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Paralyzed Parenting: When You Don’t Follow Through

 

 

by Ron L. Deal, President, Successful Stepfamilies

 

 

“For these commands are a lamp, this teaching is a light,

and the corrections of discipline are the way to life.”  (Proverbs 6:23 NIV)

 

“No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. 

Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness

and peace for those who have been trained by it.”  (Hebrews 12:11 NIV)

 

 

          It’s one of the biggest complaints I hear about biological parents (either from a stepparent or an ex-spouse regarding the other biological parent): “They just don’t follow through.  No matter how much we discuss it, once we make a plan, they just don’t follow through with discipline—and the rest of us are suffering for it.” 

          There are lots of reasons that biological parents “get wimpy” (pardon my directness, but that’s what it is) with their kids.  Some are “tired and just don’t have the energy to see it through,” others are afraid the other house will become more appealing to the children if they are too harsh, while still others just don’t have any parenting skills and simply don’t know what to do (if this is you—read a book or go to a class!). 

          But in my experience, a significant number of parents in stepfamilies get paralyzed by what parenting expert John Rosemond calls “psychological thinking.”[1]  These parents spend an inordinate amount of time trying to analyze “why” their child misbehaves.  “What does it mean?” is this parent’s most asked question.  The fact that 15 year-old Susie can’t seem to get her assignments turned in at school is not just about a lack of responsibility, it is assumed symbolic of some mystery the parent must figure out.  Furthermore, to this parent punishing a child or “holding their feet to the fire” for something that obviously is about some “deeper psychological need,” doesn’t seem fair.  The net result is a parent that doesn’t respond in ways that will reshape the child’s behavior, they just do nothing. 

 

Five Consequences of Psychological Thinking

          When parents get bogged down by assigning psychological causes to their child’s behavior, John Rosemond points out that several consequences become inevitable:

  1. The child is no longer responsible for what he is doing.  Something else is held as responsible for the child’s misbehavior.  This might be another parent (ex-spouse) or circumstance (divorce, death of a parent, etc.), or the parent might hold themselves responsible (guilty).
  2. The child is transformed from someone who is misbehaving into a victim of circumstances that are beyond his or her control.  Instead of discipline, he warrants compassion.
  3. The child’s behavior is justified by the circumstances in question.  Suddenly, he is innocent of wrongdoing.  He doesn’t really mean to do what he is doing. 
  4. The parent’s ability to discipline is paralyzed.  How can a parent punish a child for doing what he can’t help doing?
  5. Because they cannot bring themselves to punish the child, the parents become unwitting accomplices in and enablers of the child’s antisocial behavior, so the child’s behavior becomes progressively worse over time.  (p. 105-106) 

 

Paralyzed by Guilt

          Biological parents in first-families fall prey to psychological thinking, too, but it in my experience, parents in single-parent and stepfamilies are even more prone to this pattern.  Why?  Because of guilt. 

·         Guilt from the divorce or parental decisions that have complicated the child’s life. 

·         Guilt from the various life circumstances that have resulted from the death or divorce. 

·         Guilt over a loss of family income and all the things the child doesn’t have. 

·         Guilt over an ex-spouse who is uninvolved in the child’s life. 

·         Guilt over the decision to remarry (or the timing of the remarriage).  

·         Guilt over sinful choices that have brought difficulty to the child’s life. 

The list goes on and on. 

          Guilt exacerbates parental pity for the child’s “victim state” and creates an inverted power system where parents feel that they owe their children.  Misbehavior is justified, excused, and from this twisted perspective, is considered partial restitution for what the parent owes the child.  Guilt and sympathy, then, lay the foundation for the parent’s paralyzation and inability to follow through. 

 

What Kids Need

          As Rosemond points out, a paralyzed parent enables misbehavior which will undoubtedly escalate and worsen over time.  This is particularly difficult when a paralyzed single parent remarries.  The new stepparent is set-up for defeat when they bring the child’s outrageous behavior to the attention of the biological parent.  They are often met with defensiveness (“he’s not selfish, he’s just going through a rough time”), counter-blame (“you just don’t like my son”), or passive-aggressive patronizing (agreeing to discipline and then not following through).  Further, the child will likely exploit the divided parental team, disrespect the stepparent, and stiff-arm the stepparent keeping them emotionally distant. 

          But perhaps the most ironic result of paralyzed parenting (that is justified by the belief that it somehow reduces the child’s emotional pain) is that it unwittingly prolongs a child’s hurt, anger, and sadness over the past because they are never purposed to manage it responsibly.  A child whose “depression over the divorce” excuses irresponsibility without consequence has no motivation to act better.  Likewise, a child who hits or openly mistreats his stepsiblings without consequence will continue to “be mad” about how “unfair” life has been to him or her. 

          Children, rather, need parents who boldly respond with firm and loving consequence to the child’s behavior.  Can you show understanding when the child wants to discuss his or her feelings about the past?  Yes.  But feelings about the past should not excuse the present. 

          Proverbs (see Prov. 6:23; 13:24; 19:8) tells us two things: Discipline is the way to life and a lack of discipline leads to death.  Believe it!  Do yourself a favor—don’t fall prey to guilt.  Wrestle with it, ask God to take it away, and make the choice not to be paralyzed by it.  As I like to say, “Just because you get handed a guilt-trip ticket, doesn’t mean you have to go for the ride.”  Parent your kids.  Love them enough to discipline them well.  It’s their gift for life. 

 

 



[1]  John Rosemond (2007).  Parenting by the Book: Biblical Wisdom for Raising Your Child. New York: Howard Books, pg. 103.

