The Columbus Dispatch

Parents should set example for child’s aptitude socially

- — Anonymous CAROLYN HAX you Write to Carolyn — whose columns appears on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays — at tellme@washpost.com.

One of my children has a challengin­g personalit­y. Within my family, we are aware of it, and deal with it, and love him oh-somuch. As he is getting older, I can see how teachers, coaches and neighborsf­avor him less than my others. He’s not as socially adept, athletic, comfortabl­e around adults, etc. I don’t even know what my question is, really ... I guess suggestion­s on how to support him? I know he will become aware of this, if he isn’t already.

He knows it, or will soon — just as everyone does who has traits outside the favored bounds. Ask a poor student in a wealthy district, or a person of color where the color of power is white. Ask short men about the humanity-negating effect of women who cite, “I can’t wear heels!” as grounds to reject them. Ask a beanstalky kid what it’s like in the fifth-grade hallways where disappeari­ng into the crowd is a sacred mission. Ask fat people how warmly embraced they feel by 21st-century America. Ask people on the autism spectrum, or their families.

People who don’t check some preferred box can make a childhood’s work — a life’s work, even — of navigating an outside world that “favors them less than others.”

I’m not minimizing the challenge your son faces or you face in raising him to be comfortabl­e in his own skin. To be emotionall­y well-adjusted can be an adult’s most precious asset, and building confidence in childhood is where that starts.

And yes, the biggest obstacles to it are often next to us at the dinner table. We accept there are smarter, prettier and more athletic/ talented/charming/fortunate people out there somewhere — but it can torment us to feel nthbest at home.

The healthiest way to teach your son not to think that way is for not to think that way.

That’s why I reeled off those other challenges. Maybe this son has the hardest path relative to your other children, but your sample size doesn’t have to be that small and might not serve your son that way. Instead, look around at how normal his challenges are.

Treating him as typical is a form of support and validation. Typical kids have areas where they need extra help. Make sure he gets what he needs — screenings, tutoring, social-skills training, His teachers also might have ideas.

Once any needs are being met, then consciousl­y shift to his strengths. Teach him to cultivate them.

Kids who are naturally socially adept can make you look like a great parent, but the ones who aren’t are where great parents are made. The warmth you show will ultimately help him find his own way.

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