PARENTS' ATTITUDE TO ADOLESCENTS
Parents are often upset when their children praise the homes of their friends,
and they regard it as a slur on their own cooking, cleaning, or furniture, and often are
foolish enough to let the adolescents see that they are annoyed. They may even
accuse them of disloyalty, or make some spiteful remark about the friends' parents.
Such a loss of dignity and descent into childish behaviour on the part of the adult
deeply shocks the adolescents, and makes them resolve that in future they will not
talk to their parents about the places or people they visit. Before very long the
parents will be complaining that the child is secretive and never tells them anything,
but they seldom realize that they have brought this on themselves. Disillusionment
with the parents, however good and adequate they may be both as parents and as
individuals, is to some degree inevitable. Most children have such a high ideal of
their parents, unless the parents themselves have been unsatisfactory, that it can
hardly hope to stand up to a realistic evaluation. Parents would be greatly surprised
and deeply touched if they realized how much belief their children usually have in
their character and infallibility, and how much this faith means to a child. If parents
were prepared for this adolescent reaction, and realized that this was a sign that the
child was growing up and developing valuable powers of observation and
independent judgement, they would not be so hurt, and therefore would not drive the
child into opposition by resenting and resisting it.
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