Or not. Next week I'll publish my darling daughter's response to this article.
You tell me...
http://www.mobiusengine.co.uk/page/3/ |
Even when it does.
As a kid, I always thought that I was being sneaky and getting away with staying out late. Then I would get home and Mom would be there, supposedly just getting a drink of water or reading a good book.
For all the times my folks caught me or made me do things right, I thank them from the bottom of my heart. It has given me a huge toolbox of skills I am using on my kids today.
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/07/ sorry-kids-want-todays-wifi-password-do-your-chores/260524/ |
My work allows me to interact with various public safety agencies on a regular basis. I use this to my advantage. My kids know that I know Alberta like the back of my hand and I know that they know that. Even when I am blowing smoke, the kids will take my word that I can find them and their friends in under ten minutes wherever they are in western Canada.
I work with people that are ex-detectives, ex-military, paramedics, nurses, doctors, pilots, engineers. To the kids, that means I can find them, I can extract them, I can bring them that close to dying and then bring them back, over and over again. I can fly out and get them, then keep them in one place.
Even when I can't.
To their friends, I am an enigma. That is a good thing. For the first few years of cadets and school, hardly any of their friends knew what I looked like, much less how to take me. Yes, I had fun with this. I still do. It warms my heart to be able to walk into a room full of teenagers and have them stop talking and look my way with a tinge of fear in their eyes.
It is all about being fair. Treat them with respect, don't give in to demands and don't carry a grudge. Sneak up on them and surprise them. Be everywhere and don’t let them forget that. Make them believe you are always around.
Even when you aren't
http://unrealitymag.com/index.php/2012/01/31/ seven-amazing-drill-sergeants-in-movies/ |
The ability to inspire and push your children to achieve, without looking like you are, is a skill to be mastered before they are out of their toddler years. Like the great martial art masters, who can knock down a mature tree with the flick of finger, you must make every thing look easy. Don't let the kids know that the master pre-cut the tree before dawn. They will spend days and months trying to knock down trees, just like him. I just wish the masters would concentrate on yard work and cleaning bedrooms, instead of forestry.
As they get older, the kids will realize that the more things change, the more they remain the same. The older they get, the smarter their parents become. If we can give them a solid foundation of fun and mischief, they too can carry on those traditions of the family.
No comments:
Post a Comment