The Star Early Edition

Telling adult children what not to do

Forewarnin­g or allowing them to learn from their mistakes is a delicate balance, writes Nancy L Wolf

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THERE’S a lot of talk recently about letting children fail so they can learn how to live. But what happens when you have adult children and you’re a perennial parent like me?

It is our strongest instinct as parents to rescue our children. But we shouldn’t always do so, says author and teacher Jessica Lahey in her recent, thoughtful book The Gift

of Failure. Parents of growing children do them no favours by scooping them up on the playground of life to save them from every slip and fall.

When our children are young, Lahey explains, they learn from failure, so we must let them experience it rather than rush in to protect them from the consequenc­es.

This is a concept I well knew in theory years ago, when my high school son left his biology textbook at school one afternoon before a big exam.

But what happens when our growing children are grown?

If our young child falls off of a playground slide, his scraped knee heals. If our teenager doesn’t get accepted into the university of his choice, he’ll probably do fine at another one.

But if we think our adult son is about to enter a disastrous marriage, our adult daughter is in a relationsh­ip harmful to her mental health or our son’s partying ways are spinning out of control, the stakes are much higher, aren’t they?

Lately my friends and I have been sharing our worries about our adult “kids”.

My friend’s 30-year-old daughter struggles in a tumultuous relationsh­ip with an unkind man. Upset and crying, the daughter calls my friend and says that despite how he acts, she really loves him and can’t part ways. Can’t she see, my friend wonders, that she is hurting herself by staying with him?

The 26-year-old son of another friend recently began his first job at a big financial firm. He has always been a model kid, dutiful and well behaved, but suddenly has started to go out to bars with friends every night, partying till the wee hours and arriving late at work. He just received a warning notice from his boss. Can’t he see, she thinks, that he is messing up at a critical time?

And yet another friend’s 29-yearold son brought his girlfriend home to meet my friend and her husband. The girlfriend’s strongly controllin­g manner upsets my friend, as does her son’s changed behaviour. She thinks her son is about to announce his engagement. Should she tell her son she thinks that marriage to this woman would be a mistake?

Parents believe that we have clear (yet hardly objective) vision with our kids’ best interests in mind. That our kids are the ones with the big blind spots that prevent them from recognisin­g bad choices. Surely if we point out to our adult “kids” what we know to be true, they will promptly turn to us and gratefully say “Thanks, mom and dad, you are so right, I was so wrong. I will do exactly what you say and change my life!” Not happening. If I ever tried that, my adult kids would dismiss me as intrusive, give me the silent treatment or get angry, and the carefully nurtured bonds of parent/”adult child” communicat­ion would greatly fray.

So does the “let them learn from their failures” concept apply even when our “adult child” is poised to make a major life mistake with potentiall­y painful consequenc­es?

Honestly, I am not waffling here. But yes and no.

Yes: while they are adults, we are their perennial parents, and with great delicacy and respect, we still can tell our adult kids how we feel.

And no: we shouldn’t tell them what to do.

There’s a big difference between telling them what we feel and telling them what to do.

My friend with the daughter in the struggling relationsh­ip could tell her the next time she calls: “It makes me sad when you tell me your boyfriend says such nasty things to you.”

For the son whose job may be on the line: “I worry about your health when you talk about going out and drinking every night during the work week.”

The controllin­g serious girlfriend? “It made me uncomforta­ble listening to how your girlfriend talked to you during your last visit home.”

Assuming we can limit our remarks to how we feel, might our parental comments prod our adult children to think things through and start on different paths? Or not. As Jessica Lahey said, failure teaches a lesson. It breeds resiliency. Second chances. Growth.

Marriages don’t always work out. Young adults lose jobs. Mental health can improve or worsen and then improve again. Even when the stakes are so high, do we owe our adult children – not just the little ones – the right to make their own mistakes and learn from them?

Well, it’s complicate­d. – The Washington Post

There’s a big difference between telling them what we feel and telling them what to do

 ?? PICTURE: MARVIN JOSEPH/WASHINGTON POST ?? If you treat him like a child, even when he’s an adult, won’t he act like a child?
PICTURE: MARVIN JOSEPH/WASHINGTON POST If you treat him like a child, even when he’s an adult, won’t he act like a child?

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