Subtitles section Play video
-
There are few more important tasks for parents than to be able to listen properly to their
-
children, that is, pick up on and give room to, their children’s moods, hatreds and
-
enthusiasms, even when these run contrary to their own inclinations.
-
It’s on the basis of having been listened to with close sympathy and imagination that
-
a child will later on be able to accept themselves, remain in touch with what they feel and find
-
partners who are interested in their core selves.
-
Why should listening properly prove so hard for many parents?
-
Partly because what children say and do can prove so threatening to parents’ sense of
-
their identity.
-
We may as parents have said a very firm goodbye to vulnerability, imagination, frankness,
-
sexual fluidity or sadness.
-
But our children come into the world unaware of any such repudiations; what we have put
-
into our shadow sides may lie in the midday sun of our offspring’s young lives.
-
The kids have no compunction saying that granny is a big fat poo, that they want to dress
-
like an opposite gender or that they long to live in a bigger house.
-
They may in addition be terrible at maths and hopeless at tying their own shoelaces.
-
This may rattle us to the core: how could we have worked so hard to expunge weakness
-
from our personality, only for it to show up in the next generation?
-
How can they be so shockingly needy and difficult, so illogical and impolite?
-
There can be jealousy behind much of the resulting non-listening.
-
Parents may not take their children’s cries to heart because no one paid particular attention
-
to their own lamentations.
-
Why would they be patient with another’s petty sorrows when they had to grow up with
-
brutal speed?
-
The best way for parents to protect themselves against registering their latent frustrations
-
and regrets can be to ensure that their children also don’t get what they want.
-
Non-listening parents are to be found constantly rewriting their children’s experiences:
-
‘That’s nonsense,’ they will say, ‘I know you love going for walks in the rain!’
-
Or: ‘Why would my brave little soldier cry about something like that!’
-
Or they’ll insinuate that there is simply no way to devote oneself to something (ballet
-
or business, being shy or dressing as a fairy) and remain legitimate and loveable.
-
The legacy of not being listened to is a split personality, in which we are unable to allow
-
in the sadness or anger, vulnerability or confidence that our parents once denied in
-
us.
-
Properly growing up may involve asking ourselves a very unfamiliar question - what sides of
-
me could my parents not accept? - and making friends with
-
the answers.