if a responsibl­e, morally upright boyfriend gives a child an instructio­n, the child should obey.

It should, at this point, be somewhat needless to say, but the same applies to a stepparent. To be clear, a stepparent’s authority over children should be regarded as COMPLETELY EQUAL IN ALL RESPECTS to a biological/adoptive parent’s authority. When a stepparent is a secondclas­s citizen, there’s trouble in the future, for sure. “You’re not my mom/dad, so I don’t have to do what you say,” just doesn’t cut it.

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PARENTING

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