Book Review: Take Back Your Kids - Confident Parenting in Turbulent Times
By Lynn Glessner, published May 09, 2007
Published Content: 53 Total Views: 24,974 Favorited By: 5 CPs
Parents are rightfully rejecting the overly authoritarian model of parenting from past generations, but have gone to the other extreme and become timid about exercising any authority at all. Doherty gives several real life examples examples, which seem at the same time both familiar and extreme.
Doherty draws the unique conclusion that we are influenced by our consumer culture to such an extent that we approach relationships with this same attitude. Thus, children have become consumers of parental services, while parents have become providers of parental services and brokers of community services for children. There is certainly an element of truth to this model, but it has gone too far when this is the entirety of the relationship.
Rather than parents being peers, therapists, or service providers, Doherty urges parents to be confident parents. Doherty describes the skills necessary to be a confident parent -- firm boundaries on behavior, an understanding of when to be flexible, and the courage to express constructive anger and endure the consequences. He assures us that our family will benefit, our children will benefit, and our community will benefit from better citizens. In the marketplace analogy, the service provider must do whatever is necessary to please the consumer and keep him happy. In a balanced world, children are expected not only to receive from adults, but also to actively contribute to the world around them. Two key expectations we should have of our children are the expectation of respect, and of participation in the family life.
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