Spoiled Kids
Parents in today’s society are so
worried about what their kids are doing and who they are hanging out with.
These things are very important because we don’t want our children just being
able to run wild on the streets. However, there needs to be a balance. There
are so many different parenting styles and most are more than adequate. Kids
should have a very respectable, loving relationship with their parents and should
feel comfortable to come to their parents with a problem or issue they are
having. In today’s society, parents spoil their kids and do not let them make
any of their own decisions. Unfortunately today, parents do not allow their
kids to have any of their own thoughts. For example, rather than giving
children pros and cons when they have to make a decision, parents tell them
exactly what to do. This does not teach children how to make responsible,
rational decisions or how to learn from their mistakes. These
parents tend to not have the best relationship with their kids in the long run.
Although parents want to protect their kids, letting children make their own
decisions is good; it helps children be more independent and not rely on their
parents as much because they will learn from their mistakes and learn to take
responsibility.
We all know those parents who are overbearing
and will not let their child go out, hang out with friends, and always have to
know where they are 24/7. Then on the other hand we have parent and child
relationships where parents do not care what their children are doing and let
them completely make my own decisions. This is a lot like Jeannette Walls
family. However, there needs to be a balance of both. Personally, I think being
more lenient then strict is good for the child. However, Jeannette’s parents
take it to an unhealthy level. A child should definitely know boundaries,
limitations, and respect, but most importantly children need to be social, have
their own experiences, and learn to make their own decisions. Children need to
learn that they will not always be there to tell them what to do and how to do
it. These kids, who grow up with overly strict parents that make every single
decision for them, will not be able to live in the real world. Parents need to
learn to let their kid make mistakes so they can learn from them and be
responsible.
In the article “Helicopter Moms vs.
Free-Range Kids ” the author talks about a mom who lets her 4th
grader ride the New York subway home from school. The mother said that “my son got home, ecstatic with independence” (“Helicopter
Moms..”). Then she got all these responses saying that she was not a good
mother for letting her 4th grader ride the subway. The mom claims
that “keeping kids under lock and key and helmet and cell phone and nanny and
surveillance” (“Helicopter Moms..”) is not the correct way to raise kids. She
ended up having to go on TV with her son to explain and defend herself. So are
parents just too strict today or is there a serious concern about children’s
safety? The world is not such a horrible
place as many assume it is. “There's a one-in-a-million chance a child will be
taken by a stranger, according to the Justice Department” and “New York City,
for instance, is safer than it's ever been; it's ranked 136th in crime among
all American cities” (“Helicopter Moms..”). Actually, “90 percent of sexual abuse cases are committed
by someone the child knows” and “mortality rates from all causes, including
disease and accidents, for American children are lower now than they were 25
years ago” (“Helicopter Moms..”). Even with these positive statistics, parents
are getting stricter. In the 70’s almost 90% of kids that lived within a mile
of school walked or rode their bikes there. Now, “Centers for Disease Control
report that only 13 percent of children bike, walk or otherwise get themselves
to school” (“Helicopter Moms..”). Walking or riding bikes to school is actually
better for kids to get more physical activity. This article also talks about
how now, kids have cell phones and it’s easier to check up on them and make
sure they are safe. They can also use it in case of an emergency which is also
a plus.
Jeannette Walls’s parents had a very
relaxed method on parenting. This is a complete extreme and no child should
ever have to go through what she had to. Her parents never cared where she was
or who she was with. When she was three years old she had to cook her own
hotdogs because no one else would do it for her. She ended up catching herself
on fire and having to go to the hospital. This did not change anything; she
kept on taking care of herself. This taught her and her siblings to be
responsible and how to take care of themselves. Jeannette did not have the
normal father-daughter or mother-daughter relationships with her parents. If
anything, Jeannette took care of her parents more than they took care of her. Jeannette
would always have to go find her father when he got drunk and left home. While
on their way to Las Vegas, Jeannette’s parents stopped at a bar while the kids
waited in the car. He “announced that he was going inside for a quick nip”
(Walls 29). It was a hot sunny day in the dessert and that “quick nip” turned
into hours. The most tragic event, to me, was when Jeannette was stranded on
the side of the road for a while before her family realized she was gone. “Just
when we took a sharp turn over some railroad tracks, the door flew open, and I
tumbled out of the car” (Walls 30). After she “rolled sever yards along the
embankment” (Walls 30) she watched the car keep driving away. The fact that her
own parents did not notice that their own daughter fell out of the car is an
example of parents that are excessively too care free. The remarkable thing is
that Jeannette, Lori, and Brian turned into wonderful and successful adults.
This proves, even though this is a dramatic example, that kids will learn to
handle life better if they are allowed more freedom when their young to learn
from their mistakes.
Personally, I have very easy going parents.
I have always had a very good relationship with them. They trusted me and had
faith in my decisions. They knew that if
they gave me the right guidance I would do the right thing. I was involved in
after school activities and was very busy. I rarely had to do chores or told to
pick up my room. If I did not want to go to school, I was not forced. I was the
first sophomore in my school to start driving. Many would say I was spoiled.
However, I learned very fast, if I did not go to school then I would have extra
work. Then my grades would slip and that would result in my car getting taken
away until they were back up. They never told me to keep my grades up, but it
was something that I figured out. I also figured out that when my room was
messy I could never find anything. This made me keep my room clean. I did not
have a curfew but realized that when I stayed out late I was tired for school
the next day and my grades dropped. When I got a little older I realized that
if I wanted to go out and do things I would need money, so therefore I got a
job. I did not need someone over my shoulder telling me exactly how and when to
do something. Living away from home now, I’m glad I learned all these things
early, other than learning them late in life and make mistakes in this crucial
time of my life. It is better to learn these things as a child rather than when
one is an adult.
All in all, there needs to be a good
balance of strictness and leniency while parenting. Parents need to let their
kids be kids and since the crime rates are significantly going down, safety
should not be such a big issue. Many cultures have different ways of parenting
that work great for them. However, from what I have observed, kids that have
over bearing parents who do not let them make their own decisions are not able
to be self-sufficient when they are adults. On the other hand, kids that let
their children make their own decisions learn how to be independent and take
care of themselves. The kids whose parents are usually strict and overbearing
are usually the kids that do not have a good relationship with their parents
and can’t handle life.
Works
Cited
“Helicopter Moms vs. Free-Range Kids.”
The Daily Beast 20 Apr. 2008: n.
pag. Print.
Walls, Jeannette. The Glass
Castle. New York: Scribner, 2005. Print.
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