Peninsula Kids Winter 2019

Page 28

Can you overprotect your child? By John Demartini

It is wiser to prepare our children for the realities of life and

teach them how to embrace both sides of life, teaching about both support and challenge.

Is it possible to overprotect your child? Overprotecting children sets up false securities and does not prepare them for the balanced realities of daily life. It is unfair to paint a utopian idealism to children and not prepare them for the other half of life. Children who have not learned and developed self-governance will require greater outside governance. Any area of a child’s life that is not empowered, they become overpowered in. Children who are able to set goals that are aligned with their highest values and what is most important to them, automatically become more self-governed, confident and resilient. They are more balanced in their orientation and can face daily pleasures and pains, supports and challenges.

Pain is your feedback! If you medicate it away, you won’t get your feedback. You need pain, discomfort and things that challenge you to grow and to learn by. Parents overprotecting their children from all forms of discomfort, simply create internal discomforts or challenges for them. If a parent helps their child to escape challenges, they simply breed new ones that follow them like a shadow.

John says: “If you attempt to remove all challenges, discomforts and pains from your life you would miss out on all that they have brought and taught you.”

John says: “They are more problem solving oriented than problem avoiding.” Some parents live with more frustration because of their unrealistic ideals to always protect their children. Children become addicted Challenges birth creativity to unrealistic fantasies of one-sided existences and they are less prepared for real life. This unrealistic fantasy to live a life of ease Children require challenges to facilitate the birth of innovation, without difficulty is the source of depression amongst children. creation, solution and opportunity. Depression is a result of comparing your current reality to an John says: “Too much support and ease creates juvenile dependence; unrealistic fantasy you are addicted to and holding on to. too much challenge creates precocious independence.” Pain is part of life – we wouldn’t have pain endings at the end of our fingers if pain weren’t necessary. There is a book called “Brilliant Function of Pain”, by Milton Ward. It is about people who cannot experience pain and what new challenges they face. 28

Peninsula Kids – Winter 2019

Is fear causing you to overprotect your child? Many people overprotect their children because they are afraid of peer pressure, judgment, or afraid their children will experience something they as parents have not learned to appreciate and love.


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