It Is A Terrible Thing Not To Become An Adult When One Ceases To Be A Child

Mamacita says:  Oh, there will be people who won’t like this post.  Fair warning:  some people will be hit below the belt.  Perhaps it’s high time somebody aimed at these people below the belt.  There’s been far too much rationalizing about this behavior, and there are way too many euphemisms for it.

Each family deals with its own dynamics in its own way. This is, of course, as it should be. I wonder sometimes if each family might benefit from thinking a little more in terms of how decisions made by the parents will affect its various members in locations other than the home itself. As parents, we see only what’s going on at home; we don’t see how what’s going on at home also changes what’s going on at school. Sometimes I think we just don’t want to know.

As a teacher, I saw, year after year, children who went from top-of-the-class to little staring zombies, because of a decision made by parents. I had to watch promising young people deteriorate before my eyes because of a decision made by parents. I watched children become virtual caretakers. I saw kids put in charge of younger siblings, and held responsible for anything that happened. I had to see children carry messages from parent to parent or, worse, wait in vain for some kind of message from the parent who is no longer there. I saw kids standing in front of the school after dark because each parent figured the other parent was picking up that night. I saw kids crying in the hallways because they were going to miss a dance or a party because it was the OTHER parent’s weekend and there was no switching allowed. And so, so often, things the child used to do are no longer possible because the money situation has changed and every little thing now means outraged outbursts from the parent who is supposed to pay. I hated seeing children worrying about lost notebooks and new school supplies because they were scared to tell either parent about yet another expense because it always triggered a fight about whose turn it was to pay. I’ve had kids tell me outright that they feel like the rope in a tug-of-war, and that the winner DIDN’T have to deal with the kids.

I’ve read essay after essay about being forced to share all their things with Mommy’s new boyfriend’s kids, or Daddy’s new girlfriend’s kids. Kids lose their rooms, their possessions, and huge chunks of time rightfully theirs, with Mommy or Daddy, because of, as one of my students put it a few years ago, “. . . kids who pass in the night.” And while it’s hard enough to have to watch Mommy or Daddy kiss and hug someone who isn’t Mommy or Daddy, try to think how hard it must be to watch Mommy or Daddy kiss and hug someone who isn’t you. . . . .

Children who were finding success were ripped from their classroom, separated from their teacher and from their friends, and placed in a new school more convenient to the parents’ new living arrangements. Children had to adapt not only to a parent moving out, but also to a new school, a new teacher, new friends, new curriculum, new home. . . and you know what? Sometimes, for a child, that’s just too much new stuff at once. What are we thinking?  Well, of course, we’re thinking of what’s best for us, the adults, and we’re dragging our children behind us and expecting them to “understand” and to cope.  After all, OUR lives are going to be so much better, right?  And it’s all about us, right?  To some pretend adults, it IS all about them.  When Mommy or Daddy doesn’t have the money for his/her children this week, but somehow miraculously has the money for his/her NEW kids,  well, naturally the old kids will understand that things have changed.  And they sure have.
It’s easy to think that any parental decision will affect the children only in the household, and that if adults work out routines that are mutually beneficial and workable to each other, that the children in that household can automatically adapt. Often, of course, they can. Just as often, they can’t. At least, not for a while. Often, these children are traumatized, and they need familiar surroundings in at least one aspect of their lives. Their home has been destroyed, through no fault of their own, and their trust in adult loyalty has been compromised, and now their school lives are being disrupted, too.

But, but, wouldn’t it be so much healthier for a child to live in a home that isn’t full of venom, dislike,  adultery, and arguments?  Of course it would.  “Staying together for the kids” only works when both parents are adults who love their children more than they love themselves.  These days, hormones and MEEEEEE trump self control and regard for a child’s security.  Nice, adults.  Real nice.

No matter how often and how sincerely parents assure their children that none of these things are their fault, most kids believe that if they’d only been better behaved, if they’d just made the team, or scored higher on that big test, or helped more around the house, etc, their parents wouldn’t have fought so much until one of them moved out. With tiny children it can go even deeper, because they don’t have the communication skills to articulate their pain. They only know that Mommy or Daddy is gone, and all the explanations in the world aren’t sufficient to reassure them about. . . . really, much of anything.

Teachers see this daily, weekly, monthly, yearly, year after year after year. We never get used to it. Even at the college level, I am reading essays about the bewildered heartbreak still inside a grown man or woman, because their parents pulled the rug out from under them twenty years ago and it still hurts.

Sometimes I think it might do these parents good if they read what their children are writing about the home situation. I wonder if these parents realize how severely some of them are disrupting their children’s lives. It’s so easy for adults to do their thing and assume the kids can cope, but the truth is, sometimes, it’s far more important for adults to do their kids’ thing and put their own lives on the back burner. And I also think that many adults simply don’t want to think about the possibility that their decisions have devastated their children. That’s too hard, and it’s not fair, either, because “don’t I deserve a little happiness?” Answer: No, you don’t. Not if it means compromising your children’s lives.


I saw more heartbreak and bewilderment than you could find in a country music playlist. I saw too much disillusionment, and disillusionment is hard enough to take in an adult; when you see it in a child’s eyes, it’s even worse. I saw it every day. I have never been able to build up any immunities to it.