 

 
Comments ( 9 )
 
Add your Comment
 
#1: by Lisa H. on 04.02.2008 @ 08:52am CDT

This article describes my ex-husband perfectly. Our son is now 17 years old and has been in and out of trouble with school, smoking, and wrecking a car (without his license) in the last couple years. My ex-husbands response to me is "It happened on my watch so I am not going to do anything about it" I have told my ex that our son is grounded or whatever the punishment but he does not keep him grounded on his parenting time. I am at my wits end with this and don't know what to do.
On the other hand my current husband thinks I am too lenient with my sons punishments for these things where as his guilt over "leaving" his two daughters is overwhelming him. He refuses to discipline either one of them stating what they do is nowhere near what my son has done (as explained above) which does not constitute him doing nothing.
This article has opened my eyes in that I do still have guilty feelings and I have tried to make excuses for my sons behavior which I will try to work on now that I have read this article which made perfect sense. I am so glad I found this website which has been quite insightful.
#2: by Rick on 04.02.2008 @ 09:34am CDT

My stepdaughter was 14 when my wife and I married. I had no children, but thought I knew how to parent! My wife was somewhat paralyzed by guilt over the divorce because her ex had basically abandoned her and her daughter.
It took a a couple of years for me to realize that my efforts to parent my stepdaughter and coerce my wife into parenting "my way" were destroying my relationship with my stepdaughter and putting a tremendous strain on our marriage.
Thankfully, we had a supportive church family and friends that offered wise counsel. With God's abundant grace we survived. We have now been married for 14 years and I have two wonderful grandchildren! My daughter introduces me as her "Dad" and our relationship has greatly improved over the years.
I'm including this comment because I realize how easy it is for the new spouse/stepparent to come in and try to "fix" things. This rarely works. The biological parent may be paralyzed by guilt or engage in "psychological thinking" for other reasons, but the stepparent must sue wisdom and discernemnt before voicing his or her opinions on parenting matters.
#3: by Terry on 04.02.2008 @ 11:38am CDT

This article described to a "T" how I have been parenting my two daughters in the four years since my divorce. Guilt, guilt guilt and excuses, excuses, excuses. Being aware makes the changes much easier to make. Thank you!
#4: by John Thybault on 04.03.2008 @ 09:54am CDT

It seems to me that my heavenly Father parents me the same way He expects me to parent my own children. Imagine that! I am so grateful that HE never gets paralyzed. Please pray for me to be more like HIM.
#5: by Mike on 04.04.2008 @ 08:10am CDT

What helps me here is to recognize that loving your children necessarily includes drawing limits for them. You're not doing them any favors by allowing them to engage in self-destructive behavior. It will harm them in the long run. If you love them, you MUST enforce consequences for inappropriate behavior.

Understanding their feelings and acknowledging them is important. But it is also important not to allow them to escape the fallout for their actions. To do so is not loving; it's harmful.
#6: by Mary on 04.04.2008 @ 10:39am CDT

I have been married to a wonderful man for several years. The power of guilt over divorced parents is mind boggling. My husband is a product of a divorced family and sympathizes with the plight of his children having to adjust to new surroundings and people. I have watched these children manipulate situations to rake havoc on our household. There always seems to be some deeper psychological meaning to everything and an excuse for their poor behavior and lack of respect. I was beginning to think I was the only step parent having to go through this. This article reinforces what I have told my husband all along - that it is the responsibility of adults (parents) to teach children to cope with things that do not go their way in life because we do not live in a perfect world and life doesn't always go our way. It is important to realize that while your feelings are valid - a person doesn't always have to act upon them. See the cup as half full instead of always half empty.
#7: by Ron Deal on 04.22.2008 @ 02:56pm CDT

Reprinted from the May '08 E-Magazine:

Reader: “I just read your article on Paralyzed Parenting and I am right in the middle of this situation...What do I do if my wife won’t discipline her children? How do I keep up the standards for my children?”

S.S.: Yours is a very frustrating situation with no easy answers. You are concerned about the example being set for your younger children, your paralyzed wife is likely worried about losing her children, and your marriage is strained by your differences of opinion. There are many things to address but at the root of your wife’s paralyzed position is fear. You cannot attack your her fear with criticism. To do so will only generate resentment toward you and likely entrench her posture with her kids even more. You must approach her with calm, openness, and patience as she wrestles with her fear.
Try to seek counseling (find a counselor). In the meantime, continue holding a high standard for your own children. When they ask, “Why do they get to do/say... and we don’t?” just say, “I know it’s confusing sometimes, but that’s up to their mother. You just worry about you and what I ask of you.” Admittedly this won’t “fix” the discrepancy but it might get you through until counseling has time to address the situation.
#8: by Michelle on 05.04.2008 @ 07:15am CDT

This situation is exactly what my husband has been dealing with. We haven't seen my step son in 4 months because we have routine, structure, and boundaries in our home and his mother does not. She has given my step son the choice of whether or not to come to our home and of course, at 12 years old, he chooses not to come to a house where there are rules. Its very painful for our family and unfortunately, his mother doesn't realize that she is a huge part of this problem. I pray that this gets resolved quickly, before my husband and his son are estranged forever.
#9: by Tricia on 05.07.2008 @ 04:27pm CDT

This is a timely article. We each had 3 kids coming into the marriage and now we have 2 together. My husband is by far the most leanient father and has a tendency to treat his kids like they are still 2 years old and serves them hand and foot, expecting little. The problem comes when I am expected to comply to his parenting style. This equals major dissention. This artilcle was helpful and perhaps my husband will be open to read and possibly understand a different side from an outside source. Is their a resource for how I could better handle this situation until things are worked out?

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© 2008 Successful Stepfamilies
Successful Stepfamilies is a ministry of
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