Are You TOO Guilt Free?
May 29, 2010 by Kimberly Darwin
Filed under Featured, Live Guilt Free, Parenting
Yesterday, my son called me a bitch.
Now, other people have done that in my younger years, but back then I had earned that label. Nowadays, however, I think I may be on the lenient side of things, and let a lot of inappropriate actions and words by others just roll off my back.
Well, folks, that doesn’t work with kids, apparently. Because they are watching you, and modeling you, and their behavior is learned from yours in a really big way.
I guess it started when I was working nights, and as I lay comatose in bed after being on my feet all night, my little tyke would crawl out of bed and switch on a DVD. One morning, he tapped my shoulder as I slept, and said, “MOM! The Matrix is everywhere.” I should have taken this as a sign that perhaps I should be more careful about what he had access to, and to be fair to myself, there was no porn or other REALLY inappropriate materials in the house.
And after all, they are going to learn it soon, anyway, right? Right. They are going to learn it. And they are going to look to you for your judgment on that material. If you glaze right over the violence and the trench coat-wearing virtual mercenaries, then your kids are going to think that these types of movies are the norm, when indeed they should not be–at least for kids.
So being called a bitch was simply a symptom of the bigger problem–that I was too lax in my household, and that my quest to bring up an individual rather than a little carbon copy of myself went too far to the other extreme. And I created an individual to which nothing was sacred.
According to Elaine Sihera on the Helium.com blog:
Children in homes where the parents do not treat each other with any respect, and where language is abusive, critical or inappropriate, tend to use those examples as their guidelines and behave accordingly. Parents teach their children not only through what they say, but most importantly, through what they DO. Children will pick up inappropriate and ambiguous behaviour when they have been set the wrong examples. The parents might not want that to happen but that is the only outcome where there is no other model to copy.
So, yes, it is possible to be TOO guilt free. Remember that you are a model for your children, and being too lax is just as detrimental to their growth as being too strict. Let them grow by feeding them the good stuff in the right portions.
Elaine Sihera
Living a Guilt Free Chaotic Life
December 1, 2009 by Kimberly Darwin
Filed under Awareness, Live Guilt Free, Parenting, Relationships
Chaos as a Way of Life
Do you ever come home from work and experience this in your first ten minutes through the door: you are attacked by the dogs, face a whining family who can’t find anything to eat despite a kitchen full of food, skid across socks on the floor, deal with piled-up mail, answer the ringing phone and encounter still-unmade beds?
I deal with this every day. After overtime on the job, I drive home in the solitude of my car (sometimes I don’t want to get out!) only to arrive home to what should be my sanctuary, but is rather a screaming zoo of chaos. I can barely take a breath before something else is requiring my attention, and there I stumble, one shoe still on my foot, to put out another virtual fire between demanding loved ones.
So last week, I decided to take a weekend away from all of this, and go with a friend to Las Vegas. I had my own room, with a big fluffy bed covered in pillows, room service and curtains that blocked out the light so I could sleep late. Three whole days to myself with no one making demands of me!
Solitude isn’t what I expected it to be
Silence. Peace. Opportunity to go within. Freedom.
Boredom!
I was lost there, with the endless shopping and sightseeing and visual treats available to me. There were so many opportunities that none of them seemed appealing–because I had no one to share them with.
Missing the Chaos
I longed to return to the noise and the craziness, because that’s where my true interaction was. Not only was I missed at home, but they missed me; for they are an integral part of me, and I had left my most integral part of behind.
Enjoying your Routine
So next time you are faced with the temper tantrums, the spilled spaghetti and towels on the floor, remember that your presence plays a large part in the growth and community of others. Their–and your–needs are important, of course. A little quiet may–or may not!–refresh you.