If I seem harsh when I write about such things, it’s because of what I have seen. I think perhaps if parents can look outside of their own situations and see these same things, more people might put their children first and themselves last, because once we have children, we are supposed to cherish them, not desert them, and not require them to change overnight because of decisions we make that are for our own personal benefit.

Children will always come first with me. Promises come second. Yes, I can be severe when I think about adults who put themselves first. Yes, I can be harsh when I think about adults who make and break promises easily. When it concerns people I care a lot about, I can be even harsher. This is ironic, really, because I am by nature a complete and total wuss, and there are footprints all over my back.

I wish parents would try a little harder. I wish parents would put their children first and foremost.  I wish parents would cultivate some self-control.  I wish parents would work a little harder at honoring promises, no matter how much greener the grass might look, over there on the other side of the fence.

It just seems to me that no matter how “unfulfilled” and “misunderstood” an adult might feel, a little child’s welfare is still more important. I also wonder at a mentality that feels entitled to help break up someone’s family unit.  “I fell in love.  I didn’t MEAN for it to happen.”  This is what people with no self control or conscience tend to say.  It’s a rationalization for “I wanted to so I did.”

We had children.  Now, we have them.  And if we don’t honor these creations by honoring each other and focusing on whatever is best for the family unit, and not necessarily for one ADULT member of that unit, maybe the whole world would be a place where our children would feel secure.

I’m harsh with babyish adults, sure.  When someone behaves like a baby, that person needs to be treated like one.

It is a terrible thing not to become an adult when one ceases to be a child.

In fact, it’s downright disgusting.

Life is full of choices.  If you are an adult, act like one.  All actions have consequences – that’s where your kids came from in the first place.

Now, do your adult job.  Keep it in your pants, honor your commitments, keep your promises, move heaven and earth to ensure that your children to grow up in a secure, safe, home, and don’t hang out with people who have no scruples about helping destroy families.

And if you don’t “feel” it any more, keep it to yourself.  You’re an adult.  Buck up and show some spunk.

Wahh, wahhh, I deserve to be happy! Oh, really?  Perhaps.  But not as much as your innocent children deserve to be.

Shut the hell up.  You’ll be as happy as you deserve to be.  You might even be surprised at how genuinely happy you can be when you put other people ahead of yourself.

Sadly, this is something far too many “adults” have never done.


Comments

It Is A Terrible Thing Not To Become An Adult When One Ceases To Be A Child — 7 Comments

  1. I appreciate the honesty in your posts, can we include this in the parent handbook? or include it in the parenting classes required before parenthood, like driver’s licenses?

    oi

    I’ve seen this many a times, but this year I’ve had a particularly hard time watching a student involved in custody issues. Anyone who says a high school kid can handle it should think again.

  2. My wife’s note said, simply, “I can’t deal with it any more, Bob. There’s just no time for ME. Good luck with the kids. I’ll be in touch when I can.”

    You know, Mamacita, there was never any time for me, either, but I just figured that was part of what being grown up meant.

    The kids still cry themselves to sleep. I’ve never said a word against her to them, but they’ll figure it out eventually. She just didn’t love them as much as she loved herself.

    And I guess she never did really love me. My life sucks right now.

    But because I’m an adult, and because I love my children, I will keep on keeping on.

    I thank you for this post, Jane. You’ve put it really well.

  3. Well, Jane, my goodness. It’s not often that we find someone who dares speak truths like this, and make no mistake, you are speaking absolute truth. You’ll probably get a ton of emails from hormonal, immature people who found a soul mate and walked away from a spouse and children, and who is now ecstaticly happy except for those unreasonable demands on his money and time from those inconvenient children of the abandoned wife.
    And maybe from some whores who encouraged someone to leave so they could be together and be happy because one happy person is better than two unhappy ones.

    I’ve been there. My husband found a woman (that kind isn’t hard to find; they’re everywhere these days) who felt completely personally justified in having an affair with a married man and helping to destroy a family, and now they are shacked up with her three kids and all his money goes to his new family. Our two kids are stood up almost every time, and when they do go to his new “digs” they just sit around and watch TV because all of his money went to buy new shoes and summer camp for his new kids.

    What are these people thinking? Oh, wait, I know. They’re thinking of themselves and nothing else.

    Thanks, Mamacita Jane, for having the guts to speak out with this most inconvenient truth for “that kind” of people. then again, that kind of people will just be offended that anyone dares call them on their selfish actions. Sigh.

  4. I hear the same stories as you do; they are rampant at the high school level where I teach. Parents who think that teenagers will handle divorce better than younger children are fooling themselves. In many ways, it’s harder for them; they’re going through so many changes themselves.

  5. I would love to hand this to the set of parents of a kid I am tutoring. She was a good student last year, failing this year. Mom quit her job (because she thought the boss disrespected her. You want disrespect, read my last post about my principal.) Dad makes minimal money as a temp. And they move about once a month to stay with another set of friends, because they cannot afford an apartment.

    AAAARRRRRRGGGGGGHHHHH

    Great post. The parents wouldn’t get it. But their daughter would.

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