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The-Dad-Vibe

Crash the helicopter...

Hello, my name is Jeff H. I was a helicopter parent for the last six years, but I have recently seen the light and understand the long term harm I was doing to my children!”

Welcome Jeff. We are all recovering Helicopter parents. There is no judgment here.

I look around the room. We want only the best childhood experience for our children. We all had the best of intentions.

  • Why would we let our children experience anything bad?
  • Why let them make mistakes if a negative experience can be avoided?
  • Who wouldn’t want to give their kid a leg up?
  • Shouldn’t our kids be the center of our world?

From an early age, I was hyper present, constantly hovering over my children. For the first five years of my son’s life, nothing happened that I didn’t know about. Secretly, I hated taking my son to preschool because two hours of his life would be unaccounted for. How sick is that? What the heck was wrong with me? I felt so normal.

What fuels the obsession? The constant worry? Guilt? Wanting to be better than our own parents? Perhaps because we have smaller families now, we have more energy to obsess and hover?

Like most ‘addictions’ (a strong word but somehow appropriate), awareness and acceptance is the first step. We are interfering with natural developmental stages of learning, risk taking, cause and effect and self-reflection (“mmm maybe I won’t do that again”). These lessons are only effective and memorable when experienced, someone can’t tell them to you.

Our kids needs to struggle, fail, experience frustration, and solve problems on their own to grow. Failure is not a bad thing. Stop protecting and preventing learning.

I am better now. I look around the room at the other helicopter ‘pilots’ and see the relief on their faces too. We have been freed from this life. Our children are a big part of our life, but not the center of our existence. Our job is to guide, encourage, and teach - not hover.

Helicopter parented kids (HPK) do not become leaders, rather simple followers. They become afraid of the world and can’t do anything without someone else’s opinion or help. HPKs are unable to deal with failure and do not learn coping skills for life outside their home. HPKs rarely take risks – why would they?

HPKs feel a huge sense of entitlement and narcissism, “it’s all about me”. They feel like the world revolves around them, well, they should - you have made them the centre of your universe!

I am now developing a more “Free Range” attitude to raising my children. I rescue less and let mistakes happen.

I look for opportunities to give space for them to act independently, and make their own decisions, like my parents did for me.

As an 11-year-old, I was always riding the Toronto transit system. One of my vivid childhood memories was going to a movie on Yonge Street on a Sunday. I chose to spend my return bus fare on a Mars bar. Without panicking, I ventured into the Eaton Centre and fished out pennies and nickels from the fountains.

I distinctly remember the pride I felt as I put the wet change into the bus slot. I solved my own problem. If that whole episode happened today, my parent’s judgement and parenting skills would be investigated.

If you want a sure-fire indicator of the divide between generations, ask people how far from home they could walk at age eight without an accompanying parent. 

A British study, “One False Move” found that 50 years ago, kids would explore a six mile radius around their house, today that exploration space has shrunk to only 300 yards. In the 1970s, 85 percent of seven and eight-year-old kids walked unsupervised to school. By 1990, that number was below 10 percent! What happened?

There is no rule that parents MUST deliver and receive their children from school. So why do we all show up there when many of us live so close to the school? We drive our kids to school, then pick them up, returning them to the safety of our care. When do they get to LIVE?

I am now looking for ways to show my children that I trust and believe in them. I don’t want them to think, “If dad is always here, holding my hand, there must be something scary or I must be incompetent and immature!”

Last week, I parked in front of the supermarket, gave my seven-year-old son a task and $11. He triumphantly returned 10 minutes later with two jugs of milk and his own treat from the change.

He is now riding his bike home on paths from play dates. Just this morning, he walked the 1.5 blocks to school all by himself. His confidence is growing astronomically because of the faith we have shown in him, even the teacher has commented. I am kicking myself for not realizing this earlier – but hey, no guilt, no bashing about the past.

When my children walk home, I can’t worry about “what other parents might think”. But I would hope they see the confidence I have in my children, after all, I am developing “self-reliant-problem-solving” leaders. How will we turn out the next generation of world leaders if they don’t know how to cross the street!

Only you know if you are a helicopter parent. Awareness is key.

If you suspect you might be a whirlybird parent, then STOP.

  • Stop delivering your child’s forgotten water bottle, lunch, and/or homework to school.
  • Stop calling the parent that didn’t invite your child to a birthday party.
  • Stop calling the school and choosing your child’s teacher and classmates for next year. They will learn something no matter who they share the year with.
  • Stop calling the hockey coach and debating ice time.

I could keep going but I hope you get the idea. Stop, because according to the Journal of Child and Family Studies, the effects of helicopter parenting get worse as your child gets older.

If you don’t stop now, you will be helping negotiate your child’s salary at their first job. Then, when you get off the phone with the university prof, after challenging a failing grade, you can find a good therapist for your stressed out, depressed, and incompetent 22-year-old.

We need to always keep our children safe. As parents, we need to set limits and hold kids accountable. Trust yourself and your kids. Stop this “worst-first” mentality – focusing on what is the WORST thing that can happen.

Somewhere between the circling helicopter and the absent, neglectful parent lies an amazing parent: one that is protective, but also a parent that believes in their child and in the lessons that the world has to teach.

Free of training wheels on her new bike, my daughter told me to “let go!” She couldn’t have been more right…

 

Happy Father’s Day to all the wonderful rock star Dads that support the Dad Vibe!

Until next time…

This article is written by or on behalf of an outsourced columnist and does not necessarily reflect the views of Castanet.



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About the Author

Jeff Hay is a Kelowna-based writer, motivational speaker, parenting coach, and father of four.

Along with writing for Castanet, Jeff also writes for the Huffington Post, the Good Men Project, and the National Fatherhood Initiative in the United States. 

When he is not playing his favourite role of 'DAD', Jeff speaks throughout Canada as a popular parenting educator, working on his website – www.thedadvibe.com, and writing his parenting book for dads, “Wait Till Your Father Gets Home!

Jeff dedicates his life to improving the well-being of children by increasing the proportion of children growing up with involved, responsible, and committed fathers.

E-mail Jeff your thoughts or questions anytime at [email protected]

 



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The views expressed are strictly those of the author and not necessarily those of Castanet. Castanet does not warrant the contents.

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