Sunday, March 18, 2007

No Hocus Pocus-Just Find a Focus

There is rumor of a secret society that is purported to have all the tools to successful parenting. This mysterious and mystical organization is rooted in the past, works in the present and looks toward the future. Secrets are not found buried in a vault or hidden in cryptic codes, they are passed in an oral tradition, from one member to another. The tricky part is, deciphering what is good and true and pure, and discarding the false and deceptive gobbledygook that is also included in the messages.

A special talisman is necessary to sort and arrange the lessons offered by the society. This talisman is a shining beacon in often murky and unstable territory. The territory of raising a child and doing it well. What, you ask, is this mysterious and mythical charm? What can help each of us navigate in these stormy and uncharted seas? As always with answers, this one is deceptively simple. The use of common sense.

If I want my child to have direction, I must be a compass. If I want to my child to feel safe, I must offer an environment of safety. If I want my child to feel validated, I must give him an opportunity to be confident and successful. If I want my child to feel love, I must show him love in a million different ways. He or she first needs a sense of family. They need expectations and boundaries, tenderness and discipline, service and philanthropy, knowledge and education,and respect and courtesy. Care-givers must offer a house that welcomes friends and is filled with laughter. A gift to our children is a young life of exploration, discovery and wonder. It is just common sense that we model behavior, create a positive environment, and verbally communicate with our children. Growing successful and competent adults takes a plan. If children grow up helter- skelter, their adult lives will be just as fragmented and undirected.

One tool from this secret vault that I believe to be a no brainer is "find a passion." This is best done before the hormones kick in, but it is never too late. Finding a passion simply means, identify and nurture something your child is good at. Whether it is music or a sport or 4H or breaking a car down and putting it together, find something your personal child can focus all those budding hormones and all that angst on.

The restlessness and lack of direction so often seen in middle school and high school is easily deflected with a favorite way to spend time. Showing a horse, dance competitions, motocross racing, soccer tournaments or swimming competitively are all excellent activities within themselves, but even better, the nature of the activity involves a commitment other than the actual event. Say, horses and riding competitively is your child's interest. Livestock must be cared for, clubs and organizations foster friendships with like minded young people and to compete in the ring requires diligence in daily training.

Of course any sport demands practice, competition and the drive to excel. Camps and workshops further promote excellence and focus. Athletic performance demands a healthy life style and experienced team mates are role models to younger team members. We all know that good coaches can effectively influence a young man or woman for the rest of their life.

A passion for the Arts can last a lifetime. Classes, camps and private lessons give a budding musician or artist tools needed to develop in their medium. Exposure to museums, concerts, galleries and choral groups foster a passion to excel. Oklahoma offers a unique opportunity for young artists via the Oklahoma Arts Institute. http://oaiquartz.com/. Muskogee Little Theater will host a summer youth theatre program. http://www.muskogeelittletheatre.com/. Voice lessons are also available at MLT. The Muskogee Art Guild has art classes as do several private artists in this community. Local music businesses have contacts for guitar, drum and other instrument instruction.

I have never seen a more committed group of young men and women than the competitive Drama and Debate kids at my high school. They were truly passionate about their craft. Translate passionate into focus, and drive, and involved, and BUSY! Any type of leaders at a school are in short supply. (Which is in itself an indication of trouble) Foster and encourage leadership. Student Council, clubs and organizations don't merely get your child involved at their own school. Most organizations offer city, state and national opportunities that include travel, training and life skills.

No hocus pocus. No mumbo jumbo. Just common sense. Who better than a parent to identify a child's special gifts? The magic is to nurture and develop them by offering tools and opportunities to excel. Every child should have their chance to sparkle.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

I have tried! Piano, softball, dance lessons, summer camp
she just always was more interested in boys and makeup and cell phones and MTV even when she was 11!

Melony Carey and Chrissie Wagner said...

Maybe she's a beautiful budding tv journalist? You never know! I have had a few students just like that who have gone on to do wonderful things with their lives -become lawyers, get master's degrees, become wonderful mothers...the thing is to keep exposing your child to new things, make her join clubs and activities at school, because somewhere out there is her passion. I've said it before - not finding it doesn't mean the end of the road, but finding it can help one live fully with passion and intent. Don't give up! And, you never know, she may have been paying more attention that you know to the piano, softball, dance lessons and summer camp than shows right now!!
Melony

Anonymous said...

I totally agree with what you said-one of my children was very active in 4H and later, FFA. High School was a busy, hectic, wonderful time and she did not get so caught up in all the hurt feelings and boy traumas and disobeying. she attends OSU and is planning on a career in veterinary medicine. My son hates anything associated with farming, cattle, horses...and does his best to let us know it. We tried band but he quit in high school we tried baseball, he jsut never liked it enough to continue once he started driving...(another open discussion) he is not a bad kid, he is just unfocused and has nothing he cares about...don't you just think there are some kids that don't commit to anything??? and may be that way as adults?? I know some like that for sure.

Melony Carey and Chrissie Wagner said...

Frustrated mom and Ranchmom
I feel your pain. I saw lots of kids when I taught that had not found their talent yet..honestly, I was probably one of those kids in high school...and maybe college.
Lots of us just loved our friends and the social part of being 13 or 16 or 18. I was on a teen "fashion board" as a sophomore (remember those?) but only because we got to be in ads in The Scout for the department store. I perfected rolling my hair on orange juice cans for the perfect flip instead of making Oklahoma Honor Society. In college, I marched to the president of OU's home with a candle in my hand to protest the Viet Nam war, but actually because a cute guy in my anthropology class was empassioned and asked me to join him.
I walked the campus not contemplating a career choice, I was contemplating which fraternity house had the cutest boys. Shallow? Nahhhh.
Somehow, along the way, husband and children and life changed me, I hope for the better. See. There is hope for all of us!!! Chrissie

Melony Carey and Chrissie Wagner said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Melony Carey and Chrissie Wagner said...

Guys are different and tricky - most of them, anyway. Things for men to do are more limited than for girls - sports, more sports, fishing,guns, fast vehicles, music are all common guy things in which we invest a great deal of our time, especially athletics, but unless you're Jimmy Johnson or get an athletic scholarship (a small percentage of drivers or athletes actually achieve that), then where can you find a passionate career doing those things?

Congratulations on your daughter's success at OSU!! It's so much easier for women, since the world really is open to us, plus we have the luxury of being able to also enjoy motherhood or staying at home, if we want and raising the kids. Men are under pressure to perform, but do not have as much leeway, I guess you'd say, as women.

Anonymous said...

i just don't want to look back and think about wasted time
there is too much to do!!
I feel like the white rabbit in Alice in Wonderland
"Im late I'm late for a very important date"
just don't know what i am hurrying to yet and it is driving me crazy!!!