Parents, We Can Either Elevate or Bring Down our Children
Parents, We Can Either Elevate or Bring Down our Children
By
Dickson Tumuramye
The way we look at children
and baptize them “names” matters a lot. A child’s identity should not be based
on his/her general weaknesses or inability. A child may be disabled but calling
them children with disabilities creates a negative connotation on them.
However,
calling them children with special needs sounds better and actually triggers
someone to respond positively to this child's predicament.
Like women don't like to be referred
to as big or fat, (they prefer being told “you are eating well”), so also
children and adults feel victimized when being called orphans, disabled, obese,
among others. Any name that reminds a person of his/her vulnerability affects
their esteem and makes uneasy and they develop self-rejection.
In life, we sometimes reflect
what our minds conceive, and we perceive it to be like that. If you keep
referring to your child useless, stupid, foolish, a disappointment,
words like who will marry you? Look at you! Shameless child! I wish I was not
your parent, I regret why I gave birth to such an ugly child like you etc; it
leaves a child to perceive that surely s/he is like that or has no value. If this person
makes a mistake accidentally, s/he will be reminded of her/his
parent's/guardian's comments. This will remain stuck in their minds and it
becomes worse if any other person refers to them as such because they will take
it to be a fact.
The end result may be this person
will start to act carelessly due to mere perception. They will likely lose
self-confidence and its related outcomes. And don’t be surprised to hear some
parents of these lamenting that their child was bewitched when actually they
drove the church to the state. We can change a child's attitude by how we
prefer to call them, say about names we call them and even the words we tell
them.
In my tenure as a child worker, I
learnt that children at all age groups love to see us cheering them. Words of
affirmation to children add a lot of meaning to their development. It is
parents to create opportunities for their success and not to frustrate
them. Parents, guardians, teachers should design what a child can become. This
builds their confidence. It also works well in marriage between couples. Just
try to refer to your spouse useless or ugly, you will see the reactions.
What our children are going
through today, the shortcomings your child experiences can only be turned into
something better depending on your perception and attitude towards him/her.
Remember inability does not necessarily mean disability. Haven’t seen people
with certain physical limitations yet they are talented and can shine better in
many areas!? God takes away one thing but replaces it with another.
Some of our
children are not even physically disabled or handicapped but the words we utter
out in their presence make them impaired in some way. It could be a weakness
but because of insensitivity, you magnify it into a huge thing, yet you could
have taken advantage of helping the person to develop this into strength.
Sometimes, everyone has moments
in life when we are moody for a certain period. You may know it, but you don’t
understand why it happens to you. Even your children at any age need a matter
of time to overcome such situations. You need to be close and have a discussion
time and then to discover where that situation is coming from. Seek solutions
not judgments.
None of us is perfect or an angel. As they say that we all have
a degree of madness, but the difference is the level, so also, we are all weak
but that doesn’t call for you to identify or classify me by what you see. Never
judge a book by its cover. Be concerned by the way people even your family
members identify your child.
The
writer is a child advocate and parenting coach, Kampala, Uganda.
tumudickson@gmail.com
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