Protector Parent - physical harm...and its benefits...
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Starting fires... |
We often fall into the trap of believing to be a "protector parent" and that "safe from physical harm" is the ultimate goal. Certainly, it's part of it...channel your inner Rambo or Mama Bear to keep kids safe from the boogeyman...it's a thing, and an important one. I'd argue that it might not be, and probably shouldn't be the only thing.
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...Cliff jumping... |
Kids, more accurately humans, learn through failure. Our propensity toward helicopter/snowplow parenting where we so completely smooth the road before our children does them no long-term favors. The skinned knee on the playground helps them, much like a river through a canyon over time, build their balance, coordination, confidence, boundaries, etc. Avoiding the proverbial skinned knee throughout their time at home with us creates kid-dults that end up with an inability to function in adult life. When I hit one of the struggle-adulting moments with a cantankerous co-worker, micro-manager boss, sick kid, more month than money, whatever it happens to be...I can trace my ability to work through it and come out resilient on the other side back to smaller-level failures growing up.
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Helmets are sometimes required... |
As we look at our parenting responsibilities, I believe one of ours is not to shield them from the bumps and bruises along the way. We treat our kids "summer knees and legs" as badges of honor, an earned testament to their rough and tumble interactions with the playground, hiking paths, bike jumps, and assorted other learning that takes place outside. Just the other night, our youngest ran his bike into the stop sign at the end of the road, bouncing off and skinning up an elbow. Should, we as parents, say "no more bikes, ever" because of the chance that you might get a little road rash or help him get dusted off, back on the bike, and ingrain resiliency?
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Dogs are always good adventure companions. |
With you in the arena, from ours to yours...Happy Trails!
Call to Action:
- Pick out a couple of ways that your family, especially your children, can do some things that are risky...in a safe way. Go do them this month.
- 1 - ___________________
- 2 - ___________________
- 3 - ___________________
- Discussion: Consider what you/your family could/would/should (level of commitment) and start/stop/sustain (action) in terms of injury-prone activities - hiking, mountain biking, and such where you can "skin a knee" without long-term trouble.
Further Reading, Motivation, and References:
- “Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming "Wow! What a Ride!” Cole Schafer
- Art of Manliness - The Risks of Not Letting Your Kids do Risky Things - https://www.artofmanliness.com/people/family/risk-not-letting-kids-risky-things/
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