Last year was the year of the Tiger Mom.
Considering the violent reaction to Amy Chua’s book it comes as no surprise that American children, in
Elizabeth Kolbert’s phrase, are “spoiled rotten.”
The Tiger Mom inculcated values of hard work and discipline
in her daughters. America’s parents were offended: how could the Tiger Mom not be spoiling her children?
Privileged and pampered, cuddled and coddled, imperious and
impudent, entitled and vainglorious America’s children have become spoiled
brats.
According to the books that Kolbert
is reviewing, America’s children not being brought up. They are not being
taught the habits that would make them productive and responsible adults.
In fact, they are taught habits that will make them
slothful, irresponsible adults.
Kolbert offers a picture from family life in Los Angeles:
In the
L.A. families observed, no child routinely performed household chores without
being instructed to. Often, the kids had to be begged to attempt the simplest
tasks; often, they still refused. In one fairly typical encounter, a father
asked his eight-year-old son five times to please go take a bath or a shower.
After the fifth plea went unheeded, the father picked the boy up and carried
him into the bathroom. A few minutes later, the kid, still unwashed, wandered
into another room to play a video game.
Clearly, the father is uncomfortable exercising authority. His son has learned it and is happy to exploit it. A father lacking authority is reduced to asking his son, nicely to take a shower. His rules are made for breaking.
Clearly, the father is uncomfortable exercising authority. His son has learned it and is happy to exploit it. A father lacking authority is reduced to asking his son, nicely to take a shower. His rules are made for breaking.
Here’s another cringe-inducing moment:
In
another representative encounter, an eight-year-old girl sat down at the dining
table. Finding that no silverware had been laid out for her, she demanded, “How
am I supposed to eat?” Although the girl clearly knew where the silverware was
kept, her father got up to get it for her.
Her wish is his command. How do you think that this girl
will fare when she brings the same bad manners into school, the workplace, or
an eventual relationship?
These parents seem to believe that children must be allowed to do what they please as they please when they please. They are even afraid to utter the word No.
Living in Paris and bringing up her daughter in the American
style, Pamela Druckerman noticed that in any gathering hers was always the most ill-behaved
child.
What were French parents doing that she was not doing? Why,
they were saying No and meaning it.
In what world would it never cross your mind to say No to a
child and mean it?
It appears that these parents have become servants whose purpose in life is to cater to their children’s
every whim.
Everyone wants to know how we got into this mess, so
let’s indulge in some speculation.
To some extent it depends on the fact that people are having
fewer children. An only child is more likely to be spoiled that is a child who
has siblings.
But there must be more to it.
Let us first hold the parenting experts responsible. After
all, parents want the best for their children. In this day and age they means following advice from child-rearing experts, the credentialed
authorities.
The result is that parents no longer trust their own judgment. They no
longer rely on a set of moral precepts. They have outsourced authority to a
crew of psychologists and developmental experts. And they have never considered the possibility that these men and women of science might be purveying an ideology.
Last year American parents were directing their anger and anguish
at the Tiger Mom because, among other things, she dared to bring up her daughters using her own judgment and the moral teachings of Confucius.
Apparently, our current experts believe that happiness means never feeling
frustration. They seem to be advising parents to do everything in their power to
meet a child’s needs and to satisfy his desires. Otherwise, why would these parents be doing what they are doing.
Finally, the fault lies in our gender-bending,
gender-neutering culture. As a culture we refuse to recognize the difference
between men and women, fathers and mothers. Thus we have undermined the structure of the family and have produced a nation of spoiled brats.
The children Kolbert writes about have neither mothers and fathers. When eight-year-olds condescend to adults it seems that their parents are glorified
servants, like the eunuchs who used to serve the Emperor and Emperor in ancient
China.
In more contemporary parlance we no longer identify people
as men and women, with distinct and defined roles in society. Everyone is a person. In place of motherhood and
fatherhood we have the aberrant notion of personhood.
For the record, the word “personhood” is a recent ideological concoction. I looked it up in a fifty-year-old copy of the Oxford English
Dictionary and it was not there.
As a culture we have acquiesced to the blurring of gender roles in the name of a specious notion like gender equality. We bow down
to the goddesses of feminism by declaring that there is no real difference between
men and women.
In the old pre-feminist days mother and father were distinct
and clearly defined roles.
Mothers made homes and nurtured children; fathers protected
and provided for their families. Mothers offered unconditional love; fathers
imposed discipline and authority.
Of course, defined roles did not prevent fathers from
helping around the house or women from working outside the home. Nor did they prevent fathers from loving their children or mothers from exercising authority.
But then feminism found that these roles oppressed women.
They placed the blame on the patriarchy, thus with fatherly
authority.
They instructed women, in name of liberation, to rebel against the
patriarchy, thus to undermine and disrespect male authority.
Today, fathers have been relegated to the status of co-caregivers;
their word does not count; they are neither feared nor respected.
Is it really a surprise that eight-year-olds treat their fathers with contempt.
Why do they do it and how do they get away with it?
They do it because fathers who have abrogated
their authority deserve contempt.
These fathers accept contempt because they know that they deserve it.
But, you will be thinking, can’t women also exercise
authority? Of course, they can and they do. In the home, however, their success
in doing so, to say nothing of their confidence, depends on the extent to which
they do it in a father’s name.
If a woman is bringing up a child in a fatherless household, no matter how definitive and determined she is, her child will have a great deal of difficulty respecting any authority. It’s
the story of America’s inner cities.